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Executable compression

Executable compression is any means of compressing an executable file and combining the compressed data with decompression code into a single executable. When this compressed executable is executed, the decompression code recreates the original code from the compressed code before executing it. In most cases this happens transparently so the compressed executable can be used in exactly the same way as the original. Executable compressors are often referred to as executable packers, runtime packers, software packers, software protectors, or even "polymorphic packers" and "obfuscating tools".

A compressed executable can be considered a self-extracting archive, where a compressed executable is packaged along with the relevant decompression code in an executable file. Some compressed executables can be decompressed to reconstruct the original program file without being directly executed. Two programs that can be used to do this are CUP386 and UNP.[citation needed]

Most compressed executables decompress the original code in memory and most require slightly more memory to run (because they need to store the decompressor code, the compressed data and the decompressed code). Moreover, some compressed executables have additional requirements, such as those that write the decompressed executable to the file system before executing it.

Executable compression is not limited to binary executables, but can also be applied to scripts, such as JavaScript. Because most scripting languages are designed to work on human-readable code, which has a high redundancy, compression can be very effective and as simple as replacing long names used to identify variables and functions with shorter versions and/or removing white-space.

Advantages and disadvantages edit

Software distributors use executable compression for a variety of reasons, primarily to reduce the secondary storage requirements of their software; as executable compressors are specifically designed to compress executable code, they often achieve better compression ratio than standard data compression facilities such as gzip, zip or bzip2 [citation needed]. This allows software distributors to stay within the constraints of their chosen distribution media (such as CD-ROM, DVD-ROM, or floppy disk), or to reduce the time and bandwidth customers require to access software distributed via the Internet.

Executable compression is also frequently used to deter reverse engineering or to obfuscate the contents of the executable (for example, to hide the presence of malware from antivirus scanners) by proprietary methods of compression and/or added encryption. Executable compression can be used to prevent direct disassembly, mask string literals and modify signatures. Although this does not eliminate the chance of reverse engineering, it can make the process more costly.

A compressed executable requires less storage space in the file system, thus less time to transfer data from the file system into memory. On the other hand, it requires some time to decompress the data before execution begins. However, the speed of various storage media has not kept up with average processor speeds, so the storage is very often the bottleneck. Thus the compressed executable will load faster on most common systems. On modern desktop computers, this is rarely noticeable unless the executable is unusually big, so loading speed is not a primary reason for or against compressing an executable.

On operating systems which page executable images on demand from the disk, compressed executables make this process less efficient. The decompressor stub allocates a block of memory to hold the decompressed data, which stays allocated as long as the executable stays loaded, whether it is used or not, competing for memory resources with other applications all along. If the operating system uses a swap file, the decompressed data has to be written to it to free up the memory instead of simply discarding unused data blocks and reloading them from the executable image if needed again. This is usually not noticeable, but it becomes a problem when an executable is loaded more than once at the same time—the operating system cannot reuse data blocks it has already loaded, the data has to be decompressed into a new memory block, and will be swapped out independently if not used. The additional storage and time requirements mean that it has to be weighed carefully whether to compress executables which are typically run more than once at the same time.

Another disadvantage is that some utilities can no longer identify run-time library dependencies, as only the statically linked extractor stub is visible.

Also, some older virus scanners simply report all compressed executables as viruses because the decompressor stubs share some characteristics with those. Most modern virus scanners can unpack several different executable compression layers to check the actual executable inside, but some popular anti-virus and anti-malware scanners have had troubles with false positive alarms on compressed executables. In an attempt to solve the problem of malware obfuscated with the help of runtime packers the IEEE Industry Connections Security Group has introduced a software taggant system.

Executable compression used to be more popular when computers were limited to the storage capacity of floppy disks, which were both slow and low capacity media, and small hard drives; it allowed the computer to store more software in the same amount of space, without the inconvenience of having to manually unpack an archive file every time the user wanted to use the software. However, executable compression has become less popular because of increased storage capacity on computers. It has its use in the demoscene where demos have to stay within a size limit, e.g. 64k intro. Only very sophisticated compression formats, which add to load time, keep an executable small enough to enter these competitions.

