X-Google-Language: ENGLISH,ASCII-7-bit X-Google-Thread: fd588,5831f8bcb0d0ecf1,start X-Google-Attributes: gidfd588,public From: kai@fantaghiro.deceiver.org (Kai Voelcker) Subject: vt.vt.z, part 1/1 Date: 1996/05/04 Message-ID: #1/1 X-Deja-AN: 152950220 organization: Kasimba Barsini Inc. followup-to: alt.ascii-art.animation reply-to: kai@deceiver.in-kiel.de newsgroups: alt.ascii-art.animation A repost from this group. For all who are new or just missed some of them. File is compressed with gzip and uuencoded. Use unshar or decode to extract. For viewing use zcat for unix and gunzip - type for dos. #!/bin/sh # # This is a self-extracting shell archive of the binary file "vt.vt.z". # Created on Sat May 4 11:47:24 CET DST 1996 by post-bin, revision 2.1. # # To decode with /bin/sh, remove everything before the /bin/sh and feed # each piece as input to /bin/sh. When all the pieces have been # processed, the archive will automatically concatenate the pieces and # uudecode them to produce vt.vt.z. If successful, it will remove all # uuencoded pieces. Alternatively, the archive(s) may be processed with # no editing by the unshar program. # # If you do not have /bin/sh or unix, you may decode by removing # everthing before/after the lines beginning with the word BEGIN/END, # respectively, in each piece. Then concatenate the pieces in the proper # order and uudecode. # part=1 pfile=vt.vt.z file=vt.vt.z psize=2472 sed -e '/^BEGIN/d' -e '/^END/d' << \End_of_Section > $pfile.$part BEGIN------------ vt.vt.z ------------ part 1/1 --- begin 644 vt.vt.z 5'9SU@I:+_O:"MO/C/_`64]V3%@`` ` end END-------------- vt.vt.z ------------ part 1/1 --- End_of_Section size=`wc -c $pfile.$part | awk '{ print $1 }'` if [ $size != $psize ]; then echo Length mismatch for uuencoded part $part \($size != $psize\). exit 1 fi echo $file, part $part extracted. if [ `echo $pfile.[0-9]* | wc -w` = 1 ]; then echo All uuencoded parts of $file extracted, uudecoding... cat $pfile.* | uudecode if [ $? -gt 0 ]; then echo Error encountered when uudecoding pieces... exit 1 fi echo $file successfully uudecoded. Removing uuencoded pieces. rm $pfile.[0-9]* fi exit 0