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NAME

       hivexregedit - Merge and export Registry changes from regedit-format files.

SYNOPSIS

        hivexregedit --merge [--prefix prefix] [--encoding enc] \
                hivefile [regfile]

        hivexregedit --export [--prefix prefix] hivefile key > regfile

DESCRIPTION

       Please note hivexregedit is a low-level tool for manipulating hive files directly.  To
       merge or export registry changes to Windows virtual machines it's better to use
       virt-win-reg(1).

       Given a local binary ("hive") file, there are two modes.  "--merge" imports (merges)
       changes from a regedit-format file into the hive.  It is similar to using the "/s" switch
       in Windows regedit.exe.

       "--export" exports a Registry key (recursively) into the regedit format.

   ENCODING
       "hivexregedit" expects that regedit files have already been re-encoded in the local
       encoding.  Usually on Linux hosts, this means UTF-8 with Unix-style line endings.  Since
       Windows regedit files are often in UTF-16LE with Windows-style line endings, you may need
       to re-encode the whole file before or after processing.

       To re-encode a file from Windows format to Linux (before processing it with the "--merge"
       option), you would do something like this:

        iconv -f utf-16le -t utf-8 < win.reg | dos2unix > linux.reg

       To go in the opposite direction, after using "--export" and before sending the file to a
       Windows user, do something like this:

        unix2dos < linux.reg | iconv -f utf-8 -t utf-16le > win.reg

       For more information about encoding, see Win::Hivex::Regedit(3).

       If you are unsure about the current encoding, use the file(1) command.  Recent versions of
       Windows regedit.exe produce a UTF-16LE file with Windows-style (CRLF) line endings, like
       this:

        $ file software.reg
        software.reg: Little-endian UTF-16 Unicode text, with very long lines,
        with CRLF line terminators

       This file would need conversion before you could "--merge" it.

   SHELL QUOTING
       Be careful when passing parameters containing "\" (backslash) in the shell.  Usually you
       will have to use 'single quotes' or double backslashes (but not both) to protect them from
       the shell.

   CurrentControlSet etc.
       Registry keys like "CurrentControlSet" don't really exist in the Windows Registry at the
       level of the hive file, and therefore you cannot modify these.

       "CurrentControlSet" is usually an alias for "ControlSet001".  In some circumstances it
       might refer to another control set.  The way to find out is to look at the
       "HKLM\SYSTEM\Select" key:

        $ hivexregedit --export SYSTEM '\Select'
        [\Select]
        "Current"=dword:00000001
        "Default"=dword:00000001
        "Failed"=dword:00000000
        "LastKnownGood"=dword:00000002

       "Current" is the one which Windows will choose when it boots.

       Similarly, other "Current..." keys in the path may need to be replaced.

EXAMPLE

        $ virt-cat WindowsGuest /Windows/System32/config/software > software.hive
        $ hivexregedit --export \
            --prefix 'HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE' \
            software.hive '\Microsoft' > ms-keys.reg

        $ hivexregedit --merge system.hive \
            --prefix 'HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM' additions.reg

OPTIONS

       --help
           Display help.

       --debug
           Enable debugging in the hivex library.  This is useful for diagnosing bugs and also
           malformed hive files.

       --merge
            hivexregedit --merge [--prefix prefix] [--encoding enc] \
                    hivefile [regfile]

           Merge "regfile" (a regedit-format text file) into the hive "hivefile".  If "regfile"
           is omitted, then the program reads from standard input.  (Also you can give multiple
           input files).

           "--prefix" specifies the Windows Registry prefix.  It is almost always necessary to
           use this when dealing with real hive files.

           "--encoding" specifies the encoding for unmarked strings in the input.  It defaults to
           "UTF-16LE" which should work for recent versions of Windows.  Another possibility is
           to use "ASCII".

       --export
            hivexregedit --export [--prefix prefix] hivefile key > regfile

           "key" is a path within the hive "hivefile".  (The key should not contain any prefix
           and should be quoted to defend backslashes from the shell).  The key is exported,
           recursively, to standard output in the textual regedit format.

           "--prefix" specifies the Windows Registry prefix.  It is almost always necessary to
           use this when dealing with real hive files.

       --prefix prefix
           Hive files and Windows Registry key names are indirectly related.  For example, inside
           the software hive, all keys are stored relative to "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE".
           Thus "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft" appears in the hive file as "\Microsoft".

           The hive format itself does not store this prefix, so you have to supply it based on
           outside knowledge.  (virt-win-reg(1), amongst other things, already knows about this).

           Usually it is sufficient to pass the parameter "--prefix
           'HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE'" or similar when doing merges and exports.

       --encoding UTF-16LE|ASCII
           When merging (only), you may need to specify the encoding for strings to be used in
           the hive file.  This is explained in detail in "ENCODING STRINGS" in
           Win::Hivex::Regedit(3).

           The default is to use UTF-16LE, which should work with recent versions of Windows.

       --unsafe-printable-strings
           When exporting (only), assume strings are UTF-16LE and print them as strings instead
           of hex sequences.  Remove the final zero codepoint from strings if present.

           This is unsafe and does not preserve the fidelity of strings in the original hive for
           various reasons:

           •   Assumes the original encoding is UTF-16LE.  ASCII strings and strings in other
               encodings will be corrupted by this transformation.

           •   Assumes that everything which has type 1 or 2 is really a string and that
               everything else is not a string, but the type field in real hives is not reliable.

           •   Loses information about whether a zero codepoint followed the string in the hive
               or not.

           This all happens because the hive itself contains no information about how strings are
           encoded (see "ENCODING STRINGS" in Win::Hivex::Regedit(3)).

           You should only use this option for quick hacking and debugging of the hive contents,
           and never use it if the output is going to be passed into another program or stored in
           another hive.

       --unsafe
           Use heuristics to tolerate certain levels of corruption within hives.

           This is unsafe but may allow to export/merge valid keys/values in an othewise
           corrupted hive.

       --max-depth depth
           Limits the recursion depth of the export. For example, an export with a max depth of 1
           will only include values directly under the specified key/prefix. A max depth of 0
           will return no values.

           Exports include all child keys by default (fully recursive), which may take a while if
           the registry hive is large / bloated.  This behavior can also be achieved by providing
           a negative max depth.

SEE ALSO

       virt-win-reg(1), Win::Hivex::Regedit(3), Win::Hivex(3), hivexsh(1), dos2unix(1),
       unix2dos(1), iconv(1), <http://libguestfs.org/>.

AUTHOR

       Richard W.M. Jones <http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/>

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2010 Red Hat Inc.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
       the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
       version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

       This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;
       without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
       See the GNU General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program;
       if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139,
       USA.