List of executable packers edit

CP/M and MSX-DOS executable edit

Known executable compressors for CP/M-80 / MSX-DOS .COM files:

  • PMexe (since 1990, written by Yoshihiko Mino, PMARC.COM+PMEXE.CPM, signature "-pms-")[1]
  • PopCom! (since 1992, written by Yoshihiko Mino, POPCOM.COM, signature "-pc1-")

MS-DOS executable edit

Known executable compressors for MS-DOS-compatible executable files (.COM or .EXE):

  • Realia Spacemaker (since 1982, written by Robert B. K. Dewar, SM.COM, signature "MEMORY$")[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
  • Microsoft EXEPACK (since 1985, written by Reuben Borman, EXEPACK.EXE, LINK.EXE /E[XEPACK], signature "RB")[9][5][4][10]
  • LZEXE (since 1989, written by Fabrice Bellard, LZEXE.EXE)[11][12]
  • PKWare PKLite (since 1990, written by Phil Katz, PKLITE.EXE)[12][13]
  • DIET (since 1991, written by Teddy Matsumoto, DIET.EXE)[12]
  • TINYPROG (TINYPROG.EXE)
  • RJS Software RJCRUSH (since 1994, written by Roland Skinner, RJCRUSH.EXE)
  • XPA (since 1995, written by JauMing Tseng, XPA.EXE)
  • Ibsen Software aPACK (since 1997, written by Jørgen Ibsen, APACK.EXE)
  • UPX (since 1998, written by Markus F. X. J. Oberhumer and László Molnár)
  • 32LiTE (since 1998, written by Oleg Prokhorov, 32LITE.EXE)
  • Knowledge Dynamics LZW Compressor[14]
  • WWpack (since 1994, written by Piotr Warezak and Rafal Wierzbicki, WWPACK.EXE)
  • 624 (only for .COM files smaller than 25 KB, uses LZW)
  • AINEXE
  • AvPack
  • ComPAck
  • HASP Envelope
  • LGLZ
  • PMWLITE
  • ProPack
  • UCEXE
  • WDOSX
  • XE
  • XPack

OS/2 executable edit

Known executable compressors under OS/2:

  • NeLite
  • LxLite

New Executable edit

Known executable compressors for New Executables:

  • PackWin
  • PKWare PKLite (from version 2.01)
  • WinLite

Portable Executable edit

Known executable compressors for Portable Executables:

Note: Clients in purple are no longer in development.

Name Latest stable Software license x86-64 support
32Lite
Alienyze 1.4 (17 August 2020 (2020-08-17)) Proprietary No
ANDpakk2
Armadillo 9.62 (7 June 2013 (2013-06-07)) Proprietary Yes
ASPack 2.40 (7 December 2018 (2018-12-07)) Proprietary Yes
ASPR (ASProtect) 2.78 (7 December 2018 (2018-12-07)) Proprietary Yes
BeRoEXEPacker
BIN-crypter
BoxedApp Packer 3.3 (26 July 2015 (2015-07-26)) Proprietary Yes
CExe 1.0b (20 July 2001 (2001-07-20)) GPL No
Crinkler 2.3 (22 July 2020 (2020-07-22)) Zlib Yes
dotBundle 1.3 (4 April 2013 (2013-04-04))[15] Proprietary Yes
Enigma Protector 6.60 (21 August 2019 (2019-08-21))[16] Proprietary Yes
Enigma Virtual Box 9.40 (10 October 2019 (2019-10-10))[16] Proprietary Yes
exe32pack
EXE Bundle 3.11 (7 January 2011 (2011-01-07))[17] Proprietary ?
EXECryptor
EXE Stealth 4.14 (29 June 2011 (2011-06-29))[17] Proprietary ?
eXPressor 1.8.0.1 (14 January 2010 (2010-01-14)) Proprietary ?
FSG 2.0 (24 May 2004 (2004-05-24))[18] Freeware No
kkrunchy src 0.23a4 (Unknown) Public domain No
MEW 1.1 (Unknown) Freeware No
MPRESS 2.19 (2 January 2012 (2012-01-02)) Freeware Yes
MuCruncher
NeoLite
NsPack
Obsidium 1.6 (11 April 2017 (2017-04-11))[19] Proprietary Yes
PECompact
PEPack
PESpin 1.33 (3 May 2011 (2011-05-03)) Freeware Yes
Petite 2.4 (22 September 2016 (2016-09-22)) Freeware No
PKLite32
RLPack Basic 1.21 (31 October 2008 (2008-10-31)) GPL No
Shrinker32
Smart Packer Pro X 2.0.0.1 (3 June 2019 (2019-06-03)) Proprietary Yes
Themida/WinLicense 3.0 (24 October 2019 (2019-10-24)) Proprietary Yes
Upack
UPX 3.96 (23 January 2020 (2020-01-23)) GPL experimental
VMProtect 3.4 (3 August 2019 (2019-08-03)) Proprietary Yes
WWPack32 1.20 (19 June 2000 (2000-06-19)) No
XComp/XPack 0.98 (18 February 2007 (2007-02-18)) Freeware No
Yoda's Crypte
YZPack

