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Add .gitignore

This commit is contained in:
Simon Shi 2018-11-08 23:54:21 +08:00
parent cd488aeb85
commit 4906b0fd81
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571 changed files with 13 additions and 161516 deletions

12
.gitignore vendored Normal file
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VisualStudio/
bin/
build/
buildroot-configs/
floppy/
hotbird64-mass-build/
lib/
src/VisualStudio-Linux-Remote/
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*.html
*.pdf
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UCLIBC_HAS_BSD_RES_CLOSE=y
UCLIBC_HAS_COMPAT_RES_STATE=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_EXTRA_COMPAT_RES_STATE is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_RESOLVER_SUPPORT=y
UCLIBC_HAS_LIBRESOLV_STUB=y
UCLIBC_HAS_LIBNSL_STUB=y
#
# String and Stdio Support
#
UCLIBC_HAS_STRING_GENERIC_OPT=y
UCLIBC_HAS_STRING_ARCH_OPT=y
UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_FUTEXES=y
UCLIBC_HAS_CTYPE_TABLES=y
UCLIBC_HAS_CTYPE_SIGNED=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_CTYPE_UNSAFE is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_CTYPE_CHECKED=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_CTYPE_ENFORCED is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_WCHAR=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_LOCALE is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_HEXADECIMAL_FLOATS=y
UCLIBC_HAS_GLIBC_CUSTOM_PRINTF=y
UCLIBC_PRINTF_SCANF_POSITIONAL_ARGS=9
# UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_BUFSIZ_256 is not set
# UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_BUFSIZ_512 is not set
# UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_BUFSIZ_1024 is not set
# UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_BUFSIZ_2048 is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_BUFSIZ_4096=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_BUFSIZ_8192 is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_BUILTIN_BUFFER_NONE=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_BUILTIN_BUFFER_4 is not set
# UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_BUILTIN_BUFFER_8 is not set
# UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_SHUTDOWN_ON_ABORT is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_GETC_MACRO=y
UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_PUTC_MACRO=y
UCLIBC_HAS_STDIO_AUTO_RW_TRANSITION=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_FOPEN_LARGEFILE_MODE is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_FOPEN_EXCLUSIVE_MODE=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_FOPEN_CLOSEEXEC_MODE is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_GLIBC_CUSTOM_STREAMS=y
UCLIBC_HAS_PRINTF_M_SPEC=y
UCLIBC_HAS_ERRNO_MESSAGES=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_SYS_ERRLIST is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_SIGNUM_MESSAGES=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_SYS_SIGLIST is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_GNU_GETOPT=y
UCLIBC_HAS_GETOPT_LONG=y
UCLIBC_HAS_GNU_GETSUBOPT=y
UCLIBC_HAS_ARGP=y
#
# Big and Tall
#
UCLIBC_HAS_REGEX=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_REGEX_OLD is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_FNMATCH=y
# UCLIBC_HAS_FNMATCH_OLD is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_WORDEXP=y
UCLIBC_HAS_NFTW=y
UCLIBC_HAS_FTW=y
UCLIBC_HAS_FTS=y
UCLIBC_HAS_GLOB=y
UCLIBC_HAS_GNU_GLOB=y
#
# Library Installation Options
#
RUNTIME_PREFIX="/"
DEVEL_PREFIX="/usr/"
MULTILIB_DIR="lib"
HARDWIRED_ABSPATH=y
#
# Security options
#
# UCLIBC_BUILD_PIE is not set
UCLIBC_HAS_ARC4RANDOM=y
# ARC4RANDOM_USES_NODEV is not set
# UCLIBC_HAS_SSP is not set
UCLIBC_BUILD_RELRO=y
UCLIBC_BUILD_NOW=y
UCLIBC_BUILD_NOEXECSTACK=y
#
# Development/debugging options
#
CROSS_COMPILER_PREFIX=""
UCLIBC_EXTRA_CFLAGS=""
# DODEBUG is not set
# DOSTRIP is not set
# DOASSERTS is not set
# SUPPORT_LD_DEBUG is not set
# SUPPORT_LD_DEBUG_EARLY is not set
# UCLIBC_MALLOC_DEBUGGING is not set
# UCLIBC_HAS_BACKTRACE is not set
WARNINGS="-Wall"
# EXTRA_WARNINGS is not set
# DOMULTI is not set

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@ -1,36 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/local/bin/bash
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
gmake -C .. clean
cd ../src
BINDIR="../bin"
export VERBOSE=3
export DNS_PARSER=OS
MAKEFLAGS="-B -j12"
REUSEOBJFLAGS="-j12"
CF="-flto=12 -static-libgcc -pipe -fwhole-program -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
CF45="-static-libgcc -pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
CFCLANG="-pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
LF="-Wl,-z,norelro -Wl,--hash-style=sysv -Wl,--build-id=none"
LFCLANG="-Wl,-z,norelro -Wl,--hash-style=sysv"
export CC=gcc6
gmake $MAKEFLAGS MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-DragonFly-x64 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-DragonFly-x64 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-DragonFly-x64 CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF" allmulti
cd $BINDIR
strip -s --strip-unneeded --remove-section=.eh_frame_hdr --remove-section=.eh_frame --remove-section=.note.gnu.gold-version --remove-section=.comment --remove-section=.note --remove-section=.note.gnu.build-id --remove-section=.note.ABI-tag vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
sstrip -z vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
cp -af ../etc/vlmcsd.kmd /usr/local/sbin
cp -af vlmcsd-DragonFly-x64 /usr/local/sbin/vlmcsd
cp -af vlmcs-DragonFly-x64 /usr/local/bin/vlmcs
# Copy everything to distribution server
scp -p vlmcsdmulti-* vlmcsd-Dragon* vlmcs-* root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/DragonFly/intel/

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@ -1,69 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
export VERBOSE=3
#export CAT=2
if [ `uname -s` != "SunOS" ]; then
echo "This is no SunOS operating system."
exit 3
fi
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
make -C .. clean
SOLARIS_VERSION=`uname -v`
MAKEFLAGS="-Bj"
REUSEOBJFLAGS="-j"
cd ../src
BINDIR="../bin"
MANDIR="../man"
CF="-flto=12 -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants -Wno-char-subscripts"
LF="-static-libgcc -fwhole-program -Wl,--hash-style=sysv,--build-id=none,-z,norelro"
export PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris-x64
export CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-Solaris-x64
export MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-Solaris-x64
make $MAKEFLAGS DNS_PARSER=OS CFLAGS="$CF" CC=gcc LDFLAGS="$LF" allmulti
export PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris-x64-threads
make $MAKEFLAGS DNS_PARSER=OS CFLAGS="$CF" CC=gcc LDFLAGS="$LF" THREADS=1 vlmcsd
export PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris-x86
export CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-Solaris-x86
export MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-Solaris-x86
make $MAKEFLAGS DNS_PARSER=OS CFLAGS="$CF" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m32" CC=gcc LDFLAGS="$LF" allmulti
export PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris-x86-threads
make $MAKEFLAGS DNS_PARSER=OS CFLAGS="$CF" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m32" CC=gcc LDFLAGS="$LF" THREADS=1 vlmcsd
scp -p $BINDIR/* root@ubuntu64.internal:x/binaries/Solaris/intel
cd ..
BINDIR="./bin"
MANDIR="./man"
mkdir /tmp/vlmcsd
cp -af $MANDIR/*.1 $MANDIR/*.5 $MANDIR/*.7 $MANDIR/*.8 /tmp/vlmcsd
xz /tmp/vlmcsd/*
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man1
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man5
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man7
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man8
sudo cp -af /tmp/vlmcsd/*.1.xz /usr/local/man/man1
sudo cp -af /tmp/vlmcsd/*.5.xz /usr/local/man/man5
sudo cp -af /tmp/vlmcsd/*.7.xz /usr/local/man/man7
sudo cp -af /tmp/vlmcsd/*.8.xz /usr/local/man/man8
rm -fr /tmp/vlmcsd
sudo cp -af $BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris-x86 /usr/local/bin/vlmcsd
sudo cp -af $BINDIR/vlmcs-Solaris-x86 /usr/local/bin/vlmcs

