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UPDATE.TXT, ARJ 2.62d BETA TEST RELEASE February 1999
This documents new or updated information since ARJ 2.60.
Please refer to UPDATE.TXT in ARJ 2.60 for more information.
YOU SHOULD REFER TO THE ARJ WEBSITE REGULARLY TO CHECK FOR PROBLEM
REPORTS AND PROGRAM UPDATES.
http://www.arjsoftware.com
** IMPORTANT NEWS ****************************************************
This is a public PRE-RELEASE TEST VERSION of ARJ 2.62d. You should
only use this version for TESTING PURPOSES. This version is NOT
intended for new ARJ users. Only experienced ARJ users should
test this program.
Please keep in mind that this is a PRE-RELEASE TEST version and
may have program bugs. You should backup your computer data
before using this program and should do so often while using this
program.
Several users have reported that various releases of ARJ have
caused VIRUS ALARMS from certain versions of Norton AntiVirus for
Windows software. This release and all previous releases have
been checked by IBM, Norton, McAfee virus scanners.
** THIS RELEASE USES AN ENHANCED ARJ ARCHIVE HEADER FORMAT **
** COMPATIBLE WITH PREVIOUS VERSIONS OF ARJ. HOWEVER, **
** SOME THIRD PARTY ARCHIVER MENU PROGRAMS MAY NOT BE **
** COMPATIBLE WITH ARCHIVES PRODUCED BY THIS ARJ VERSION. **
The ARJ file header has been lengthened by a number of bytes to
support additional file properties. The new "-j$" option will
disable this new header enhancement.
It is STRONGLY RECOMMENDED that you run the TESTARJ.BAT batch file
to verify that this version of ARJ.EXE is working correctly.
You should also test out your favorite functions.
Please do report any issues that you encounter with this new
version. Some problems such as the rare hang with the -hm option
have only been reported two times in six months. In fact, a
problem with percent symbols in filenames has been reported once
since 1991.
We are also interested in your comments concerning these new
features.
The name of our company is ARJ Software, Inc.
ARJ Software, Inc. is now marketing two archiver products, ARJ and
JAR (JAR16/JAR32). JAR produces "J" archives which are not
compatible with ARJ. The 32 bit version of JAR (JAR32) supports
the Windows NT operating system version 3.50 and above as well as
Windows 95/98.
We have developed the new archiver, JAR, so that we could provide
state of the art data compression with solid archiving techniques
and new compression algorithms. These improvements could not be
added to ARJ without introducing serious compatibility issues with
older releases of ARJ. JAR16/32 compresses significantly better
than ARJ and PKZIP for many files and provides long filename
support for both Windows 95 and Windows NT. JAR16/32 duplicates
many of ARJ's powerful functionality and provides new original
functionality. However, it does not duplicate ARJ and it requires
more system resources (memory and cpu power) to run. It also is
harder for third party archiver software to support. There are
very few JAR add-ons. See our web site for a copy of this
archiver.
Please note that ARJ is our MAIN product and it is our intention
to continue supporting and enhancing the ARJ product. A
significant number of new features have been added to ARJ in the
past year. ARJ has the advantages of a large installed base, a
simple archive format, significant third party software support,
and a long history of reliable performance. We also plan to
provide ARJ support for Windows.
A 32 BIT CONSOLE VERSION OF ARJ FOR WINDOWS 95/98 AND WINDOWS NT
IS AVAILABLE FOR TESTING.
This ARJ version has been changed with regard to the storage of
the SFX modules and the built-in help information. The change now
requires that MS-DOS 3.0 and above be used to access the SFX
modules and the help information. Under DOS 2.11, the help
screens and self-extractor creation will work if ARJ.EXE is
located in the CURRENT directory. This change frees up more
conventional memory for ARJ use.
The mailing address of ARJ Software, Inc. has changed as of
August 1993.
ARJ Software, Inc.
