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WINEDUMP(1)		    Wine Developers Manual		   WINEDUMP(1)

NAME
       winedump - A Wine DLL tool

SYNOPSIS
       winedump [-h | sym <sym> | spec <dll> | dump <file> ] [mode_options]

DESCRIPTION
       winedump is a Wine tool which aims to help:
       A: Reimplementing a Win32 DLL for use within Wine, or
       B: Compiling a Win32 application with Winelib that uses x86 DLLs

       For both tasks in order to be able to link to the Win functions some
       glue code is needed.  This 'glue' comes in the form of a .spec file.
       The .spec file, along with some dummy code, is used to create a
       Wine .so corresponding to the Windows DLL.  The winebuild program
       can then resolve calls made to DLL functions.

       Creating a .spec file is a labour intensive task during which it is
       easy to make a mistake. The idea of winedump is to automate this task
       and create the majority of the support code needed for your DLL. In
       addition you can have winedump create code to help you re-implement a
       DLL, by providing tracing of calls to the DLL, and (in some cases)
       automatically determining the parameters, calling conventions, and
       return values of the DLL's functions.

       Another use for this tool is to display (dump) information about a 32bit
       DLL or PE format image file. When used in this way winedump functions
       similarly to tools such as pedump provided by many Win32 compiler
       vendors.

       Finally winedump can be also used to demangle C++ symbols.

MODES
       winedump can be used in several different modes.	 The first argument to
       the program determines the mode winedump will run in.

       -h     Help mode.  Basic usage help is printed.

       dump   To dump the contents of a file.

       spec   For generating .spec files and stub DLLs.

       sym    Symbol mode.  Used to demangle C++ symbols.

OPTIONS
       Mode options depend on the mode given as the first argument.

       Help mode:
       No options are used.
       The program prints the help info and than exits.

       Dump mode:

       <file> Dumps the content of the file named <file>. Various file
	      formats are supported (PE, NE, LE, Minidumps, .lnk).

       -C     Turns on symbol demangling.

       -f     Dumps file header information.
	      This option dumps only the standard PE header structures,
	      along with the COFF sections available in the file.

       -j dir_name
	      Dumps only the content of directory dir_name, for files
	      which header points to directories.
	      For PE files, currently the import, export, debug, resource,
	      tls and clr directories are implemented.
	      For NE files, currently the export and resource directories are
	      implemented.

       -x     Dumps everything.
	      This command prints all available information (including all
	      available directories - see -j option) about the file. You may
	      wish to pipe the output through more/less or into a file, since
	      a lot of output will be produced.

       -G     Dumps contents of debug section if any (for now, only stabs
	      information is supported).

       Spec mode:

       <dll>  Use dll for input file and generate implementation code.

       -I dir Look for prototypes in 'dir' (implies -c). In the case of
	      Windows DLLs, this could be either the standard include
	      directory from your compiler, or a SDK include directory.
	      If you have a text document with prototypes (such as
	      documentation) that can be used also, however you may need
	      to delete some non-code lines to ensure that prototypes are
	      parsed correctly.
	      The 'dir' argument can also be a file specification (e.g.
	      "include/*"). If it contains wildcards you must quote it to
	      prevent the shell from expanding it.
	      If you have no prototypes, specify /dev/null for 'dir'.
	      Winedump may still be able to generate some working stub
	      code for you.

       -c     Generate skeleton code (requires -I).
	      This option tells winedump to create function stubs for each
	      function in the DLL. As winedump reads each exported symbol
	      from the source DLL, it first tries to demangle the name. If
	      the name is a C++ symbol, the arguments, class and return
	      value are all encoded into the symbol name. Winedump
	      converts this information into a C function prototype. If
	      this fails, the file(s) specified in the -I argument are
	      scanned for a function prototype. If one is found it is used
	      for the next step of the process, code generation.

       -t     TRACE arguments (implies -c).
	      This option produces the same code as -c, except that
	      arguments are printed out when the function is called.
	      Structs that are passed by value are printed as "struct",
	      and functions that take variable argument lists print "...".

       -f dll Forward calls to 'dll' (implies -t).
	      This is the most complicated level of code generation. The
	      same code is generated as -t, however support is added for
	      forwarding calls to another DLL. The DLL to forward to is
	      given as 'dll'.

       -D     Generate documentation.
	      By default, winedump generates a standard comment at the
	      header of each function it generates. Passing this option
	      makes winedump output a full header template for standard
	      Wine documentation, listing the parameters and return value
	      of the function.

       -o name
	      Set the output dll name (default: dll).
	      By default, if winedump is run on DLL 'foo', it creates
	      files 'foo.spec', 'foo_main.c' etc, and prefixes any
	      functions generated with 'FOO_'.	If '-o bar' is given,
	      these will become 'bar.spec', 'bar_main.c' and 'BAR_'
	      respectively.
	      This option is mostly useful when generating a forwarding DLL.

       -C     Assume __cdecl calls (default: __stdcall).
	      If winebuild cannot determine the calling convention,
	      __stdcall is used by default, unless this option has
	      been given.
	      Unless -q is given, a warning will be printed for every
	      function that winedump determines the calling convention
	      for and which does not match the assumed calling convention.

       -s num Start prototype search after symbol 'num'.

       -e num End prototype search after symbol 'num'.
	      By passing the -s or -e options you can have winedump try to
	      generate code for only some functions in your DLL. This may
	      be used to generate a single function, for example, if you
	      wanted to add functionality to an existing DLL.

       -S symfile
	      Search only prototype names found in 'symfile'.
	      If you want to only generate code for a subset of exported
	      functions from your source DLL, you can use this option to
	      provide a text file containing the names of the symbols to
	      extract, one per line. Only the symbols present in this file
	      will be used in your output DLL.

       -q     Don't show progress (quiet).
	      No output is printed unless a fatal error is encountered.

       -v     Show lots of detail while working (verbose).
	      There are 3 levels of output while winedump is running. The
	      default level, when neither -q or -v are given, prints the
	      number of exported functions found in the dll, followed by
	      the name of each function as it is processed, and a status
	      indication of whether it was processed OK.  With -v given, a
	      lot of information is dumped while winedump works: this is
	      intended to help debug any problems.

       Sym mode:

       <sym>  Demangles C++ symbol '<sym>' and then exits.

FILES
       function_grep.pl
	      Perl script used to retrieve a function prototype.

       Files output in spec mode for foo.dll:
       foo.spec
	      This is the .spec file.
       foo_dll.h
       foo_main.c
	      These are the source code files containing the minimum set
	      of code to build a stub DLL. The C file contains one
	      function, FOO_Init, which does nothing (but must be
	      present).
       Makefile.in
	      This is a template for 'configure' to produce a makefile. It
	      is designed for a DLL that will be inserted into the Wine
	      source tree.

BUGS
       C++ name demangling is not fully in sync	 with  the  implementation  in
       msvcrt.	 It  might  be useful to submit your C++ name to the testsuite
       for msvcrt.

AUTHORS
       Jon P. Griffiths <jon_p_griffiths at yahoo dot com>
       Michael Stefaniuc <mstefani at redhat dot com>

SEE ALSO
       winedump's README file
       The Winelib User Guide
       The Wine Developers Guide

Wine 1.2.2			 October 2005			   WINEDUMP(1)
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