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@ -1,46 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/local/bin/bash
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
export VERBOSE=3
export DNS_PARSER=OS
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
gmake -C .. clean
cd ../src
VERSION="$(uname -r | sed -e 's/-.*//')"
MAKE="gmake"
BINDIR="../bin"
PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH
MAKEFLAGS="-B -j12"
REUSEOBJFLAGS="-j12"
CF="-flto=12 -static-libgcc -pipe -fwhole-program -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
CFCLANG="-pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
LF="-Wl,-z,norelro -Wl,--hash-style=gnu -Wl,--build-id=none"
LFCLANG="-Wl,-z,norelro -Wl,--hash-style=gnu"
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS allmulti CAT=2 MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64-gcc CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64-gcc PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64-gcc CC=gcc9 CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF"
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64 CC=clang-devel CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" LDFLAGS="$LF" allmulti
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86 CC=clang-devel CFLAGS="$CFCLANG -m32" LDFLAGS="$LF"
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS allmulti CAT=2 MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86-gcc CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86-gcc PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86-gcc CC=gcc9 CFLAGS="$CF -m32 -DCOMPAT_32BIT" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/lib32 -B/usr/lib32 $LF"
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS CAT=2 vlmcsd PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64-threads-gcc THREADS=1 CC=gcc9 CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="-lpthread $LF"
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS vlmcsd PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64-threads THREADS=1 CC=clang-devel CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" LDFLAGS="-lpthread $LF"
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS vlmcsd PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86-threads THREADS=1 CC=clang-devel CFLAGS="$CFCLANG -m32" LDFLAGS="-lpthread $LF"
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS CAT=2 vlmcsd PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86-threads-gcc THREADS=1 CC=gcc9 CFLAGS="$CF -m32 -DCOMPAT_32BIT" LDFLAGS="-lpthread -L/usr/lib32 -B/usr/lib32 $LF"
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS CRYPTO=openssl_with_aes CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64-openssl1.0.1-EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64-openssl1.0.1-EXPERIMENTAL CC=clang-devel CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" LDFLAGS="$LF"
$MAKE $MAKEFLAGS CRYPTO=openssl_with_aes CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86-openssl1.0.1-EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x86-openssl1.0.1-EXPERIMENTAL CC=clang-devel CFLAGS="$CFCLANG -m32" LDFLAGS="$LF"
cd ../bin
strip -s --strip-unneeded --remove-section=.eh_frame_hdr --remove-section=.eh_frame --remove-section=.note.gnu.gold-version --remove-section=.comment --remove-section=.note --remove-section=.note.gnu.build-id --remove-section=.note.ABI-tag vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
sstrip -z vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
sudo cp -af ../etc/vlmcsd.kmd /usr/local/sbin
sudo cp -af vlmcsd-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64-gcc /usr/local/sbin/vlmcsd
sudo cp -af vlmcs-FreeBSD-$VERSION-x64-gcc /usr/local/bin/vlmcs
# Copy everything to distribution server
scp -p * root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/FreeBSD/intel/

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@ -1,48 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
export VERBOSE=3
export DNS_PARSER=OS
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
make -C .. clean
BINDIR="../bin"
MANDIR="../man"
cd ../src
MAKEFLAGS="-B -j1"
export CC=gcc
CF="-flto=jobserver -pipe -fwhole-program -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
LF="-fuse-ld=gold -lresolv -Wl,-z,norelro,--hash-style=gnu,--build-id=none"
make $MAKEFLAGS MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-hurd-x86-glibc PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-hurd-x86-glibc CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-hurd-x86-glibc CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF" allmulti
cd $BINDIR
sstrip -z vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
cp -af ../etc/vlmcsd.kmd /usr/local/sbin
cp -af vlmcsd-hurd-x86-glibc /usr/local/sbin/vlmcsd
cp -af vlmcs-hurd-x86-glibc /usr/local/bin/vlmcs
cd $MANDIR
# Copy man pages
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man1 2>/dev/null
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man5 2>/dev/null
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man8 2>/dev/null
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man7 2>/dev/null
cp -af vlmcs.1 vlmcsdmulti.1 /usr/local/man/man1/
cp -af vlmcsd.7 /usr/local/man/man7/
cp -af vlmcsd.8 /usr/local/man/man8/
rm -f vlmcsdmulti vlmcsd vlmcs 2>/dev/null
cp -af vlmcsd.ini.5 /usr/local/man/man5/
bzip2 -f -9 /usr/local/man/man5/vlmcsd.ini.5 /usr/local/man/man1/vlmcs.1 /usr/local/man/man1/vlmcsdmulti.1 /usr/local/man/man7/vlmcsd.7 /usr/local/man/man8/vlmcsd.8
cd $BINDIR
# Copy everything to distribution server
scp -p * root@ubuntu64.internal:x/binaries/Hurd/intel/

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@ -1,57 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
export VERBOSE=3
export DNS_PARSER=OS
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
make -C .. clean
BINDIR="../bin"
MANDIR="../man"
cd ../src
MAKEFLAGS="-B -j`nproc`"
export CC=gcc
CF="-flto=jobserver -pipe -fwhole-program -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
LF="-lresolv -Wl,-z,norelro,--hash-style=gnu,--build-id=none"
export PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-10.1-x64-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-FreeBSD-10.1-x64-glibc
export MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-FreeBSD-10.1-x64-glibc
make $MAKEFLAGS CFLAGS="$CF -m64" LDFLAGS="$LF" CAT=2 allmulti
cp -af ../etc/vlmcsd.kmd /usr/local/sbin
cp -af $PROGRAM_NAME /usr/local/sbin/vlmcsd
cp -af $CLIENT_NAME /usr/local/bin/vlmcs
export PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-FreeBSD-10.1-x86-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-FreeBSD-10.1-x86-glibc
export MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-FreeBSD-10.1-x86-glibc
make $MAKEFLAGS CFLAGS="$CF -m32" LDFLAGS="$LF" CAT=2 allmulti
cd $BINDIR
sstrip -z *
cd $MANDIR
# Copy man pages
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man1 2>/dev/null
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man5 2>/dev/null
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man8 2>/dev/null
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man7 2>/dev/null
cp -af vlmcs.1 vlmcsdmulti.1 /usr/local/man/man1/
cp -af vlmcsd.7 /usr/local/man/man7/
cp -af vlmcsd.8 /usr/local/man/man8/
cp -af vlmcsd.ini.5 /usr/local/man/man5/
bzip2 -f -9 /usr/local/man/man5/vlmcsd.ini.5 /usr/local/man/man1/vlmcs.1 /usr/local/man/man1/vlmcsdmulti.1 /usr/local/man/man7/vlmcsd.7 /usr/local/man/man8/vlmcsd.8
cd $BINDIR
# Copy everything to distribution server
scp -p * root@ubuntu64.internal:x/binaries/FreeBSD/intel/

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@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
cd ~/vlmcsd/hotbird64-mass-build
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
BINDIR="bin"
cd ..
# Compile vlmcsd binaries for Minix 3
SUFFIX=-minix-$(uname -r)-x86
export CC=clang
export CFLAGS="-pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
export LDFLAGS="-Wl,--hash-style=sysv -Wl,-z,norelro -Wl,--build-id=none"
export PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd$SUFFIX
export CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs$SUFFIX
export MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti$SUFFIX
gmake clean
gmake -B allmulti
#strip -s --strip-unneeded --remove-section .eh_frame_hdr --remove-section .eh_frame --remove-section .ident --remove-section .note.minix.ident --remove-section .note.netbsd.pax --remove-section=.note.gnu.gold-version --remove-section=.comment --remove-section=.note --remove-section=.note.gnu.build-id --remove-section=.note.ABI-tag $BINDIR/*$SUFFIX
scp -p $BINDIR/* root@ubuntu64.internal:x/binaries/Minix/intel/