P.O. Box 249
Norwood MA 02062
USA
FAX: 781-769-4893
EMAIL: robjung@world.std.com
There is ARJ WEB site support information added to the file
ARJ.TXT. It is excerpted below:
http://www.ARJSOFTWARE.com (ARJ homepage)
http://www.Dunkel.de/ARJ (German and English)
http://www.glo.be/tsf (French and English)
You can find information about the world of ARJ on the Internet by
using various search sites including www.altavista.com,
www.yahoo.com, and www.dejanews.com.
Our credit card ordering procedures have changed. We now process
credit cards directly.
**********************************************************************
ARJ YEAR 2000 COMPLIANCE STATEMENT
The program ARJ is YEAR 2000 compliant and will not produce errors
processing date data in connection with the year change from
December 31, 1999 to January 1, 2000 or with the leap year factor
from February 28, 2000 to February 29, 2000 when used with accurate
date data. This statement applies to ARJ versions 2.30, 2.41a,
2.50a, 2.60, and versions under development.
No special user changes or activities are required for this
compliance. No programming or configuration changes are required
either.
Disclaimer: The Statement of Compliance refers to ARJ products as
delivered by ARJ Software, Inc. The Compliance Statement does not
apply to third party add-on features or products. The Compliance
statement does not constitute a warranty or extend the terms of any
existing warranty.
This statement supersedes all previous ARJ year 2000 compliance
statements.
ARJ YEAR 2000 IMPROVEMENTS
This version of ARJ has been modified to allow the specification
of the century for the ARJ date options "-o" and "-ob". Prior to
this version, the ARJ date options would accept a date in the form
of YYMMDD. With this version, ARJ will accept dates in both
YYMMDD and YYYYMMDD formats. ARJ will presume that any year
specifications beginning with 19, 20, and 21 are YYYY type
specifications and any year specifications beginning with 80, 81,
82 ... 99 are YY type specifications.
Example: -o980105 -> on or after Jan 5, 1998
-o19980105 -> on or after Jan 5, 1998
-o100105 -> on or after Jan 5, 2010
-o20100105 -> on or after Jan 5, 2010
-o201001051200 -> on or after Jan 5, 2010 12:00 P.M.
WINDOWS 98 SUPPORT
ARJ 2.62 supports Windows 98. In this document, references to
Windows 95 support ALSO INCLUDE Windows 98 support.
LONG FILENAME SUPPORT
ARJ versions 2.60 and above support long filenames ONLY in the
Windows 95/98 graphical environment. ARJ 2.6x does NOT support
long filenames in Windows NT, NTFS, or OS/2. ARJ is a DOS program
that uses the special DOS hooks available in Windows 95/98 to
access the long filenames. This means that long filename support
will not be available via some software driver add-ons if they do
not provide the necessary DOS hooks.
In development is a 32 bit console mode version of ARJ that
supports Win 95/98 and Win NT long filenames. It is available for
public testing and comment as a test release. The 32 bit version
will provide full long filename support wherever Windows itself
supports long filenames. This is not always the case for the DOS
version of ARJ.
REMINDER: When specifying filenames with embedded blanks or
symbols like ">", "<", or "|" on the command line, you MUST quote
the filenames. Example: "Program Files\*.*"
When specifying a target directory name that contains spaces, you
must quote the directory name. If the name specification ends in
a "\" backslash (needed for a non-existent directory), you must
insert a space after the "\". Alternatively, you can use the
"-ht" option.
Example: ARJ x archive "C:\Program Files\ " or
ARJ x archive "-htC:\Program Files"
In addition, ARJ 2.62 supports the Win95 file properties date-time
accessed and date-time created. This support results in slightly
larger archives. The "-j$" option can be used to disable this new
feature. ARJ does not support the file attributes of TEMPORARY or
COMPRESSED.
WINDOWS LONG FILENAME LABELING
A very noticeable change is how ARJ archives files within Windows
95/98. In 2.60, ARJ would label/mark all files saved in Windows
95 as Windows long filename files. In 2.61 and above, ARJ will
label as Windows long filename files only those files whose
Windows 95 filename is different from its MS-DOS filename.
"NAME.txt" is NOT the same as "NAME.TXT" because of case. As an
aid, ARJ will display the count of long filenames encountered when
adding files or listing an archive. The longname test is done
based upon the filename or pathname specified by the user.