ELF files edit

Known executable compressors for ELF files:

  • gzexe (uses a shell script stub and gzip, works on most Unix-like systems)
  • HASP Envelope
  • UPX
  • 624 (for Linux/386)[20]

CLI assembly files edit

Known executable compressors for CLI assembly files:

  • .NETZ
  • NsPack
  • Mpress
  • HASP Envelope
  • dotBundle
  • Exepack.NET
  • DotProtect:[21] Commercial protector/packer for .net and mono. Features on-line verifications and "industry standard encryption".

Mac OS Classic applications edit

Executable compressors for Mac OS Classic applications:

  • Application VISE[22]
  • StuffIt InstallerMaker

Mach-O (Apple Mac OS X) files edit

Known executable compressors for Mach-O (Apple Mac OS X) files:

  • HASP Envelope
  • UPX
  • VMProtect

Commodore 64 and VIC-20 edit

Known executable compressors for executables on the Commodore 64 and VIC-20:

Amiga edit

Known executable compressors for executables on the Amiga series:

Java edit

Known executable compressors for Java:

JAR files:

WAR files:

  • HASP Envelope

JavaScript edit

There are two types of compression that can be applied to JavaScript scripts:

  • Reduce the redundancy in the script (by removing comments, white space and shorten variable and functions names). This does not alter the behavior of the script.
  • Compress the original script and create a new script that contains decompression code and compressed data. This is similar to binary executable compression.

Self-decompressing compressors edit

These compress the original script and output a new script that has a decompressor and compressed data.

  • JsSfx
  • Packify

Redundancy reducing compressors edit

These remove white space, remove comments, and shorten variable and function names but do not alter the behavior of the script.