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@ -1,155 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
SMALLCC="-pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
SMALLLD="-pipe -Wl,--hash-style=sysv -Wl,-z,norelro -Wl,--build-id=none"
SMALL="$SMALLCC $SMALLLD"
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
gmake -C .. clean
BINDIR="../bin"
MANDIR="../man"
cd ../src
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/intel/glibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/intel/uclibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/intel/static
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/intel/musl
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/sparc/glibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/s390/glibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Android/arm/bionic
mkdir -p ../binaries/Android/arm/static
mkdir -p ../binaries/Android/intel/bionic
mkdir -p ../binaries/Android/intel/static
mkdir -p ../binaries/Android/mips/bionic
mkdir -p ../binaries/Android/mips/static
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/arm/little-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/arm/little-endian/musl
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/arm/little-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/arm/little-endian/static
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/arm/big-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/arm/big-endian/static
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/static
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/musl
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/static
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/musl
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/ppc/little-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/ppc/big-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/ppc/big-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/ppc/big-endian/musl
mkdir -p ../binaries/Linux/ppc/big-endian/static
mkdir -p ../binaries/MacOSX/intel
mkdir -p ../binaries/MacOSX/ppc
mkdir -p ../binaries/iOS/arm
mkdir -p ../binaries/FreeBSD/intel
mkdir -p ../binaries/NetBSD/intel
mkdir -p ../binaries/OpenBSD/intel
mkdir -p ../binaries/DragonFly/intel
mkdir -p ../binaries/Solaris/intel
mkdir -p ../binaries/Windows/intel
mkdir -p ../binaries/Minix/intel
mkdir -p ../binaries/Hurd/intel
## IBM S/390
export CFLAGS="$SMALLCC"
export PLATFORMFLAGS="-flto=jobserver -fwhole-program -m31 -mesa -mpacked-stack -msmall-exec"
export LDFLAGS="$SMALLLD -Wl,--hash-style=gnu"
export THREADS=0
export FEATURES=full
export CC=s390x-linux-gnu-gcc
export VERBOSE=3
export MULTI_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-s390-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcs-s390-glibc
export PROGRAM_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsd-s390-glibc
make -B -j`nproc` allmulti
export PLATFORMFLAGS="-flto=jobserver -fwhole-program -m64 -mzarch -mpacked-stack -msmall-exec"
export MULTI_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-s390x-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcs-s390x-glibc
export PROGRAM_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsd-s390x-glibc
make -B -j`nproc` allmulti
## SPARC64
export PLATFORMFLAGS="-flto=jobserver -fwhole-program -mcpu=v7"
export LDFLAGS="$SMALLLD"
export CC=sparc64-linux-gnu-gcc
export MULTI_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/sparc/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-sparc64v9-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/sparc/glibc/vlmcs-sparc64v9-glibc
export PROGRAM_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/sparc/glibc/vlmcsd-sparc64v9-glibc
make -B -j`nproc` allmulti
## MIPS64 BIG-ENDIAN
export PLATFORMFLAGS="-flto=jobserver -fwhole-program -mips64 -mno-mips16"
export LDFLAGS="$SMALLLD"
export CC=mips64-linux-gnuabi64-gcc
export MULTI_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-mips64-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/glibc/vlmcs-mips64-glibc
export PROGRAM_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/glibc/vlmcsd-mips64-glibc
make -B -j`nproc` allmulti
export PLATFORMFLAGS="-flto=jobserver -fwhole-program -mips64 -mmicromips"
export MULTI_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-mips64mm-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/glibc/vlmcs-mips64mm-glibc
export PROGRAM_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/glibc/vlmcsd-mips64mm-glibc
make -B -j`nproc` allmulti
## MIPS64 LITTLE-ENDIAN
export PLATFORMFLAGS="-flto=jobserver -fwhole-program -mips64 -mno-mips16"
export LDFLAGS="$SMALLLD"
export CC=mips64el-linux-gnuabi64-gcc
export MULTI_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-mips64el-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/glibc/vlmcs-mips64el-glibc
export PROGRAM_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/glibc/vlmcsd-mips64el-glibc
make -B -j`nproc` allmulti
export PLATFORMFLAGS="-flto=jobserver -fwhole-program -mips64 -mmicromips"
export MULTI_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-mips64elmm-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/glibc/vlmcs-mips64elmm-glibc
export PROGRAM_NAME=~/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/glibc/vlmcsd-mips64elmm-glibc
make -B -j`nproc` allmulti
if [ "$1" == "nocopy" ]; then
exit 0
fi
scp -p -P 2222 ~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-s390-glibc ~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcs-s390-glibc ~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsd-s390-glibc ~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-s390x-glibc ~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcs-s390x-glibc ~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsd-s390x-glibc s390:vlmcsd
scp -p -P 2222 ~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-s390-glibc ~/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-s390x-glibc s390:/usr/local/sbin

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#!/usr/pkg/bin/bash
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
export VERBOSE=3
export DNS_PARSER=OS
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
gmake -C .. clean
BINDIR="../bin"
cd ../src
MAKEFLAGS="-B -j12"
REUSEOBJFLAGS="-j12"
CF="-flto=12 -static-libgcc -pipe -fwhole-program -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
CF45="-flto=12 -static-libgcc -pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
CFCLANG="-pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
LF="-Wl,-z,norelro -Wl,--hash-style=sysv -Wl,--build-id=none"
LFCLANG="-Wl,-z,norelro -Wl,--hash-style=sysv"
gmake $MAKEFLAGS CC=/usr/pkg/gcc6/bin/gcc PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-NetBSD-x64 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-NetBSD-x64 MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-NetBSD-x64 allmulti CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF"
gmake allmulti CC=gcc $MAKEFLAGS CAT=2 MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-NetBSD-x86 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-NetBSD-x86 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-NetBSD-x86 CFLAGS="$CF45 -m32" LDFLAGS="$LF"
#gmake $MAKEFLAGS CC=clang PROGRAM_NAME=vlmcsd-NetBSD-x64-clang CLIENT_NAME=vlmcs-NetBSD-x64-clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" LDFLAGS="$LFCLANG"
cd $BINDIR
strip -s --strip-unneeded -R .ident -R .got -R .note.netbsd.pax -R .gnu.version -R .eh_frame -R .note.gnu.gold-version -R .comment -R .note -R .note.gnu.build-id -R .note.ABI-tag vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
#sstrip -z vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
cp -af vlmcsd-NetBSD-x86 /usr/local/sbin/vlmcsd
cp -af vlmcs-NetBSD-x86 /usr/local/bin/vlmcs
# Copy everything to distribution server
scp -p vlmcsdmulti-* vlmcsd-Net* vlmcs-* root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/NetBSD/intel/

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#!/bin/bash
if [ $(id -u) != 0 ]; then
echo "Must be root to run this"
exit 5
fi
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
IS64ONLY=0
if [ "$(uname -r|grep Microsoft)" != "" ]; then
IS64ONLY=1
echo "Warning 32-bit toolchains do not run."
fi
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
export VERBOSE=3
export DNS_PARSER=internal
MAKEFLAGS="-j200 -B"
REUSEOBJFLAGS="-j200"
SMALLCC="-pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
SMALLLD="-pipe -Wl,--hash-style=sysv -Wl,-z,norelro -Wl,--build-id=none"
SMALL="$SMALLCC $SMALLLD"
rm -f vlmcs vlmcsdmulti vlmcsd 2>/dev/null
rm -fr ../binaries
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/intel/glibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/intel/uclibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/intel/static
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/intel/musl
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/sparc/glibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/s390/glibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Android/arm/bionic
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Android/arm/static
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Android/intel/bionic
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Android/intel/static
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Android/mips/bionic
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Android/mips/static
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/arm/little-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/arm/little-endian/musl
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/arm/little-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/arm/little-endian/static
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/arm/big-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/arm/big-endian/static
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/static
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/mips/little-endian/musl
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/static
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/mips/big-endian/musl
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/ppc/little-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/ppc/big-endian/glibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/ppc/big-endian/uclibc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/ppc/big-endian/musl
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/ppc/big-endian/static
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/MacOSX/intel
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/MacOSX/ppc
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/iOS/arm
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/FreeBSD/intel
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/NetBSD/intel
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/OpenBSD/intel
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/DragonFly/intel
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Solaris/intel
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Windows/intel
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Minix/intel
mkdir -p ../../debian/root/x/binaries/Hurd/intel
../../bin/prepare-debian
OLDHOME=$HOME
export HOME=/root
chroot ../../debian /root/x/hotbird64-mass-build/make_bs
chroot ../../debian /root/x/hotbird64-mass-build/make_multilib_linux
export HOME=$OLDHOME
rm -f *_all.c vlmcsd.o vlmcs.o vlmcsdmulti.o 2> /dev/null
export STAGING_DIR=.
cd ../src
pwd
# Linux x32 glibc
export FEATURES=full
export MULTI_NAME=../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/intel/glibc/vlmcsdmulti-x32-glibc
export CLIENT_NAME=../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/intel/glibc/vlmcs-x32-glibc
export PROGRAM_NAME=../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/intel/glibc/vlmcsd-x32-glibc
export CC=gcc
export CFLAGS="$SMALLCC"
export PLATFORMFLAGS="-flto=16 -fwhole-program -mx32 -march=nocona -mtune=generic"
export LDFLAGS="-fuse-ld=bfd $SMALLLD -Wl,--hash-style=gnu"
export THREADS=0
export NOPROCFS=0
export AUXV=1
make DNS_PARSER=OS $MAKEFLAGS allmulti
if [ $? != 0 ]; then
echo Error creating $CLIENT_NAME and/or $PROGRAM_NAME
exit $?
fi
# Linux x32 glibc threads
export FEATURES=full
export PROGRAM_NAME=../../debian/root/x/binaries/Linux/intel/glibc/vlmcsd-x32-glibc-threads
export CC=gcc
export CFLAGS="$SMALLCC"
export PLATFORMFLAGS="-flto=16 -fwhole-program -mx32 -march=nocona -mtune=generic"
export LDFLAGS="-fuse-ld=bfd $SMALLLD -Wl,--hash-style=gnu -lpthread"
export THREADS=1
export NOPROCFS=0
export AUXV=1
make DNS_PARSER=OS $MAKEFLAGS $PROGRAM_NAME
if [ $? != 0 ]; then
echo Error creating $PROGRAM_NAME
exit $?
fi
cd ..
make alldocs
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man1 2>/dev/null
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man5 2>/dev/null
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man8 2>/dev/null
mkdir -p /usr/local/man/man7 2>/dev/null
cp -a man/vlmcs.1 man/vlmcsdmulti.1 /usr/local/man/man1/
cp -a man/vlmcsd-floppy.7 man/vlmcsd.7 /usr/local/man/man7/
cp -a man/vlmcsd.8 /usr/local/man/man8/
cp -a man/vlmcsd.ini.5 /usr/local/man/man5/
pbzip2 -f -9 /usr/local/man/man7/vlmcsd-floppy.7 /usr/local/man/man5/vlmcsd.ini.5 /usr/local/man/man1/vlmcs.1 /usr/local/man/man1/vlmcsdmulti.1 /usr/local/man/man7/vlmcsd.7 /usr/local/man/man8/vlmcsd.8
mandb >/dev/null 2>&1