Filenames within a longname directory would not necessarily be
labeled as Windows long filenames if the filename specification
excluded the directory name.
The new "-hf4" option will set ARJ to label all files saved under
Windows 95 as Windows long filenames (as in 2.60).
To help locate Windows 95 files within an archive, ARJ has a new
"w" option for the "-hb" option. For extraction, deletion, and
listing, the "-hbw" option will select only files that are marked
as Windows long filenames files. This option is non-functional
for adding or updating files. It is limited to selecting files
within an existing archive. This option is useful when extracting
an archive in MS-DOS and encountering one or more "Requires Win95
or -hf...." error messages. The user would be able to view the
files that are affected and take appropriate actions.
Example: ARJ x archive *.* (assume some Win95 errors)
ARJ x archive *.* -hf1
Windows 95/98 DOS support (and therefore ARJ) do not support
access to long filenames containing certain characters. For
example, a filename containing the copyright symbol or the
trademark symbol cannot be accessed in a Win95 DOS window with the
COPY command or with ARJ. These type of filenames can only be
accessed via their short names. The Win95 system normally stores
filename characters as two bytes per symbol allowing an alphabet
of 65536 possible symbols. Because Win95 DOS only uses one byte
per character position allowing only a 256 symbol alphabet, many
characters are displayed by Win95 DOS as "_".
COMPATIBILITY WITH ARJ32
With this release, a new program ARJ32 for Windows 95/98/NT has
been released for alpha level testing. ARJ32 has been designed to
support the Windows 32 bit environment. It is generally
compatible with ARJ for DOS (2.xx). However, ARJ32 has an option
to use the ANSI codepage to access the file system instead of the
default OEM codepage. This ANSI codepage option would most likely
be chosen by users using languages containing foreign symbols.
Archives created using the ANSI codepage may not be processed
correctly by ARJ for DOS because of a filename translation issue
(ANSI to OEM codepage). Special symbols and foreign characters
may not be translated correctly. In addition, ANSIPAGE archives
have an additional compatibility issue with versions of ARJ from
2.30 and earlier. Those versions will treat ANSI codepage
archives as CORRUPTED ARJ-SECURED archives. This should not be
an issue since ANSI codepage archives should not be processed by
ARJ for DOS. ARJ 2.62c and above will not process such an archive
unless the "-hy" option is specified.
ARJSFX/ARJSFXV POST EXTRACTION EXECUTION OPTION
For software distributors, this version of ARJ provides for the
execution of a command after self-extraction. The ARJSFX and
ARJSFXV modules support the execution of a command after a
successful extraction.
The ARJSFX and ARJSFXV modules support the "-!" option which
allows the user to build a self-extractor which will execute a
command after its files are successfully extracted.
This option is most useful with the embedded command line feature.
The command must not contain any blanks if it is used in the
embedded command line. If a target directory is specified, the
target directory will be set as the working directory for the
post-extraction command.
Example: )) C:\DIR\ -!SETUP.EXE
The above example will cause the command "SETUP.EXE" to
be executed in the directory C:\DIR.
Please note that the user will always be prompted by the
self-extractor for permission to execute this command. This
prompt is disabled for ARJ-SECURED self-extracting archives.
ARJSFX/ARJSFXV VIRUS CHECK
Both the ARJSFX and ARJSFXV self-extractors now perform a simple
virus damage check before processing the self-extractor's archive.
If damage is detected, the self-extractor will abort with an error
message indicating possible damage.
This check will not work against a virus designed specifically to
attack ARJ self-extractors.
The ARJSFX self-extractor has a "-s" option to skip this virus
check. The ARJSFXV self-extractor has a "-a" option to skip the
virus check. You can include the above skip option as part of
a custom built-in command line.
ARJSFX/ARJSFXV VERIFY BEFORE EXTRACTION OPTION
Both the ARJSFX and ARJSFXV self-extractors now accept the
"-x" and "-t" options simultaneously to enable the testing of an
archive just before extracting the archive.