  • Packer
  • YUI compressor
  • Shrinksafe
  • JSMin

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gielen, Pierre; Taylor, Johnathan (1997) [1993]. Logan, Wolverine (ed.). "PMarc help manual". Archived from the original on 2019-04-22. Retrieved 2019-02-22. […] PMEXE.CPM […] is a module […] in combination with PMARC […] used to make executable compressed COM files (just like LZEXE or PKLITE […] type: PMARC <archive>.COM=PMEXE2.CPM <filename> [options] The archive-name must be .COM […] not .PMA. The output file will have the extension .CPM. It's an MSX-DOS COM file […] rename file […] to run it […]
  2. ^ "Expert Report of Robert B. K. Dewar In Response To The Report Of Kenneth D. Crews". Cambridge University Press et al v. Patton et al, Filing 124, Supplemental Initial Disclosures by Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, Inc., Sage Publications, Inc. - Cambridge University Press, Oxfort University Press, Inc., and Sage Publications, Inc. v. Mark P. Becker, Georgia State University President, et al, Civil Action No. 1:08-CV-1425-ODE (Court document). United States District Court For The Northern District Of Georgia, Atlanta Division. p. 18. Exhibit A. from the original on 2018-05-01. Retrieved 2019-04-23. […] SPACEMAKER and TERMULATOR, commodity software for IBM PC (PC DOS file compression utility and VT-100 emulator), being marketed by Realia, Inc. R.B.K. Dewar (1982–1983), 8088 assembly language, 8,000 lines […]
  3. ^ Realia, Inc. (January 1983). "If you use DOS, you need this program". PC Magazine (advertisement). 2 (9). Ziff-Davis Publishing: 417. Archived from the original on 2019-04-22. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
  4. ^ a b Dewar, Robert Berriedale Keith (1984-03-13). "DOS 3.1 ASMB (Another Silly Microsoft Bug)". info-ibmpc@USC-ISIB.ARPA. from the original on 2018-05-01. Retrieved 2019-04-23. […] The /E option of the linker should generate an EXE file which is logically equivalent to the uncompressed EXE file. The current version […] results in AX being clobbered. AX on entry to an EXE file has a definite meaning (it indicates drive validity for the parameters), thus it should be passed through to the uncompressed image. Given this one very obvious violation of the interface rules, there may be others, I have not bothered to investigate further […] I did write the Realia SpaceMaker program which does a similar sort of thing to the EXEPACK option (but needless to say does not have this particular […]
  5. ^ a b Paul, Matthias R. (2002-10-07) [2000]. "Re: masm .com (PSP) related trouble". Newsgroup: alt.lang.asm. Archived from the original on 2017-09-03. Retrieved 2017-09-03.}
  6. ^ Necasek, Michal (2018-04-30). "Realia SpaceMaker". OS/2 Museum. from the original on 2019-01-27. Retrieved 2019-02-22.
  7. ^ Parsons, Jeff (2019-01-10). "An Update on Early Norton Utilities". PCjs. from the original on 2019-01-29. Retrieved 2019-02-22.
  8. ^ Necasek, Michal (2019-01-12). "Yep, Norton Did It". OS/2 Museum. from the original on 2019-04-22. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
  9. ^ a b Necasek, Michal (2018-03-23). "EXEPACK and the A20-Gate". OS/2 Museum. from the original on 2018-11-13. Retrieved 2019-04-20.
  10. ^ Miles, Ya'akov; Nather, Ed (1986-05-17) [1986-02-05, 1986-02-09]. "Undocumented Microsoft LINK option: /E". INFO-IBMPC mailing list. from the original on 2018-05-01. Retrieved 2019-04-26. [Miles:] There exists an undocumented […] switch to Microsoft LINK.EXE […], which will cause an automatic compaction during binding. This process will eliminate storage for uninitialized arrays from the .EXE file produced by the linker […] To use this feature, specify the /E option to the command line […] [Nather:] The option does not exist in MS Link versions 3.00 and 3.01 [Miles:] By comparing the sizes of the (packed) files generated from LINK ver 3.02 and the /E option with the size of the .EXE file manually packed with […] EXEPACK, I have come to the conclusion that LINK ver 3.02 option /E generates EXACTLY the same size file as manually running EXEPACK on a regular .EXE file output by LINK […]
  11. ^ Bellard, Fabrice (2003-02-09). "LZEXE home page". bellard.org. from the original on 2019-03-24. Retrieved 2019-03-18.
  12. ^ a b c Salomon, David (2000) [1998]. "Chapter 3.22: EXE Compressors". Data Compression: The Complete Reference (2 ed.). Springer-Verlag. p. 212. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-86092-8. ISBN 978-3-540-78086-1. S2CID 35889155. Retrieved 2019-04-26.
  13. ^ Paul, Matthias R. (2002-04-11). "Re: [fd-dev] ANNOUNCE: CuteMouse 2.0 alpha 1". freedos-dev. from the original on 2020-02-21. Retrieved 2020-02-21. […] > no one packer may pack combos like .SYS+.COM or .SYS+.EXE. […] There are packers for .COM or .EXE and others for .SYS, but I too have not seen a packer which supports both in one. […] possibility to combine a program/TSR and device driver in .EXE files […] and a program/TSR.COM and device driver into a .COM program […] It might also be possible to add another self-made stub to the file, after it has already been compressed […] all the compressed DR-DOS device drivers use a similar technique to let the normal PKLITE .COM decompressor work with .SYS files (meanwhile PKLITE supports a similar feature for .SYS files itself). […] (NB. PKLITE 1.50 (1995) and higher gained the capability to compress device drivers, but not combined COM+SYS drivers.)
  14. ^ "Google Code Archive - Long-term storage for Google Code Project Hosting".
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-08-21. Retrieved 2013-05-06.
  16. ^ a b "Software Protection, Software Licensing, Software Virtualization".
  17. ^ a b "WebtoolMaster Software News".
  18. ^ . www.xtreeme.prv.pl. Archived from the original on 2004-05-25. Retrieved 2022-01-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  19. ^ "Download | Obsidium Software Protection System".
  20. ^ "624".
  21. ^ DotProtect http://site.yvansoftware.be/dotpacker1_0 22 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ Kiene, Steve; Mark, Dave (1999). "A Chat With Steve Kiene". MacTech. Vol. 15, no. 4. Retrieved 2017-12-10.
  23. ^ . www.cs.tut.fi. Archived from the original on 2014-07-30. Retrieved 2022-01-15.
  24. ^ web.comhem.se/~u13114991/exo/
  25. ^ "ByteBoozer (PC)".
  26. ^ a b c "Crunchers to download".
  27. ^ "Askeksa/Shrinkler". GitHub. 2021-09-25.
  28. ^ "PackFire v1.2k by Neural".