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#!/usr/local/bin/bash
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
export VERBOSE=3
export DNS_PARSER=OS
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
gmake -C .. clean
cd ../src
BINDIR="../bin"
MAKEFLAGS="-B -j12"
REUSEOBJFLAGS="-j12"
CF="-static-libgcc -pipe -fwhole-program -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
CF45="-static-libgcc -pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
CFCLANG="-pipe -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
LF="-lpthread -Wl,-z,norelro"
LFCLANG="-lpthread -Wl,-z,norelro"
gmake -Bj12 allmulti $MAKEFLAGS CC=egcc THREADS=1 MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-OpenBSD-x64 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-OpenBSD-x64 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-OpenBSD-x64 CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF"
#gmake allmulti $MAKEFLAGS CAT=2 MULTI_NAME=vlmcsdmulti-OpenBSD-x86 PROGRAM_NAME=vlmcsd-OpenBSD-x86 CLIENT_NAME=vlmcs-OpenBSD-x86 CFLAGS="$CF45 -m32" LDFLAGS="$LF"
#gmake $MAKEFLAGS CC=clang PROGRAM_NAME=vlmcsd-OpenBSD-x64-clang CLIENT_NAME=vlmcs-OpenBSD-x64-clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" LDFLAGS="$LFCLANG"
cd $BINDIR
strip -s --strip-unneeded --remove-section=.eh_frame_hdr --remove-section=.eh_frame --remove-section=.note.gnu.gold-version --remove-section=.comment --remove-section=.note --remove-section=.note.gnu.build-id --remove-section=.note.ABI-tag vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
#sstrip -z vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
cp -f ../etc/vlmcsd.kmd /etc
cp -f vlmcsd-OpenBSD-x64 /usr/local/sbin/vlmcsd
cp -f vlmcs-OpenBSD-x64 /usr/local/bin/vlmcs
# Copy everything to distribution server
scp -p vlmcsdmulti-* vlmcsd-Open* vlmcs-* root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/OpenBSD/intel/

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#!/bin/bash
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
export VERBOSE=3
export DNS_PARSER=OS
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
make -C .. clean
MAKEFLAGS="-Bj"
REUSEOBJFLAGS="-j"
CFGCC="-static-libgcc -mdynamic-no-pic -Os -flto=jobserver -fwhole-program -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
CFCLANG="-mdynamic-no-pic -Os -flto -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
CFGCC42="-static-libgcc -mdynamic-no-pic -Os -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants"
cd ../src
BINDIR="../bin"
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-MacOSX-x86 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-MacOSX-x86 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-MacOSX-x86 CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m32 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.0" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS vlmcsd THREADS=1 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-MacOSX-x86-threads CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m32 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.0" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-MacOSX-x64 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-MacOSX-x64 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-MacOSX-x64 CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.0" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS vlmcsd THREADS=1 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-MacOSX-x64-threads CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.0" && \
#make $MAKEFLAGS CLIENT_NAME=vlmcs-MacOSX-x86-openssl-EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM_NAME=vlmcsd-MacOSX-x86-openssl-EXPERIMENTAL CRYPTO=openssl_with_aes_soft CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m32 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.4" && \
#make $MAKEFLAGS CLIENT_NAME=vlmcs-MacOSX-x64-openssl-EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM_NAME=vlmcsd-MacOSX-x64-openssl-EXPERIMENTAL CRYPTO=openssl_with_aes_soft CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.4" && \
#make $MAKEFLAGS CLIENT_NAME=vlmcs-iOS-7.1-armv7 PROGRAM_NAME=vlmcsd-iOS-7.1-armv7 CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-mthumb -m32 -arch armv7 -miphoneos-version-min=1.0 -isysroot /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS7.1.sdk" && \
#rm -f vlmcs.o vlmcsd.o vlmcsdmulti.o *_all.* && \
#make $REUSEOBJFLAGS vlmcsdmulti-iOS-7.1-armv7 MULTI_NAME=vlmcsdmulti-iOS-7.1-armv7 CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-mthumb -m32 -arch armv7 -miphoneos-version-min=1.0 -isysroot /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS7.1.sdk" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-iOS-armv7 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-iOS-armv7 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-iOS-armv7 CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-mthumb -m32 -arch armv7 -miphoneos-version-min=1.0 -isysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS.sdk" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-iOS-armv8-aarch64 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-iOS-armv8-aarch64 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-iOS-armv8-aarch64 CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64 -arch arm64 -miphoneos-version-min=7.0 -isysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS.sdk" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-iOS-6.1-armv7 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-iOS-6.1-armv7 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-iOS-6.1-armv7 CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-mthumb -m32 -arch armv7 -miphoneos-version-min=1.0 --sysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS6.1.sdk -isysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS6.1.sdk" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-iOS-5.1-armv7-clang3.4 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-iOS-5.1-armv7-clang3.4 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-iOS-5.1-armv7-clang3.4 CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-mthumb -m32 -arch armv7 -miphoneos-version-min=1.0 --sysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS5.1.sdk -isysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS5.1.sdk" && \
#PATH=~/toolchains/iOS5.1-MacOS-Lion/usr/bin:$PATH clang --version
PATH=~/toolchains/iOS5.1-MacOS-Lion/usr/bin:$PATH make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-iOS-5.1-armv6-clang3.1 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-iOS-5.1-armv6-clang3.1 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-iOS-5.1-armv6-clang3.1 CC=clang CFLAGS="$CFCLANG" PLATFORMFLAGS="-arch armv6 -miphoneos-version-min=1.0 --sysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS5.1.sdk -isysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS5.1.sdk" && \
#PATH=~/toolchains/gcc4.2/usr/bin/bin:$PATH make $MAKEFLAGS CLIENT_NAME=vlmcs-iOS-4.1-armv6-llvm-gcc4.2 PROGRAM_NAME=vlmcsd-iOS-4.1-armv6-llvm-gcc4.2 CC=llvm-g++-4.2 CFLAGS="$CFGCC42" PLATFORMFLAGS="-arch armv6 -miphoneos-version-min=1.0 --sysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS4.1.sdk -isysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS4.1.sdk" && \
#rm -f vlmcs.o vlmcsd.o vlmcsdmulti.o *_all.* && \
#PATH=~/toolchains/gcc4.2/usr/bin/bin:$PATH make $REUSEOBJFLAGS vlmcsdmulti-iOS-4.1-armv6-llvm-gcc4.2 MULTI_NAME=vlmcsdmulti-iOS-4.1-armv6-llvm-gcc4.2 CC=llvm-g++-4.2 CFLAGS="$CFGCC42" PLATFORMFLAGS="-arch armv6 -miphoneos-version-min=1.0 --sysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS4.1.sdk -isysroot ~/toolchains/iPhoneOS4.1.sdk" && \
#PATH=~/toolchains/gcc4.2/usr/bin:$PATH make $MAKEFLAGS CLIENT_NAME=vlmcs-iOS-4.1-armv7-clang PROGRAM_NAME=vlmcsd-iOS-4.1-armv7-llvm-clang CC=~/toolchains/gcc4.2/usr/bin/bin/clang CFLAGS="$CFGCC42" PLATFORMFLAGS="-mthumb -arch armv7 -miphoneos-version-min=4.1 --sysroot /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS4.1.sdk -isysroot /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS4.1.sdk" && \
#rm -f vlmcs.o vlmcsd.o vlmcsdmulti.o && \
#PATH=~/toolchains/gcc4.2/usr/bin:$PATH make $REUSEOBJFLAGS vlmcsdmulti-iOS-4.1-armv7-llvm-clang MULTI_NAME=vlmcsdmulti-iOS-4.1-armv7-llvm-clang CC=~/toolchains/gcc4.2/usr/bin/bin/clang CFLAGS="$CFGCC42" PLATFORMFLAGS="-mthumb -arch armv7 -miphoneos-version-min=4.1 --sysroot /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS4.1.sdk -isysroot /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS4.1.sdk" && \
PATH=~/toolchains/gcc4.2/usr/bin:$PATH make -Bj allmulti SAFE_MODE=1 MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-MacOSX-ppc PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-MacOSX-ppc CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-MacOSX-ppc CC=gcc CFLAGS="$CFGCC42 -isysroot ~/toolchains/MacOSX10.5.sdk -arch ppc -mmacosx-version-min=10.0" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-MacOSX-x86-gcc CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-MacOSX-x86-gcc PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-MacOSX-x86-gcc CC=gcc-7 CFLAGS="$CFGCC" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m32 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.11" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS vlmcsd THREADS=1 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-MacOSX-x86-threads-gcc CC=gcc-7 CFLAGS="$CFGCC" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m32 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.11" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-MacOSX-x64-gcc CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-MacOSX-x64-gcc PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-MacOSX-x64-gcc CC=gcc-7 CFLAGS="$CFGCC" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.11" && \
make $MAKEFLAGS vlmcsd THREADS=1 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-MacOSX-x64-threads-gcc CC=gcc-7 CFLAGS="$CFGCC" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64 -march=core2 -mmacosx-version-min=10.11" && \
# Sign the iOS binaries
#ldid -S *iOS*
#strip vlmcs-* vlmcsd-* vlmcsdmulti-*
cd $BINDIR
MANDIR="../man"
rm -fr *.dSYM
sudo cp -p ../etc/vlmcsd.kmd /usr/local/bin
sudo cp -p vlmcs-MacOSX-x86-gcc /usr/local/bin/vlmcs
sudo cp -p vlmcsd-MacOSX-x86-gcc /usr/local/bin/vlmcsd
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/share/man/man8
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/share/man/man1
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/share/man/man7
sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/share/man/man5
sudo cp -p $MANDIR/vlmcsd.8 /usr/local/share/man/man8
sudo cp -p $MANDIR/vlmcs.1 $MANDIR/vlmcsdmulti.1 /usr/local/share/man/man1
sudo cp -p $MANDIR/vlmcsd-floppy.7 $MANDIR/vlmcsd.7 /usr/local/share/man/man7
sudo cp -p $MANDIR/vlmcsd.ini.5 //usr/local/share/man/man5
# Copy the stuff to distribution server
scp -p vlmcsd-MacOSX-x* vlmcs-MacOSX-x* vlmcsdmulti-MacOSX-x* root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/MacOSX/intel
scp -p vlmcsd-MacOSX-ppc* vlmcs-MacOSX-ppc* vlmcsdmulti-MacOSX-ppc* root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/MacOSX/ppc
scp -p vlmcsd-iOS* vlmcs-iOS* vlmcsdmulti-iOS* root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/iOS/arm