Example: )) C:\DIR\ -x -t
ARJSFXV PASSWORD PROMPT
A garbled ARJSFXV self-extracting archive will automatically
prompt the user for the password when extracting or testing the
archive.
You must use ARJ 2.61 and above to create the garbled archive as
well as create the ARJSFXV self-extractor.
Example: ARJ a vendor *.* -gpassword -je -v360
NOTE: If you create a garbled archive with ARJ 2.61 and above and
add ungarbled files and then delete the garbled files, ARJ will
continue to mark the archive as a garbled archive. Currently,
only the ARJSFXV module takes note of this marking.
ARJSFXV SUPPORT FOR FILE DTA AND DTC PROPERTIES
The ARJSFXV self-extractor will restore Win95 file date-time
accessed and date-time created properties from an ARJ archive
that contains those file properties. ARJ 2.62 and up can
create such an archive. This feature will only work within
the Win95 GUI environment. The "-j$" option can be used to
disable this support.
ARJ COMMAND LINE SHORTCUT
New to ARJ 2.62 is the expansion of command line directory names
to full wildcard specifications. However, this feature will only
work properly if the first filespec on the command line is NOT a
directory. The ARJ placeholder "..." can be used for that first
filespec. A directory name used as the first filespec will result
in that directory being specified as the TARGET directory and
affecting subsequent filespecs.
Example: ARJ a archive ... DIR1 dir2 dir\dir3
is equivalent to
ARJ a archive DIR1\*.* dir2\*.* dir\dir3\*.*
Example: ARJ a archive DIR1 dir2 dir\dir3
is equivalent to
ARJ a archive DIR1\dir2\*.* DIR1\dir\dir3\*.*
ARJ RESPONSE FILE
ARJ supports the specification of the "-g" and "-g?" options on
the command line along with a response file specification.
Using this feature is more secure than putting a password
specification within an ARJ response file which is written to
disk.
SHAREWARE LIMITATIONS
After ARJ version 2.41a, full functionality of a small set of ARJ
software features will NOT be available in the shareware versions
of ARJ (registered or not). These features include the multiple
volume self-extractor, the ARJSFX embedded command line feature,
and the inhibit display messages option. The full featured
versions will ONLY be available from ARJ Software, Inc. and its
agents. Registered ARJ users can upgrade to this version for a
small shipping/handling fee (five dollars) or a SASE with
diskette.
Check the WHATSNEW.TXT file for changes since ARJ 2.41a.
ENCRYPTION
New to version 2.60 is a new encryption scheme based upon the
Russian encryption algorithm (GOST 28147-89 cipher). This
algorithm is similar in design to DES; however, GOST is designed
for software implementation. GOST 28147-89 uses a 256 bit key and
32 rounds of encryption. In addition, this implementation of GOST
also uses the 64 bit cipher feedback mode.
This new encryption is accessed by using the "-g" option to
specify the password and the "-hg" option to specify the new
scheme. This new scheme is in addition to the older XOR garble
scheme.
The encryption module is a separate COM file named ARJCRYPT.COM.
ARJ expects to find the encryption module in the same directory
as itself. This has the advantage of saving space with the
ARJSFXV module and the DEARJ.EXE module when encryption is not
needed. You simply do not include the encryption module in the
archive when not using encryption.
At ARJ 2.62d, support for a new version of ARJCRYPT.COM has been
added. This new version will support passwords up to 64
characters in length. ARJCRYPT version 1.0 only supports
passwords up to 32 characters in length. Version 2.0 is not
included with this test release. It is available on our website
for download by USA residents. ARJ 2.62d can use either version
of ARJCRYPT.COM.
For non-USA users, the encryption overlay module is not included
with this version of ARJ. Because of USA export regulations,
ARJ Software, Inc. may not export the encryption overlay module
from the USA.
** Please NOTE that losing your password means losing your file!
** Please DO NOT ask for technical support on lost passwords.
** There is no shortcut/backdoor for determining lost passwords.
New to ARJ 2.61 is a limited key size version of GOST encryption.
ARJ 2.61 now provides a "-hg!" option which invokes the built-in
40 bit key version of the Russian GOST encryption algorithm. The
normal GOST algorithm has a 256 bit key size. This limited
encryption is provided to meet USA encryption export rules.