executable, compression, popcom, redirects, here, music, fair, popkomm, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sourc. POPCOM redirects here For the music fair see Popkomm This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Executable compression news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Executable compression is any means of compressing an executable file and combining the compressed data with decompression code into a single executable When this compressed executable is executed the decompression code recreates the original code from the compressed code before executing it In most cases this happens transparently so the compressed executable can be used in exactly the same way as the original Executable compressors are often referred to as executable packers runtime packers software packers software protectors or even polymorphic packers and obfuscating tools A compressed executable can be considered a self extracting archive where a compressed executable is packaged along with the relevant decompression code in an executable file Some compressed executables can be decompressed to reconstruct the original program file without being directly executed Two programs that can be used to do this are CUP386 and UNP citation needed Most compressed executables decompress the original code in memory and most require slightly more memory to run because they need to store the decompressor code the compressed data and the decompressed code Moreover some compressed executables have additional requirements such as those that write the decompressed executable to the file system before executing it Executable compression is not limited to binary executables but can also be applied to scripts such as JavaScript Because most scripting languages are designed to work on human readable code which has a high redundancy compression can be very effective and as simple as replacing long names used to identify variables and functions with shorter versions and or removing white space Contents 1 Advantages and disadvantages 2 List of executable packers 2 1 CP M and MSX DOS executable 2 2 MS DOS executable 2 3 OS 2 executable 2 4 New Executable 2 5 Portable Executable 2 6 ELF files 2 7 CLI assembly files 2 8 Mac OS Classic applications 2 9 Mach O Apple Mac OS X files 2 10 Commodore 64 and VIC 20 2 11 Amiga 2 12 Java 2 13 JavaScript 2 13 1 Self decompressing compressors 2 13 2 Redundancy reducing compressors 3 See also 4 ReferencesAdvantages and disadvantages editSoftware distributors use executable compression for a variety of reasons primarily to reduce the secondary storage requirements of their software as executable compressors are specifically designed to compress executable code they often achieve better compression ratio than standard data compression facilities such as gzip zip or bzip2 citation needed This allows software distributors to stay within the constraints of their chosen distribution media such as CD ROM DVD ROM or floppy disk or to reduce the time and bandwidth customers require to access software distributed via the Internet Executable compression is also frequently used to deter reverse engineering or to obfuscate the contents of the executable for example to hide the presence of malware from antivirus scanners by proprietary methods of compression and or added encryption Executable compression can be used to prevent direct disassembly mask string literals and modify signatures Although this does not eliminate the chance of reverse engineering it can make the process more costly A compressed executable requires less storage space in the file system thus less time to transfer data from the file system into memory On the other hand it requires some time to decompress the data before execution begins However the speed of various storage media has not kept up with average processor speeds so the storage is very often the bottleneck Thus the compressed executable will load faster on most common systems On modern desktop computers this is rarely noticeable unless the executable is unusually big so loading speed is not a primary reason for or against compressing an executable On operating systems which page executable images on demand from the disk compressed executables make this process less efficient The decompressor stub allocates a block of memory to hold the decompressed data which stays allocated as long as the executable stays loaded whether it is used or not competing for memory resources