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@ -1,61 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/sh
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
export VERBOSE=3
export CAT=2
if [ `uname -s` != "SunOS" ]; then
echo "This is no SunOS operating system."
exit 3
fi
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
make -C .. clean
SOLARIS_VERSION=`uname -v`
MAKEFLAGS="-Bj"
REUSEOBJFLAGS="-j"
cd ../src
BINDIR="../bin"
MANDIR="../man"
CF="-fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -fmerge-all-constants -Wno-char-subscripts"
LF="-fwhole-program -Wl,--hash-style=sysv -Wl,--build-id=none"
# 32 bit
if [ "$CAT" != "" ]; then
gmake $MAKEFLAGS LD_ALTEXEC=/usr/bin/gld allmulti CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x86 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x86 MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x86 CC=gcc CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF"
else
gmake $MAKEFLAGS LD_ALTEXEC=/usr/bin/gld MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x86 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x86 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x86 CC=gcc CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF" allmulti
fi
gmake $MAKEFLAGS LD_ALTEXEC=/usr/bin/gld vlmcsd PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x86-threads CC=gcc THREADS=1 CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="-lpthread $LF"
gmake $MAKEFLAGS LD_ALTEXEC=/usr/bin/gld CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x86-openssl1.0-EXPERIMENTAL CRYPTO=openssl_with_aes PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x86-openssl1.0-EXPERIMENTAL CC=gcc CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF"
# 64 bit
LF="$LF -Wl,-melf_x86_64_sol2"
if [ "$CAT" != "" ]; then
gmake $MAKEFLAGS LD_ALTEXEC=/usr/bin/gld allmulti MULTI_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsdmulti-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x64 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x64 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x64 CC=gcc CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64"
else
gmake $MAKEFLAGS LD_ALTEXEC=/usr/bin/gld MULTI_NAME=vlmcsdmulti-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x64 CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x64 PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x64 CC=gcc CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64" allmulti
fi
gmake $MAKEFLAGS LD_ALTEXEC=/usr/bin/gld vlmcsd PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x64-threads CC=gcc THREADS=1 CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF -lpthread" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64"
gmake $MAKEFLAGS LD_ALTEXEC=/usr/bin/gld CLIENT_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcs-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x64-openssl1.0-EXPERIMENTAL CRYPTO=openssl_with_aes PROGRAM_NAME=$BINDIR/vlmcsd-Solaris$SOLARIS_VERSION-x64-openssl1.0-EXPERIMENTAL CC=gcc CFLAGS="$CF" LDFLAGS="$LF" PLATFORMFLAGS="-m64"
rm -f *.o *_all.*
cd $BINDIR
gstrip -s --strip-unneeded --remove-section=.note.gnu.gold-version --remove-section=.comment --remove-section=.note --remove-section=.note.gnu.build-id --remove-section=.note.ABI-tag vlmcs-* vlmcsd-*
#gstrip -s --strip-unneeded --remove-section=.eh_frame_hdr --remove-section=.eh_frame --remove-section=.note.gnu.gold-version --remove-section=.comment --remove-section=.note --remove-section=.note.gnu.build-id --remove-section=.note.ABI-tag vlmcs-* vlmcsd-*
#sstrip -z vlmcs-* vlmcsd-*
# Copy stuff to distribution server
scp -p vlmcsd-Sola* vlmcs-* vlmcsdmulti-* root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/Solaris/intel