The "l" command will now indicate the type of encryption method
used. See the "l" command below for more details.
ARJ CAUTIONS
Whenever archiving to diskettes, it is HIGHLY recommended that
the option "-jt" be used. This helps spot BAD diskettes or BAD
diskette drives. It is HIGHLY recommended that the "-jt" option
be used in a Windows or multi-tasking or network environment.
In addition, the diskette drive should NOT be read or write
cached. This allows the "-jt" option to work properly. For
Windows 95, ARJ.EXE at 2.61 automatically forces a re-read of
the diskette drive.
The XMS accelerator in Hurricane 2.0 MAY interfere with the use
of the ARJ -hm! option within a Windows DOS box. You can use
the -hm option instead.
UNERASE or UNDELETE commands do not always recover a file/archive
correctly. This will result in damaged archives. This is true
for all archive types. You should always test an archive after
unerasing it.
CAUTION: To those who use the "-t1" and/or "-t1g" options to
save a few extra bytes, this option should only be used on TEXT
FILES. Those are files created by EDLIN, EDIT, QEDIT, BRIEF,
NOTEPAD, and others. Text files typically contain only letters,
numbers, spaces, and punctuation marks. WORD PROCESSOR format
files ARE NOT TEXT FILES! MS WORD, Wordperfect, AMIPRO, WRITE,
and similar files ARE NOT TEXT FILES. Using the "-t1" or "-t1g"
on any other kind of file probably will result in DATA LOSS!
ARJ ERRORLEVELS
ARJ will now return a DOS error code of 11 for a user control break
action. ARJ formerly returned a code of 2 for this situation.
ARJ will now return a DOS error code of 12 when trying to modify a
chapter archive that already has 250 chapters in it. ARJ formerly
returned a code of 2 for this situation.
ARJ COMMANDS
"g" command
At ARJ 2.62d, you can use the -hg or -hg! option to encrypt an
archive using the GOST algorithm. Only archives that are
ungarbled and created with ARJ 2.62 or higher can be garbled with
the -hg or -hg! option.
"l" command
"v" command
ARJ will display the count of files selected within an archive
that have Windows long filenames.
The listing format has been changed to better indicate the century
years. Instead of a "+" symbol to indicate the year 2000, ARJ will
now display a "0" for year 2000, a "1" for the year 2100. This
character appears immediately before the date-time field.
The "v" command will now display Win95 file date-time accessed
and file date-time created properties if they exist in the archive.
As of ARJ 2.62d, the output under the "G" of the BTPMGUX area is
changed. Instead of a simple 1"G" to indicate that the file is
garbled, that field may contain the values "0", "1", "2", "3", or
"4".
"0" indicates XOR garbling (archives created before 2.60).
"1" indicates XOR garbling (archives created at 2.60 and greater).
"2" indicates GOST encryption with a 32 byte password limit.
"3" indicates GOST encryption (ARJCRYPT.COM version 2.0).
"4" indicates 40 byte encryption limit.
ARJ SWITCHES
"-g" switch
The garble option in this version of ARJ has three versions. One
is the original version found in earlier ARJ releases. It is
compatible with older versions and works like those versions.
The second garble version uses a separate encryption module.
This new option is accessed by using the new "-hg" option. This
option sets ARJ to use the separate encryption module to encrypt
the data. By default, ARJ will look for the file "ARJCRYPT.COM"
in the same directory where the ARJ.EXE being executed is found.
The user may specify the pathname of the module to use.
Examples: ARJ a archive *.doc -gThis_is_a_password -hg
ARJ a archive *.doc -gpassword -hgc:\dir\enc.com
The new garble option accepts a password key up to 32 characters
long. Excess characters are ignored. Garble passwords ARE CASE
SENSITIVE! DO NOT LOSE your password! There is no known method to
recover the password other than by brute force, which could take a
very long time. The longer the password, the longer it would take
to "guess" it.
A variation of the "-hg" option is "-hg!". This "-hg!" option
accesses a built-in version of GOST that is limited to a 40 bit
key size. This algorithm is designed to meet USA encryption
export rules.