with other applications all along If the operating system uses a swap file the decompressed data has to be written to it to free up the memory instead of simply discarding unused data blocks and reloading them from the executable image if needed again This is usually not noticeable but it becomes a problem when an executable is loaded more than once at the same time the operating system cannot reuse data blocks it has already loaded the data has to be decompressed into a new memory block and will be swapped out independently if not used The additional storage and time requirements mean that it has to be weighed carefully whether to compress executables which are typically run more than once at the same time Another disadvantage is that some utilities can no longer identify run time library dependencies as only the statically linked extractor stub is visible Also some older virus scanners simply report all compressed executables as viruses because the decompressor stubs share some characteristics with those Most modern virus scanners can unpack several different executable compression layers to check the actual executable inside but some popular anti virus and anti malware scanners have had troubles with false positive alarms on compressed executables In an attempt to solve the problem of malware obfuscated with the help of runtime packers the IEEE Industry Connections Security Group has introduced a software taggant system Executable compression used to be more popular when computers were limited to the storage capacity of floppy disks which were both slow and low capacity media and small hard drives it allowed the computer to store more software in the same amount of space without the inconvenience of having to manually unpack an archive file every time the user wanted to use the software However executable compression has become less popular because of increased storage capacity on computers It has its use in the demoscene where demos have to stay within a size limit e g 64k intro Only very sophisticated compression formats which add to load time keep an executable small enough to enter these competitions List of executable packers editCP M and MSX DOS executable edit Known executable compressors for CP M 80 MSX DOS COM files PMexe since 1990 written by Yoshihiko Mino PMARC COM PMEXE CPM signature pms 1 PopCom since 1992 written by Yoshihiko Mino POPCOM COM signature pc1 MS DOS executable edit Known executable compressors for MS DOS compatible executable files COM or EXE Realia Spacemaker since 1982 written by Robert B K Dewar SM COM signature MEMORY 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Microsoft EXEPACK since 1985 written by Reuben Borman EXEPACK EXE LINK EXE E XEPACK signature RB 9 5 4 10 LZEXE since 1989 written by Fabrice Bellard LZEXE EXE 11 12 PKWare PKLite since 1990 written by Phil Katz PKLITE EXE 12 13 DIET since 1991 written by Teddy Matsumoto DIET EXE 12 TINYPROG TINYPROG EXE RJS Software RJCRUSH since 1994 written by Roland Skinner RJCRUSH EXE XPA since 1995 written by JauMing Tseng XPA EXE Ibsen Software aPACK since 1997 written by Jorgen Ibsen APACK EXE UPX since 1998 written by Markus F X J Oberhumer and Laszlo Molnar 32LiTE since 1998 written by Oleg Prokhorov 32LITE EXE Knowledge Dynamics LZW Compressor 14 WWpack since 1994 written by Piotr Warezak and Rafal Wierzbicki WWPACK EXE 624 only for COM files smaller than 25 KB uses LZW AINEXE AvPack ComPAck HASP Envelope LGLZ PMWLITE ProPack UCEXE WDOSX XE XPackOS 2 executable edit Known executable compressors under OS 2 NeLite LxLiteNew Executable edit Known executable compressors for New Executables PackWin PKWare PKLite from version 2 01 WinLitePortable Executable edit Known executable compressors for Portable Executables Note Clients in purple are no longer in development Name Latest stable Software license x86 64 support32LiteAlienyze 1 4 17 August 2020 2020 08 17 Proprietary NoANDpakk2Armadillo 9 62 7 June 2013 2013 06 07 Proprietary YesASPack 2 40 7 December 2018 2018 12 07 Proprietary YesASPR ASProtect 2 78 7 December 2018 2018 12 07 Proprietary YesBeRoEXEPackerBIN crypterBoxedApp Packer 3 3 26 July 2015 2015 07 26 Proprietary YesCExe 1 0b 20 July 2001 2001 07 20 GPL NoCrinkler 2 3 22 July 2020 2020 07 22 Zlib YesdotBundle 1 3 4 April 2013 2013 04 04 15 Proprietary YesEnigma Protector 6 60 21 August 2019 2019 08 21 16 Proprietary YesEnigma Virtual Box 9 40 10 October 2019 2019 10 10 16 Proprietary Yesexe32packEXE Bundle 3 