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@ -1,99 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
cd "$( dirname "$0" )"
export VLMCSD_VERSION=$(git describe)
msbuild='/cygdrive/c/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2017/Enterprise/MSBuild/15.0/Bin/amd64/msbuild.exe'
version="$VLMCSD_VERSION, built $(date -u '+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S') UTC"
make -C .. clean
export ExternalCompilerOptions="/D VERSION=\"\\\"$version\\\"\" /D BUILD_TIME=$(date '+%s')"
"$msbuild" ../VisualStudio/vlmcsd.sln /t:Rebuild /p:Configuration=publish /p:Platform=x86 /m /v:m
"$msbuild" ../VisualStudio/vlmcsd.sln /t:Rebuild /p:Configuration=publish /p:Platform=x64 /m /v:m
export CAT=2
export VERBOSE=3
NUMCPU=`cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep "processor" | wc -l`
CF="-Wno-missing-braces -fno-common -fno-exceptions -fno-non-call-exceptions -fno-stack-protector -fmerge-all-constants -fno-unwind-tables -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -pipe"
CFMSRPC="-Wno-missing-braces -Wno-unused-variable $CF" # -fno-common -fno-stack-protector -fmerge-all-constants -pipe"
PF32=""
PF64="-mpreferred-stack-boundary=4 -march=nocona -mtune=generic"
LFCYG32="-fwhole-program -Wl,--nxcompat,--dynamicbase,--tsaware,--large-address-aware,--disable-long-section-names"
LFWIN32="-fwhole-program -Wl,--nxcompat,--dynamicbase,--tsaware,--large-address-aware,--disable-long-section-names,--no-seh"
LFCYG64="-fwhole-program -Wl,--nxcompat,--dynamicbase,--tsaware,--disable-long-section-names,--high-entropy-va"
LFWIN64="-fwhole-program -Wl,--nxcompat,--dynamicbase,--tsaware,--disable-long-section-names,--high-entropy-va,--no-seh"
MAKEFLAGS="-j$NUMCPU -B"
REUSEFLAGS="-j$NUMCPU"
cd ../src
make $MAKEFLAGS libkms FEATURES=minimum THREADS=1 DLL_NAME=../bin/cygkms32.dll DNS_PARSER=internal CC=i686-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CF -flto=jobserver -fvisibility=hidden" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF32" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG32 -Wl,--no-seh"
make $MAKEFLAGS libkms FEATURES=minimum THREADS=1 DLL_NAME=../bin/cygkms64.dll DNS_PARSER=internal CC=x86_64-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CF -flto=jobserver -fvisibility=hidden" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF64" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG64 -Wl,--no-seh"
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti THREADS=1 DNS_PARSER=internal CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-cygwin-x86 PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-cygwin-x86 MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-cygwin-x86 CC=i686-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CF" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF32" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG32 -Wl,--no-seh"
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti THREADS=1 DNS_PARSER=internal CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-cygwin-x64 PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-cygwin-x64 MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-cygwin-x64 CC=x86_64-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CF" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF64" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG64 -Wl,--no-seh"
make $MAKEFLAGS MSRPC=1 THREADS=1 DNS_PARSER=internal CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-cygwin-msrpc-x86 PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-cygwin-msrpc-x86 MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-cygwin-msrpc-x86 CC=i686-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CF -fasynchronous-unwind-tables" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF32" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG32"
make $MAKEFLAGS MSRPC=1 THREADS=1 DNS_PARSER=internal CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-cygwin-msrpc-x64 PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-cygwin-msrpc-x64 MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-cygwin-msrpc-x64 CC=x86_64-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CFMSRPC" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF64" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG64"
make $MAKEFLAGS vlmcsdmulti MSRPC=1 THREADS=1 DNS_PARSER=internal MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-cygwin-msrpc-x64 CC=x86_64-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CFMSRPC -flto=jobserver" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF64" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG64"
make $MAKEFLAGS vlmcsdmulti MSRPC=1 THREADS=1 DNS_PARSER=internal MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-cygwin-msrpc-x86 CC=i686-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CFMSRPC -flto=jobserver" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF32" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG32"
#make $MAKEFLAGS THREADS=1 MSRPC=1 DNS_PARSER=internal CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-cygwin-msrpc-x86-openssl-EXPERIMENTAL CRYPTO=openssl_with_aes PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-cygwin-x86-openssl-EXPERIMENTAL CC=i686-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CFMSRPC" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF32" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG32"
make $MAKEFLAGS THREADS=1 MSRPC=1 DNS_PARSER=internal CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-cygwin-msrpc-x64-openssl-EXPERIMENTAL CRYPTO=openssl_with_aes PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-cygwin-x64-openssl-EXPERIMENTAL CC=x86_64-pc-cygwin-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CFMSRPC" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF64" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG64"
export CAT=2
#unset CAT
make $MAKEFLAGS libkms CRYPTO=windows FEATURES=minimum THREADS=1 DLL_NAME=../bin/libkms32-gcc.dll CC=i686-w64-MingW32-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CF -flto=jobserver -fvisibility=hidden" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF32" LDFLAGS="-static-libgcc $LFWIN32"
make $MAKEFLAGS libkms CRYPTO=windows FEATURES=minimum THREADS=1 DLL_NAME=../bin/libkms64-gcc.dll CC=x86_64-w64-MingW32-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CF -flto=jobserver -fvisibility=hidden" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF64" LDFLAGS="-static-libgcc $LFWIN64"
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti THREADS=1 CRYPTO=internal CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-Windows-x86-gcc PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-Windows-x86-gcc MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-Windows-x86-gcc CC=i686-w64-MingW32-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CF -fno-lto" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF32" LDFLAGS="$LFWIN32"
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti THREADS=1 CRYPTO=internal CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-Windows-x64-gcc PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-Windows-x64-gcc MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-Windows-x64-gcc CC=x86_64-w64-MingW32-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CF -fno-lto" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF64" LDFLAGS="$LFWIN64"
unset CAT
make -Bj allmulti CAT=2 MSRPC=1 CRYPTO=windows CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-Windows-msrpc-x86 PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-Windows-msrpc-x86 MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-Windows-msrpc-x86 CC=i686-w64-MingW32-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CFMSRPC -fno-lto" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF32" LDFLAGS="$LFWIN32"
make $MAKEFLAGS allmulti CAT=2 THREADS=1 MSRPC=1 CRYPTO=windows CLIENT_NAME=../bin/vlmcs-Windows-msrpc-x64 PROGRAM_NAME=../bin/vlmcsd-Windows-msrpc-x64 MULTI_NAME=../bin/vlmcsdmulti-Windows-msrpc-x64 CC=x86_64-w64-MingW32-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CFMSRPC -fno-lto" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF64" LDFLAGS="$LFWIN64"
#unset CAT
#make $MAKEFLAGS CAT=2 vlmcsdmulti-Windows-msrpc-x86 THREADS=1 MSRPC=1 CRYPTO=windows MULTI_NAME=vlmcsdmulti-Windows-msrpc-x86 CC=i686-w64-MingW32-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CFMSRPC" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF32" LDFLAGS="-Wl,--nxcompat,--dynamicbase,--tsaware,--large-address-aware"
#make $MAKEFLAGS CAT=2 vlmcsdmulti-Windows-msrpc-x64 THREADS=1 MSRPC=1 CRYPTO=windows MULTI_NAME=vlmcsdmulti-Windows-msrpc-x64 CC=x86_64-w64-MingW32-gcc.exe CFLAGS="$CFMSRPC" PLATFORMFLAGS="$PF64" LDFLAGS="$LFCYG64"
export CAT=2
#echo ""
#echo "Copying MingW binaries from distribution server"
#scp -p root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/Windows/intel/*Windows* root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/Windows/intel/libkms* .
cd ..
echo ""
echo "Installing binaries"
cp -p bin/vlmcs-cygwin-x64.exe /usr/local/bin/vlmcs &
cp -p bin/vlmcsd-cygwin-x64.exe /usr/local/bin/vlmcsd &
cp -p etc/vlmcsd.kmd /usr/local/bin &
cp -p bin/cygkms64.dll /usr/local/bin/cygkms.dll &
cp -p bin/libkms32.dll /cygdrive/c/nttools/x86 &
cp -p bin/libkms64.dll /cygdrive/c/nttools/x64 &
cp -p bin/vlmcsd-Windows-x86.exe /cygdrive/c/nttools/x86/vlmcsd.exe &
cp -p bin/vlmcs-Windows-x86.exe /cygdrive/c/nttools/x86/vlmcs.exe &
cp -p etc/vlmcsd.kmd /cygdrive/c/nttools/x86
#cmd /C mklink c:\\nttools\\x86\\vlmcsd.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe 2> /dev/null &
#cmd /C mklink c:\\nttools\\x86\\vlmcs.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe 2> /dev/null &
echo "Installing man pages"
mkdir -p /usr/share/man/man8
mkdir -p /usr/share/man/man1
mkdir -p /usr/share/man/man7
mkdir -p /usr/share/man/man5
cp -p man/vlmcsd.7 man/vlmcsd-floppy.7 /usr/share/man/man7
cp -p man/vlmcsd.8 /usr/share/man/man8
cp -p man/vlmcsd.ini.5 /usr/share/man/man5
cp -p man/vlmcs.1 man/vlmcsdmulti.1 /usr/share/man/man1
bzip2 -f /usr/share/man/man7/vlmcsd-floppy.7 /usr/share/man/man5/vlmcsd.ini.5 /usr/share/man/man7/vlmcsd.7 /usr/share/man/man8/vlmcsd.8 /usr/share/man/man1/vlmcs.1 /usr/share/man/man1/vlmcsdmulti.1 &
# Copy stuff to distribution server
scp -p bin/*.exe bin/*.dll root@ubuntu64:x/binaries/Windows/intel

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@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
#!/bin/bash
cd "$( dirname "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}" )"
find ../binaries/ -xdev -name 'vlmcs*' ! -name '*-NetBSD-*' ! -name '*-Windows-*' ! -name '*-cygwin-*' ! -name '*-MacOSX-*' ! -name '*-iOS-*' -exec sstrip -z {} \;

4
lib/.gitignore vendored
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@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
# Ignore everything in this directory
*
# Except this file
!.gitignore