These new encryption schemes are not compatible with the "-g"
option of pre-2.55 versions of ARJ. If you want to maintain
compatibility with pre-2.55 versions of ARJ, you should NOT use
the "-hg" option.
Only the multiple volume self-extractor supports the new encryption
module.
When garbling or ungarbling an existing archive, ARJ will detect
the method of encryption previously used and select that same
method regardless of whether the "-hg" option is specified or not.
"-oa" switch
The "-oa" and "-oab" switches allow the user to select files under
Windows 95 based upon file date-time last accessed. "-oa" selects
files after the date value, "-oab" selects files before.
This ARJ version does NOT support combining "-o", "-oa", "-oc" with
one another. You CAN combine "-oa" with "-oab".
"-oc" switch
The "-oc" and "-ocb" switches allow the user to select files under
Windows 95 based upon file date-time created. "-oc" selects
files after the date value, "-ocb" selects files before.
"-odb" switch
The "-od" and "-odb" switches allow the user to select files based
upon the number of days from today. The "-odb" switch allows the
user to select files modified before the specified number of days
from today. You CAN combine the "-od" and "-odb" switches.
"-v" switch
New to ARJ 2.61 is a simple delete option "D" when creating volume
archives. For SAFETY REASONS, this delete option is limited in
scope and specification. The exact file or files (via wildcard)
must be specified. A directory name is not sufficient (A:\ or
C:\TEMP). A filename or wildspec is required (A:\*.* or
C:\TEMP\*.TXT). In addition, this delete option does not delete
through (recurse) subdirectories. In other words, this delete
function works similar to the DOS DEL command except that a
filespec is required. ARJ accepts all characters after the "D"
option as the filespec.
Examples: ARJ a a:archive -vada:\*.*
ARJ a testvol -v1440dtestvol.a*
"-h#" switch
This feature has been modified to use only the last two digits of
the year. So the year 2010 will be represented by "10". This
will still provide "uniqueness" for filename generation. Daily
created archives will not collide name-wise for 100 years.
"-hb" switch
This switch is used to select by file attribute or file type.
The "-hb" option can be used to select files by their attributes
(normal, readonly, hidden, system, directory, and archive bit).
"Normal" is defined as files that are NOT the following: readonly,
hidden, system, label, chapter header, or directory. For
extract/list operations, you can also select chapter labels and
volume labels. By default, the "-hb" option by itself selects all
types of files. If you specify a letter symbol representing a file
type, you are selecting ONLY that type of file. You can specify a
series of letters representing all of the file types that you want
to select. For example, the "-hbdr" option selects both
directories and readonly files. Selections are additive.
Example: -hbnr select only normal and readonly files
Single letters represent each attribute or type.
a - archive bit set
b - archive bit clear
h - hidden
r - readonly
s - system
d - directory
n - normal files (not d, h, r, s, l, c)
l - volume label
c - chapter label
f - abbreviation for "ndhrs"
w - Windows long filenames
The archive bit selection ("a" or "b") is a special case. If you
have selected no types of files EXCEPT files with the archive bit
set, ARJ will select from the set of all file types. If you have
selected one or more file types, ARJ will select based upon the
archive bit from the selected set of files types.
Examples: -hbhrsa select hidden, readonly files with archive
bit set
-hba select all files with archive bit set
Add/update options : f, d, r, h, s, n, a, b.
Extract/list options: f, d, r, h, s, n, a, b, c, l, w.
Examples: ARJ a archive *.* -r -hbrs select only readonly
and system files
ARJ a archive *.* -r -hbd store only directories
ARJ l archive *.* -hbr list only readonly files
ARJ l archive -jb* -hbc list chapter headers
Notes: The option "-hb" with no letter options is an abbreviation
for "-hbndhrslc" (all types).
"-hf3" switch
When building a dual-name archive, ARJ will now check for files that
have long filenames inaccessible through MS-DOS. These are
filenames that contain symbols that WIN95/MS-DOS translates into the
underscore "_" symbol. ARJ will display the "Can't open ..." error
message for each such file encountered.
