- #Uniextract inno failed code#
- #Uniextract inno failed zip#
- #Uniextract inno failed download#
- #Uniextract inno failed windows#
So, I'll do something like this (from one of my system maintenance scripts): Eg., if I have a script or function that's going to do five different things and display output for each of those tasks, I'd like to have any easy way to visually distinguish each of the steps, as well as easily determine which step the script is on. My most common use for these functions are simple status output messages. By making it red, however, it's significantly more likely to stand out from any surrounding, "normal" output. If this message was output normally with echo and it was surrounded by a lot of other text, it might be overlooked by the user. This allows me to easily output yellow (cinfo) or red (cwarn) text with a single line in a script. RESET='\033[00 00m' # normal No message passed"} In Bash, I include the following functions in any script where I want colored output: # Display colorized information output While I'm not a fan of flash for flash's sake, a little splash of color here and there in the right places can greatly enhance script output. Note: Have the innounp.Most modern terminals* (xterm, Linux desktop environment terminals, Linux console, etc.) support ANSI escape sequences for providing colorized output. Now -m flag does not affect reconstructed script content. Updated innounp to 0.31 (supports Inno Setup 5.3.9)įixed infinite loop issue on some unsupported versions. Updated AutoIt to 3.3.6.1 and replaced deprecated _Arra圜reate UDF Updated translations for Italian, Korean, Russian Updated some UniExtract window sizes for better internationalization support Updated PEiD detection of Microsoft SFX cab files for more reliable extraction
#Uniextract inno failed zip#
Updated Zip support to log unzip output and permit minor reported unzip errors Updated FEAD support to workaround read-only permission issue Updated RPM and DEB support to extract interim CPIO and TAR files Updated success/fail detection to check output directory timestamp can detect cases where files are overwritten, which old method missed will still consider failed if user chooses not to overwrite files, or if all files are written to a subdirectory of the output directory Removed debug output for 7-Zip, arj, hlp buffers output, preventing proper user feedback and input prompts
#Uniextract inno failed windows#
Removed Windows NT 4.0 support from installer
#Uniextract inno failed download#
Removed msi2xml helper binary and MSXML download link on MSI selection page
#Uniextract inno failed code#
msp) to use MsiX instead of msi2xmlĬhanged LZMA support to use 7-Zip for extractionĬhanged FEAD support to use PEiD rather than TrID for detectionĬhanged following formats to call 7z by name (also see 7-Zip debug comment): bz2, chm, gz, tar, Z this is mostly for code cleanup functionality should be the sameįixed InstallShield 5.x regression in 1.6 preventing successful extractionįixed bug in extraction of non-TAR LZW compressed filesįixed bug that prevented picking files after toggling history optionįixed bug in display of history combo boxes when no items listedįixed cosmetic bug in Visual C++ SFX status dialogįixed cosmetic bug in status dialogs due to extra padding by AutoIt exe resource extraction in new versionsĬhanged Windows installer support (.msi. The original motivation behind this project was to create an easy, convenient way to extract files from installation packages, such as Inno Setup or Windows Installer packages, without pulling up a command line every time.Īdded support for environmental variables (eg., specify %temp% for debug dir)Īdded support for XZ compressed files and txz/tlz archives via 7-ZipĪdded support for Windows Installer merge modules (.msm) via MsiXĪdded support for NBH files via NBHextractĪdded translations for Armenian, Czeck, Persian (Farsi), Serbian, SwedishĬhanged 7-Zip unpacking behavior now attempts brute force extraction only after External PEiD scan change due to aggressive. What it will do is allow you to extract files from virtually any type of archive, regardless of source, compression method, etc. It will never replace WinRAR, 7-Zip, etc. This application is not intended to be a general purpose archiving program. Universal Extractor is a program do to exactly what it says: extract files from any type of archive, whether it's a simple zip file, an installation program (like Wise or NSIS), or even a Windows Installer (.msi) package.