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@ -1,335 +0,0 @@
VLMCS(1) KMS Activation Manual VLMCS(1)
NAME
vlmcs - a client for testing and/or charging KMS servers
SYNOPSIS
vlmcs [ options ] [ target ] [ options ]
target can be one of the following:
hostname|ipaddress[:tcp-port] to query a specific KMS server
(example: vlmcs kms.example.com:1688).
.domain to automatically detect KMS servers via DNS for domain
(example: vlmcs .example.com). Please note the dot before
domain.
- (a single dash) to detect KMS servers in your own domain.
If you use ipaddress:port as the target, the ipaddress must be enclosed
in brackets if it contains colons, e.g. [2001:db8:dead:beef::1]:1688.
If you use a link-local IPv6 address on Unix systems, you must append a
percent sign and the interface identifier of the source interface, for
example fe80::dead:beef%eth0.
If you omit the target, 127.0.0.1:1688 will be used except if you use
-i6. In this case the default target is [::1]:1688.
DESCRIPTION
vlmcs is a program that can be used to test a KMS server that provides
activation for several Microsoft products. The KMS server may also be
an emulator. It supports KMS protocol versions 4, 5 and 6.
vlmcs generates one or more activation requests for a Microsoft KMS
product and sends it to a KMS server. It then analyzes and displays the
responses of the KMS server.
vlcms checks both the DCE-RPC protocol and the activation message for
correctness and reports any errors that it finds.
vlmcs can also be used to "charge" a KMS server. A Microsoft KMS server
sends correct activation messages only if it detects a certain minimum
of clients (25 for Windows client OSses, 5 otherwise) on the network.
This is Microsoft's futile attempt to prevent running a KMS server in a
home environment.
OPTIONS
-h or -?
Show help.
-V Displays extended version information. This includes the com-
piler used to build vlmcs, the intended platform and flags (com-
pile time options) to build vlmcs. If you have the source code
of vlmcsd, you can type make help (or gmake help on systems that
do not use the GNU version of make(1) by default) to see the
meaning of those flags.
-x Show valid applications that can be used with -l.
-e Show some examples how to use vlmcs correctly.
-v Be verbose. Instead of just displaying the returned ePID and the
HwId (protocol v6 only) vlmcsd shows all details of the query
and the response.
-l application
Request activation for a specific application. Valid applica-
tions can be displayed by using -x. The default application is
Windows Vista Business. The list of available applications is
not complete. You may supply GUIDs with -a, -k and -s to specify
applications that are not listed with -x. The -l option is used
as a shortcut for the most common applications.
-K protocol-version
Force a specific version of the KMS protocol. Valid versions are
4.0, 5.0 and 6.0. The default is to select a suitable version
according to the application selected. You may use -K to send an
incorrect protocol version to the KMS server and see how it
behaves. Genuine KMS servers return HRESULT 0x8007000D if the
KMS protocol is not 4.0, 5.0 or 6.0. Emulators should do the
same. When sending a request with an incorrect protocol number,
vlmcs ignores the minor protocol number (e.g. sends a v4 request
for version 4.1). If the major version number is less then 4, it
sends a v4 request. If the major version is greater then 6, it
sends a v6 request. In any case the protocol-version as speci-
fied by -K is put in the version fields of the request.
-4, -5 and -6
Force version 4, 5 or 6 of the KMS protocol. These options are
actually shortcuts of -K 4.0, -K 5.0 and -K 6.0.
-j filename
Use KMS data file filename. By default vlmcs contains product
data that is recent when vlmcs was compiled. You may use a more
recent KMS data file that contains additional products.
If vlmcsd has been compiled to use a default KMS data file, you
may use -j- to ignore the default configuration file.
-m Let the client pretend to be a virtual machine. Early versions
of Microsoft's KMS server did not increase the client count if
the request came from a virtual machine. Newer versions ignore
this flag.
-d Use NetBIOS names instead of DNS names. By default vlmcsd gener-
ates some random DNS names for each request. If you prefer Net-
BIOS names, you may use -d. A real Microsoft activation client
uses DNS names or NetBIOS depending on the client name configu-
ration. KMS servers treat the workstation name as a comment that
affects logging only. Clients will be identified by a GUID that
can be specified using -c. -d has no effect if you also specify
-w.
-a application-guid
Send requests with a specific application-guid. There are cur-
rently only three known valid application-guids:
55c92734-d682-4d71-983e-d6ec3f16059f (Windows)
59a52881-a989-479d-af46-f275c6370663 (Office 2010)
0ff1ce15-a989-479d-af46-f275c6370663 (Office 2013)
A Microsoft KMS server uses these GUIDs to have seperate coun-
ters for the already activated clients. A client that does not
contact the KMS server within 30 days will be deleted from the
database. Emulated KMS servers are always fully charged.
-k kms-guid
Send requests with a specific kms-guid. A Microsoft KMS server
uses these GUIDs as a product id to decide whether to grant
activation or not. A list of current kms-guids can be found in
kms.c (table KmsIdList). Emulated KMS servers grant activation
unconditionally and do not check the kms-guid.
-s activation-guid
The activation-guid defines the actual product, e.g. "Windows
8.1 Professional WMC KMSCLIENT edition". A activation-guid maps
1:1 to a product key. However, neither a Microsoft KMS server
nor emulated servers check this id. The activation-guid is use-
ful in logging to get a specific product description like "Win-
dows 8.1 Professional WMC". A list of current activation-guids
can be found in kms.c (table ExtendedProductList).
-n requests
Send requests requests to the server. The default is to send at
least one request and enough subsequent requests that the server
is fully charged afterwards for the application-guid you
selected (explicitly with -a or implicitly by using -l).
-T Causes to use a new TCP connection for each request if multiple
requests are sent with vlmcsd. This is useful when you want to
test an emulated KMS server whether it suffers from memory
leaks. To test for memory leaks use -n with a large number of
requests (> 100000) and then test twice (with and without -T).
This option may become neccessary for future versions of Micro-
soft's KMS server because multiple requests with different
clients-guids for the same kms-id-guid are impossible in a real
KMS szenario over the same TCP connection.
-c client-machine-guid
Normally vlmcs generates a random client-machine-guid for each
request. By using this option you can specify a fixed client-
machine-guid This causes a Microsoft KMS not to increment its
client count because it receives multiple requests for the same
client. Thus do not use -c if you want to charge a real KMS
server.
-o previous-client-machine-guid
If the client-machine-guid changes for some reason, the real KMS
client stores a previous-client-machine-guid which is sent to
the KMS server. This happens rarely and usually
00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 is used. You can use -o to
specify a different previous-client-machine-guid.
-G filename
Grabs ePIDs and HWIDs from a KMS server and writes the informa-
tion to filename in format suitable to be used as a configura-
tion file (aka ini file) for vlmcsd(8). This is especially use-
ful if you have access to a genuine KMS server and want to use
the same data with vlmcsd(8).
If filename does not exist, it will be created. If you specify
an existing filename, it will be updated to use the information
received from the remote KMS server and a backup filename~ will
be created.
-G cannot be used with -l, -4, -5, -6, -a, -s, -k, -r and -n
-w workstation-name
Send requests with a specific workstation-name. This disables
the random generator for the workstation name. Since it is a
comment only, this option does not have much effect.
-r required-client-count
Also known as the "N count policy". Tells the KMS server that
successful activation requires required-client-count clients.
The default is the required-client-count that the product would
need if the request was a real activation. A Microsoft KMS
server counts clients up to the double amount what was specified
with -r. This option can be used to "overcharge" a Microsoft KMS
server.
-t status
Reports a specific license status to the KMS server. status is a
number that can be from 0 to 6. 0=unlicensed, 1=licensed, 2=OOB
grace, 3=OOT grace, 4=Non-genuinue grace, 5=notification,
6=extended grace. Refer to TechNet <http://
technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff686879.aspx#_Toc257201371>
for more information. A Microsoft KMS server collects this
information for statistics only.
-g binding-expiration
This tells the KMS server how long a client will stay in its
current license status. This can be the remaining OOB time (the
grace peroid that is granted between installation of a product
and when activation is actuall required) or the remaining time
when KMS activation must be renewed. binding-expiration is
specified in minutes. A Microsoft KMS server apparantly does not
use this information.
-i protocol-version
Force the use of Internet protocol protocol-version. Allowed
values are 4 (IPv4) and 6 (IPv6). This option is useful only if
you specfiy a hostname and not an ip-address on the command
line.
-p Do not set the RPC_PF_MULTIPLEX flag in the RPC bind request.
This can be used to test if the KMS server uses the same setting
of this flag in the RPC bind respone. Some KMS emulators don't
set this correctly.
-N0 and -N1
Disables (-N0) or enables (-N1) the NDR64 transfer syntax in the
RPC protocol. Disable NDR64 only in case of problems. If NDR64
is not used, vlmcs cannot detect many RPC protocol errors in KMS
emulators. If you want to test whether a KMS emulator fully sup-
ports NDR64, you must use the -n option to send at least two
requests. This is because Microsoft's client always sends the
first request using NDR32 syntax and subsequent requests using
NDR64 syntax.
-B0 and -B1
Disables (-B0) or enables (-B1) bind time feature negotiation
(BTFN) in the RPC protocol. Disable BTFN only in case of prob-
lems. If BTFN is not used, vlmcs cannot detect many RPC protocol
errors in KMS emulators.
Options that do not require an argument can be specified together with
a single dash, e.g. vlmcs -6mvT. If you specify an option more than
once, the last occurence will be in effect.
FILES
vlmcsd.ini(5)
EXAMPLES
vlmcs kms.example.com
Request activation for Windows Vista using v4 protocol from
kms.example.com. Repeat activation requests until server is
charged for all Windows products.
vlmcs -
Request activation for Windows Vista using v4 protocol from a
KMS server that is published via DNS for the current domain.
vlmcs .example.com
Request activation for Windows Vista using v4 protocol from a
KMS server that is published via DNS for domain example.com.
vlmcs -6 -l Office2013 -v -n 1
Request exactly one activation for Office2013 using v6 protocol
from localhost. Display verbose results.
vlmcs kms.bigcompany.com -G /etc/vlmcsd.ini
Get ePIDs and HWIDs from kms.bigcompany.com and create/update
/etc/vlmcsd.ini accordingly.
BUGS
Some platforms (e.g. Solaris) may have a man(7) system that does not
handle URLs. URLs may be omitted in the documentation on those plat-
forms. Cygwin, Linux, FreeBSD and Mac OS X are known to work correctly.
AUTHOR
Written by Hotbird64
CREDITS
Thanks to CODYQX4, crony12, deagles, DougQaid, eIcn, mikmik38, nos-
ferati87, qad, Ratiborus, vityan666, ...
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd(7), vlmcsd(8), vlmcsdmulti(1)
Hotbird64 November 2016 VLMCS(1)