"-hf4" switch
This switch sets ARJ to label all files archived under Windows
as Windows long filenames.
"-hg" switch
This switch is used to specify the filename of the encryption
module to be used when encrypting a new archive. The default
filename is "ARJCRYPT.COM". ARJCRYPT.COM contains a new encryption
scheme that is incompatible with earlier releases of ARJ. ARJ will
look for the encryption module in the directory that contains the
copy ARJ.EXE that is being executed unless the specified module
name contains a path symbol "\" as in "ARJ\OLDCRYPT.COM". If you
want to use a module in the current directory, you should specify
the name as in ".\ARJCRYPT.COM". The "." indicates the current
directory.
With an existing archive, ARJ detects the encryption scheme that
was used to encrypt the archive and uses the same scheme regardless
of whether the "-hg" option is specified or not. However, if you
encrypted with a non-default ARJCRYPT.COM, you must specify the
pathname with the "-hg" option.
"-hg!" switch
This switch is used to specify the use of a built-in 40 bit
version of the Russian GOST encryption algorithm. This algorithm
is limited to a 40 bit key to meet USA encryption export rules.
Any password input to this function will be crunched down to a
40 bit size.
"-hq1" switch
This switch sets ARJ to ignore the error that occurs when ARJ
cannot open a file because it cannot be found during an add-type
command and/or a compare command. This is DOS error code 2.
This option applies only to files being added to a new archive
and/or being compared. For an existing archive, this option
will be ignored during the add operation, but NOT during a
subsequent compare operation.
This open error typically happens when a temporary file that ARJ
has found to archive is purged by another process before ARJ can
actually open and compress/compare it. This is not the same
error as when a user specifies a filename on the command line
and ARJ cannot find it.
This error also occurs in Windows 95 when trying to archive
files with filenames that contain "unusual" symbols. These are
the symbols that have no equivalent in MS-DOS. MS-DOS displays
those symbols as "_" underscore.
If you use the "-ji" option to set up an index file, ARJ will
log any file that it cannot open.
"-hm" switch
At ARJ 2.62c, ARJ will by default set -hm3000. This means that if
you are archiving over 3000 filenames, ARJ will use a disk file to
manage the list of filenames.
"-hy" switch
This switch will set ARJ to allow the extraction of ARJ32 created
archives containing ANSI codepage filenames. ARJ for DOS always
uses the OEM codepage which may translate ANSI codepage filenames
incorrectly or not at all. Filenames containing only alphanumeric
characters and the DOT symbol should be translated correctly.
The default for ARJ32 is the OEM codepage.
"-j#2" switch
This switch will set ARJ to restore the file attributes to the
selected files. No file will be extracted. Archives created
with the "-j#" and "-j#1" options can be used.
"-j#3" switch
This switch will set ARJ to restore the file dates (written,
accessed, created) to the selected files. No file will be
extracted.
"-j#4" switch
This switch will set ARJ to restore the file attributes and the
file dates (written, accessed, created) to the selected files. No
file will be extracted.
"-j$" switch
This switch will set ARJ to NOT save the file properties date-time
accessed and date-time created. This will save header size and
result in a slightly smaller archive. During extraction, this
switch will set ARJ to NOT restore the file properties date-time
accessed and date-time created.
"-ji" switch
ARJ will now log extraction errors to the index file.
"-jo1" switch
This switch will set ARJ on extraction to generate unique output
filenames AND keep the current file extension.
Example: NOTE.TXT will generate NOTE.001.TXT and so on.
"-jt" switch
"-jt1" switch
In DOS and Windows 95 when using removable media (diskettes), ARJ
will flush and invalidate cached diskette data from memory, so
that testing is done on the actual data on the diskette. A side
effect of this improvement in reliability is longer diskette
testing times.
Missing directories will now be reported as errors.
"-jt3" switch
This switch allows one to do a quick compare of files within an
archive and on disk. ARJ will only compare the date-time stamps
and the size of the files.
Example: ARJ t archive -jt3
There is a limitation in that multiple volume archives will generate
(size) errors for the files split over volumes.
end document