NAME
Parse::Win32Registry - Parse Windows Registry Files
SYNOPSIS
use strict;
use Parse::Win32Registry qw( :REG_ );
my $filename = shift or die "Filename?";
my $registry = Parse::Win32Registry->new($filename);
my $root_key = $registry->get_root_key;
my $software_key = $root_key->get_subkey(".DEFAULT\\Software")
|| $root_key->get_subkey("Software");
if (!defined($software_key)) {
die "Could not locate the Software key\n";
}
my $key_name = "Microsoft\\Windows\\CurrentVersion\\Explorer";
print "\nDisplaying $key_name (1):\n";
if (my $key = $software_key->get_subkey($key_name)) {
print $key->get_name, "\n";
foreach my $value ($key->get_list_of_values) {
my $value_name = $value->get_name || "(Default)";
print "$value_name = ";
my $value_type = $value->get_type;
if ($value_type == REG_DWORD ||
$value_type == REG_SZ ||
$value_type == REG_EXPAND_SZ
) {
print $value->get_data;
}
else {
print "(not safe to print ", $value->get_type_as_string, ")";
}
print "\n";
}
}
print "\nDisplaying $key_name (2):\n";
if (my $key = $software_key->get_subkey($key_name)) {
$key->print_summary;
foreach my $value ($key->get_list_of_values) {
$value->print_summary;
}
}
sub traverse {
my $key = shift;
my $depth = shift || 0;
print " " x $depth;
$key->print_summary;
foreach my $subkey ($key->get_list_of_subkeys) {
traverse($subkey, $depth + 1);
}
}
print "\nDisplaying the registry tree from $key_name:\n";
if (my $key = $software_key->get_subkey($key_name)) {
traverse($key);
}
DESCRIPTION
Parse::Win32Registry is a module for parsing Windows Registry files, allowing you to read the keys and values of a registry file without going through the Windows API.
It provides an object-oriented interface to the keys and values in a registry file. Registry files are structured as trees of keys, with each key containing further subkeys or values.
The module is intended to be cross-platform, and run on those platforms where Perl will run.
It supports both Windows NT registry files (Windows NT, 2000, XP, 2003) and Windows 95 registry files (Windows 95, 98, and Millennium Edition).
METHODS
Start by creating a Registry object from a valid registry file. Use the Registry object's get_root_key method to obtain the root key of that registry file. This root key is your first Key object. From this key, you can explore the Key and Value objects that comprise the registry file using the methods described below.
Data is read directly from a registry file when a Key or Value object is created, and discarded when the Key or Value object is destroyed. This avoids any delay in parsing an entire registry file before any Key or Value object is instantiated as it is anticipated that generally code will only be extracting a subset of the keys and values contained in a registry file.
Registry Object Methods
- $registry = Parse::Win32Registry->new( 'filename' );
-
Creates a new Registry object for the specified registry file.
- $root_key = $registry->get_root_key;
-
Returns the root Key object of the registry file.
The root key of a registry file is not the same as one of the virtual roots of the registry (HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, HKEY_USERS, etc) that you may be familiar with from using tools such as REGEDIT.
Key Object Methods
- $key->get_name
-
Returns the name of the key. The root key of a Windows 95 Registry file does not have a name; this is returned as an empty string.
- $key->get_path
-
Returns the path to the key. This is relative to the root key of the registry file, not a virtual root such as HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE.
- $key->get_subkey( 'key name' )
-
Returns a Key object for the specified subkey name. If a key with that name does not exist, nothing will be returned.
You can specify a path to a subkey by separating keys using the path separator '\\'. For example:
$key->get_subkey( 'Software\\Microsoft\\Windows' )
A path is always relative to the current key. If any key in the path does not exist, nothing will be returned.
- $key->get_value( 'value name' )
-
Returns a Value object for the specified value name. If a value with that name does not exist, nothing will be returned.
- $key->get_list_of_subkeys
-
Returns a list of Key objects representing the subkeys of the current key. If a key has no subkeys, an empty list will be returned.
- $key->get_list_of_values
-
Returns a list of Value objects representing the values of the current key. If a key has no values, an empty list will be returned.
- $key->get_timestamp
-
Returns the timestamp for the key as a time value suitable for passing to gmtime or localtime.
Only Windows NT registry keys have a timestamp; Windows 95 registry keys do not.
Returns nothing if the date is out of range or if called on a Windows 95 registry key.
- $key->get_timestamp_as_string
-
Returns the timestamp as a ISO 8601 string, for example, '2010-05-30T13:57:11Z'. The Z indicates that the time is UTC ('Zero Meridian').
Returns the string '(undefined)' if the date is out of range or if called on a Windows 95 registry key.
- $key->print_summary
-
Prints the name, number of subkeys, and number of values for the key. The timestamp will also be printed for Windows NT registry keys.
Windows NT registry keys know how many subkeys and values they have, while Windows 95 registry keys only know how many values they have.
Value Object Methods
- $value->get_name
-
Returns the name of the value. In both Windows NT and Windows 95 based registry files you can get values without a name. This is returned as an empty string.