11 7 January 2011 2011 01 07 17 Proprietary EXECryptorEXE Stealth 4 14 29 June 2011 2011 06 29 17 Proprietary eXPressor 1 8 0 1 14 January 2010 2010 01 14 Proprietary FSG 2 0 24 May 2004 2004 05 24 18 Freeware Nokkrunchy src 0 23a4 Unknown Public domain NoMEW 1 1 Unknown Freeware NoMPRESS 2 19 2 January 2012 2012 01 02 Freeware YesMuCruncherNeoLiteNsPackObsidium 1 6 11 April 2017 2017 04 11 19 Proprietary YesPECompactPEPackPESpin 1 33 3 May 2011 2011 05 03 Freeware YesPetite 2 4 22 September 2016 2016 09 22 Freeware NoPKLite32RLPack Basic 1 21 31 October 2008 2008 10 31 GPL NoShrinker32Smart Packer Pro X 2 0 0 1 3 June 2019 2019 06 03 Proprietary YesThemida WinLicense 3 0 24 October 2019 2019 10 24 Proprietary YesUpackUPX 3 96 23 January 2020 2020 01 23 GPL experimentalVMProtect 3 4 3 August 2019 2019 08 03 Proprietary YesWWPack32 1 20 19 June 2000 2000 06 19 NoXComp XPack 0 98 18 February 2007 2007 02 18 Freeware NoYoda s CrypteYZPackELF files edit Known executable compressors for ELF files gzexe uses a shell script stub and gzip works on most Unix like systems HASP Envelope UPX 624 for Linux 386 20 CLI assembly files edit Known executable compressors for CLI assembly files NETZ NsPack Mpress HASP Envelope dotBundle Exepack NET DotProtect 21 Commercial protector packer for net and mono Features on line verifications and industry standard encryption Mac OS Classic applications edit Executable compressors for Mac OS Classic applications Application VISE 22 StuffIt InstallerMakerMach O Apple Mac OS X files edit Known executable compressors for Mach O Apple Mac OS X files HASP Envelope UPX VMProtectCommodore 64 and VIC 20 edit Known executable compressors for executables on the Commodore 64 and VIC 20 PuCrunch 23 Exomizer 24 ByteBoozer 25 Amiga edit Known executable compressors for executables on the Amiga series powerpacker 26 Titanics cruncher 26 imploder 26 TNM cruncher Shrinkler 27 PackFire 28 Java edit Known executable compressors for Java JAR files HASP Envelope pack200 ProGuardWAR files HASP EnvelopeJavaScript edit There are two types of compression that can be applied to JavaScript scripts Reduce the redundancy in the script by removing comments white space and shorten variable and functions names This does not alter the behavior of the script Compress the original script and create a new script that contains decompression code and compressed data This is similar to binary executable compression Self decompressing compressors edit These compress the original script and output a new script that has a decompressor and compressed data JsSfx PackifyRedundancy reducing compressors edit These remove white space remove comments and shorten variable and function names but do not alter the behavior of the script Packer YUI compressor Shrinksafe JSMinSee also editDisk compression RAM compression Kolmogorov complexity Self modifying code Self relocating code Self extracting archive Self booting diskReferences edit Gielen Pierre Taylor Johnathan 1997 1993 Logan Wolverine ed PMarc help manual Archived from the original on 2019 04 22 Retrieved 2019 02 22 PMEXE CPM is a module in combination with PMARC used to make executable compressed COM files just like LZEXE or PKLITE type PMARC lt archive gt COM PMEXE2 CPM lt filename gt options The archive name must be COM not PMA The output file will have the extension CPM It s an MSX DOS COM file rename file to run it Expert Report of Robert B K Dewar In Response To The Report Of Kenneth D Crews Cambridge University Press et al v Patton et al Filing 124 Supplemental Initial Disclosures by Cambridge University Press Oxford University Press Inc Sage Publications Inc Cambridge University Press Oxfort University Press Inc and Sage Publications Inc v Mark P Becker Georgia State University President et al Civil Action No 1 08 CV 1425 ODE Court document United States District Court For The Northern District Of Georgia Atlanta Division p 18 Exhibit A Archived from the original on 2018 05 01 Retrieved 2019 04 23 SPACEMAKER and TERMULATOR commodity software for IBM PC PC DOS file compression utility and VT 100 emulator being marketed by Realia Inc R B K Dewar 1982 1983 8088 assembly language 8 000 lines Realia Inc January 1983 If you use DOS you need this program PC Magazine advertisement 2 9 Ziff Davis Publishing 417 Archived from the original on 2019 04 22 Retrieved 2019 04 22 a b Dewar Robert Berriedale Keith 1984 03 13 DOS 3 1 ASMB Another Silly Microsoft Bug info ibmpc USC ISIB ARPA