On 2007-08-29, Hyuga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> I try to read (and extract) some "self extracting" zipefiles >> on a Windows system. The standard module zipefile seems not to >> be able to handle this. [...] > > First of all, there's really no such thing as a "self > extracting zipefile".
Perhaps there isn't "really such a thing," but that's the commonly used name for the type of file the OP is dealing with. > [...] You'll have to execute it--there's no way you can > operate on it like a normal zip file. Executing the file is a huge, huge security risk. Other zip tools (e.g. the "unzip" utility for Linux) seem know how to work with self-extracting zipfiles. Unfortunately there are multiple slightly different zip formats along with mutlple "self-extracting zip file" formats. Nonetheless, I've never run across one I couldn't unzip without executing it. On Linux, I'd probably just try exec'ing the "unzip" program. Another option is to search through the file from the beginning looking for whatever signature matches the beginning of a "normal" zip file. The self-extracting zipfiles that I've dissected are just an executable image concatenated with a "normal" zipfile. If you just start searching from the beginning of the file, it's simple to find the actual zip data and copy it into a separate file which then can be unzipped like any other plain zipfile. I haven't done that for many years since the normal zip tools that I use can operate on self-extracting files. -- Grant Edwards grante Yow! NEWARK has been at REZONED!! DES MOINES has visi.com been REZONED!! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list