- $value->get_type
-
Returns the integer representing the type of the data. The constants for the value types can be imported from the Parse::Win32Registry module with
use Parse::Win32Registry qw( :REG_ );
- $value->get_type_as_string
-
Returns the type of the data as a string instead of an integer constant, making it more suitable for printed output.
- $value->get_data
-
Returns the data for the value.
REG_SZ, REG_EXPAND_SZ, and REG_MULTI_SZ values will be returned as strings. The string data will be converted from Unicode (UCS-2LE) for Windows NT based registry files. Any terminating null characters will be removed from REG_SZ and REG_EXPAND_SZ values. To extract the component strings of a REG_MULTI_SZ value, you will need to use the built-in split function to separate on null characters.
REG_DWORD values are unpacked and returned as integers. undef will be returned for REG_DWORD values that contain invalid data.
All other types are returned as packed binary strings.
- $value->get_data_as_string
-
Returns the data for a value, making it safe for printed output.
REG_SZ and REG_EXPAND_SZ values will be returned directly from get_data, REG_MULTI_SZ values will have their component strings prefixed by indices to more clearly show the number of elements, and REG_DWORD values will be returned as integers formatted as hex numbers; all other value types will be returned as a string of hex octets.
'(invalid data)' will be returned for REG_DWORD values that contain invalid data, instead of the undef returned by get_data.
'(no data)' will be returned if get_data returns an empty string.
- $value->print_summary
-
Prints the name, type, and data for the value.
'(Default)' will be displayed for those values that do not have names.
EXPORTS
On request, Parse::Win32Registry will export the registry type constants:
use Parse::Win32Registry qw( :REG_ );
The :REG_ tag exports all of the following constants:
REG_NONE
REG_SZ
REG_EXPAND_SZ
REG_BINARY
REG_DWORD
REG_DWORD_BIG_ENDIAN
REG_LINK
REG_MULTI_SZ
REG_RESOURCE_LIST
REG_FULL_RESOURCE_DESCRIPTOR
REG_RESOURCE_REQUIREMENTS_LIST
REG_QWORD
SCRIPTS
dumpreg.pl is a script installed with the Win32::ParseRegistry module that you can use to work out the paths to keys or values you are interested in for your own scripts as well as being a command line utility for examining registry files.
Type dumpreg.pl on its own to see the help:
dumpreg.pl <filename> [subkey] [-r] [-q] [-i] [-d]
-r or --recurse traverse all child keys from the root key
or the subkey specified
-q or --quiet do not display values
-i or --indent indent subkeys and values to reflect their
level in the registry tree
-d or --debug display debugging information about
subkeys and values
The root key will be displayed unless a subkey is specified; paths to subkeys are always specified relative to the root key. By default, only the subkeys and values belonging to the specified key will be displayed; to display all keys and values beneath a key, use the -r or --recurse option.
For example, dumpreg.pl ntuser.dat might display the following:
$$$PROTO.HIV [subkeys=9] [values=0]
= AppEvents (key)
= Console (key)
= Control Panel (key)
= Environment (key)
= Identities (key)
= Keyboard Layout (key)
= Printers (key)
= Software (key)
= UNICODE Program Groups (key)
From here, you can explore the subkeys to find those keys or values you are interested in:
dumpreg.pl ntuser.dat software
dumpreg.pl ntuser.dat software\microsoft
dumpreg.pl ntuser.dat software\microsoft\windows
dumpreg.pl ntuser.dat software\microsoft\windows\currentversion
...
Remember to quote any subkey path that contains spaces:
dumpreg.pl ntuser.dat "keyboard layout"
TROUBLESHOOTING
If you run into problems parsing a registry file, the error message will probably begin with 'Could not read...' or 'Invalid...'. Troubleshooting these messages is possible, but you will need to be comfortable dealing with binary data and be prepared to refer to the source for information on the internal registry data structures.
'Could not read...' indicates that the code tried to read data that did not exist; this is typically because the offset to that data was invalid. To identify the source of the incorrect offset, you need to work down through the registry tree, key by key, until you reach the key or value that generates the error. Suspect the preceding key of holding invalid data.
'Invalid...' indicates that the data was read successfully, but one of the checks failed. This will occur either because the offset to that data was invalid and points to the wrong place in the registry file (which can be troubleshot as for 'Could not read...'), or because the data being parsed is a new type of data structure. Unfortunately there is no easy way to distinguish these without becoming familiar with internal registry data structures. If you do think it is a new type of data structure, let the author know.
The print_debug method can be used in place of the print_summary to display additional information about keys and values. This method has not been documented as it is not considered a stable part of the public interface, and its output is largely unintelligible to the unfamiliar. You may, however, find it useful.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This would not have been possible without the work of those people who have analysed and documented the structure of Windows Registry files, namely: the WINE Project (see misc/registry.c in older releases), the Samba Project (see utils/editreg.c and utils/profiles.c), the oft-referenced B.D. (for WinReg.txt), and Petter Nordahl-Hagen (see chntpw's ntreg.h).
AUTHOR
James Macfarlane, <jmacfarla@cpan.org>
If you have any requests or contributions, contact me.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2006 by James Macfarlane
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.