Archived from the original on 2018 05 01 Retrieved 2019 04 23 The E option of the linker should generate an EXE file which is logically equivalent to the uncompressed EXE file The current version results in AX being clobbered AX on entry to an EXE file has a definite meaning it indicates drive validity for the parameters thus it should be passed through to the uncompressed image Given this one very obvious violation of the interface rules there may be others I have not bothered to investigate further I did write the Realia SpaceMaker program which does a similar sort of thing to the EXEPACK option but needless to say does not have this particular a b Paul Matthias R 2002 10 07 2000 Re masm com PSP related trouble Newsgroup alt lang asm Archived from the original on 2017 09 03 Retrieved 2017 09 03 Necasek Michal 2018 04 30 Realia SpaceMaker OS 2 Museum Archived from the original on 2019 01 27 Retrieved 2019 02 22 Parsons Jeff 2019 01 10 An Update on Early Norton Utilities PCjs Archived from the original on 2019 01 29 Retrieved 2019 02 22 Necasek Michal 2019 01 12 Yep Norton Did It OS 2 Museum Archived from the original on 2019 04 22 Retrieved 2019 04 22 a b Necasek Michal 2018 03 23 EXEPACK and the A20 Gate OS 2 Museum Archived from the original on 2018 11 13 Retrieved 2019 04 20 Miles Ya akov Nather Ed 1986 05 17 1986 02 05 1986 02 09 Undocumented Microsoft LINK option E INFO IBMPC mailing list Archived from the original on 2018 05 01 Retrieved 2019 04 26 Miles There exists an undocumented switch to Microsoft LINK EXE which will cause an automatic compaction during binding This process will eliminate storage for uninitialized arrays from the EXE file produced by the linker To use this feature specify the E option to the command line Nather The option does not exist in MS Link versions 3 00 and 3 01 Miles By comparing the sizes of the packed files generated from LINK ver 3 02 and the E option with the size of the EXE file manually packed with EXEPACK I have come to the conclusion that LINK ver 3 02 option E generates EXACTLY the same size file as manually running EXEPACK on a regular EXE file output by LINK Bellard Fabrice 2003 02 09 LZEXE home page bellard org Archived from the original on 2019 03 24 Retrieved 2019 03 18 a b c Salomon David 2000 1998 Chapter 3 22 EXE Compressors Data Compression The Complete Reference 2 ed Springer Verlag p 212 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 86092 8 ISBN 978 3 540 78086 1 S2CID 35889155 Retrieved 2019 04 26 Paul Matthias R 2002 04 11 Re fd dev ANNOUNCE CuteMouse 2 0 alpha 1 freedos dev Archived from the original on 2020 02 21 Retrieved 2020 02 21 gt no one packer may pack combos like SYS COM or SYS EXE There are packers for COM or EXE and others for SYS but I too have not seen a packer which supports both in one possibility to combine a program TSR and device driver in EXE files and a program TSR COM and device driver into a COM program It might also be possible to add another self made stub to the file after it has already been compressed all the compressed DR DOS device drivers use a similar technique to let the normal PKLITE COM decompressor work with SYS files meanwhile PKLITE supports a similar feature for SYS files itself NB PKLITE 1 50 1995 and higher gained the capability to compress device drivers but not combined COM SYS drivers Google Code Archive Long term storage for Google Code Project Hosting DotBundle Download an evaluation version Archived from the original on 2013 08 21 Retrieved 2013 05 06 a b Software Protection Software Licensing Software Virtualization a b WebtoolMaster Software News Archived copy www xtreeme prv pl Archived from the original on 2004 05 25 Retrieved 2022 01 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Download Obsidium Software Protection System 624 DotProtect http site yvansoftware be dotpacker1 0 Archived 22 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine Kiene Steve Mark Dave 1999 A Chat With Steve Kiene MacTech Vol 15 no 4 Retrieved 2017 12 10 Lossless Data Compression Program Hybrid LZ77 RLE www cs tut fi Archived from the original on 2014 07 30 Retrieved 2022 01 15 web comhem se u13114991 exo ByteBoozer PC a b c Crunchers to download Askeksa Shrinkler GitHub 2021 09 25 PackFire v1 2k by Neural Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Executable compression amp oldid 1209133415 EXEPACK, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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