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<title>VLMCS</title>
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<body>
<h1 align="center">VLMCS</h1>
<a href="#NAME">NAME</a><br>
<a href="#SYNOPSIS">SYNOPSIS</a><br>
<a href="#DESCRIPTION">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
<a href="#OPTIONS">OPTIONS</a><br>
<a href="#FILES">FILES</a><br>
<a href="#EXAMPLES">EXAMPLES</a><br>
<a href="#BUGS">BUGS</a><br>
<a href="#AUTHOR">AUTHOR</a><br>
<a href="#CREDITS">CREDITS</a><br>
<a href="#SEE ALSO">SEE ALSO</a><br>
<hr>
<h2>NAME
<a name="NAME"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">vlmcs - a
client for testing and/or charging KMS servers</p>
<h2>SYNOPSIS
<a name="SYNOPSIS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcs</b> [
<i>options</i> ] [ <i>target</i> ] [ <i>options</i> ]</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><i>target</i>
can be one of the following:</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em"><i>hostname</i>|<i>ipaddress</i>[:<i>tcp-port</i>]
to query a specific KMS server (example: vlmcs
kms.example.com:1688). <br>
.<i>domain</i> to automatically detect KMS servers via DNS
for <i>domain</i> (example: vlmcs .example.com). Please note
the dot before <i>domain</i>. <i><br>
-</i> (a single dash) to detect KMS servers in your own
domain.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">If you use
<i>ipaddress</i>:<i>port</i> as the <i>target</i>, the
<i>ipaddress</i> must be enclosed in brackets if it contains
colons, e.g. [2001:db8:dead:beef::1]:1688. If you use a
link-local IPv6 address on Unix systems, you must append a
percent sign and the interface identifier of the source
interface, for example fe80::dead:beef%eth0.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">If you omit the
<i>target</i>, 127.0.0.1:1688 will be used except if you use
<b>-i6</b>. In this case the default target is
[::1]:1688.</p>
<h2>DESCRIPTION
<a name="DESCRIPTION"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcs</b> is
a program that can be used to test a KMS server that
provides activation for several Microsoft products. The KMS
server may also be an emulator. It supports KMS protocol
versions 4, 5 and 6.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcs</b>
generates one or more activation requests for a Microsoft
KMS product and sends it to a KMS server. It then analyzes
and displays the responses of the KMS server.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlcms</b>
checks both the DCE-RPC protocol and the activation message
for correctness and reports any errors that it finds.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcs</b>
can also be used to &quot;charge&quot; a KMS server. A
Microsoft KMS server sends correct activation messages only
if it detects a certain minimum of clients (25 for Windows
client OSses, 5 otherwise) on the network. This is
Microsoft&rsquo;s futile attempt to prevent running a KMS
server in a home environment.</p>
<h2>OPTIONS
<a name="OPTIONS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>-h</b> or
<b>-?</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Show help.</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p><b>-V</b></p></td>
<td width="8%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Displays extended version information. This includes the
compiler used to build vlmcs, the intended platform and
flags (compile time options) to build vlmcs. If you have the
source code of vlmcsd, you can type <b>make help</b> (or
<b>gmake help</b> on systems that do not use the GNU version
of <b>make</b>(1) by default) to see the meaning of those
flags.</p> </td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p><b>-x</b></p></td>
<td width="8%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Show valid <i>application</i>s that can be used with
<b>-l</b>.</p> </td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p><b>-e</b></p></td>
<td width="8%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Show some examples how to use vlmcs correctly.</p></td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p><b>-v</b></p></td>
<td width="8%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Be verbose. Instead of just displaying the returned ePID
and the HwId (protocol v6 only) vlmcsd shows all details of
the query and the response.</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-l</b>
<i>application</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Request activation for a
specific <i>application</i>. Valid applications can be
displayed by using <b>-x</b>. The default <i>application</i>
is <i>Windows Vista Business</i>. The list of available
applications is not complete. You may supply GUIDs with
<b>-a</b>, <b>-k</b> and <b>-s</b> to specify applications
that are not listed with <b>-x</b>. The <b>-l</b> option is
used as a shortcut for the most common applications.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-K</b>
<i>protocol-version</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Force a specific version of the
KMS protocol. Valid versions are 4.0, 5.0 and 6.0. The
default is to select a suitable version according to the
<i>application</i> selected. You may use <b>-K</b> to send
an incorrect protocol version to the KMS server and see how
it behaves. Genuine KMS servers return HRESULT 0x8007000D if
the KMS protocol is not 4.0, 5.0 or 6.0. Emulators should do
the same. When sending a request with an incorrect protocol
number, vlmcs ignores the minor protocol number (e.g. sends
a v4 request for version 4.1). If the major version number
is less then 4, it sends a v4 request. If the major version
is greater then 6, it sends a v6 request. In any case the
<i>protocol-version</i> as specified by <b>-K</b> is put in
the version fields of the request.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-4</b>, <b>-5</b> and
<b>-6</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Force version 4, 5 or 6 of the
KMS protocol. These options are actually shortcuts of <b>-K
4.0</b>, <b>-K 5.0</b> and <b>-K 6.0</b>.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-j</b> <i>filename</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Use KMS data file
<i>filename</i>. By default vlmcs contains product data that
is recent when vlmcs was compiled. You may use a more recent
KMS data file that contains additional products.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">If vlmcsd has
been compiled to use a default KMS data file, you may use
<b>-j-</b> to ignore the default configuration file.</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p><b>-m</b></p></td>
<td width="8%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Let the client pretend to be a virtual machine. Early
versions of Microsoft&rsquo;s KMS server did not increase
the client count if the request came from a virtual machine.
Newer versions ignore this flag.</p></td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p><b>-d</b></p></td>
<td width="8%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Use NetBIOS names instead of DNS names. By default
vlmcsd generates some random DNS names for each request. If
you prefer NetBIOS names, you may use <b>-d</b>. A real
Microsoft activation client uses DNS names or NetBIOS
depending on the client name configuration. KMS servers
treat the workstation name as a comment that affects logging
only. Clients will be identified by a GUID that can be
specified using <b>-c</b>. <b>-d</b> has no effect if you
also specify <b>-w</b>.</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-a</b>
<i>application-guid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Send requests with a specific
<i>application-guid</i>. There are currently only three
known valid <i>application-guid</i>s:</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">55c92734-d682-4d71-983e-d6ec3f16059f
(Windows) <br>
59a52881-a989-479d-af46-f275c6370663 (Office 2010) <br>
0ff1ce15-a989-479d-af46-f275c6370663 (Office 2013)</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">A Microsoft KMS
server uses these GUIDs to have seperate counters for the
already activated clients. A client that does not contact
the KMS server within 30 days will be deleted from the
database. Emulated KMS servers are always fully charged.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-k</b> <i>kms-guid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Send requests with a specific
<i>kms-guid</i>. A Microsoft KMS server uses these GUIDs as
a product id to decide whether to grant activation or not. A
list of current <i>kms-guid</i>s can be found in kms.c
(table KmsIdList). Emulated KMS servers grant activation
unconditionally and do not check the <i>kms-guid</i>.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-s</b>
<i>activation-guid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">The <i>activation-guid</i>
defines the actual product, e.g. &quot;Windows 8.1
Professional WMC KMSCLIENT edition&quot;. A
<i>activation-guid</i> maps 1:1 to a product key. However,
neither a Microsoft KMS server nor emulated servers check
this id. The <i>activation-guid</i> is useful in logging to
get a specific product description like &quot;Windows 8.1
Professional WMC&quot;. A list of current
<i>activation-guid</i>s can be found in kms.c (table
ExtendedProductList).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-n</b> <i>requests</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Send <i>requests</i> requests
to the server. The default is to send at least one request
and enough subsequent requests that the server is fully
charged afterwards for the <i>application-guid</i> you
selected (explicitly with <b>-a</b> or implicitly by using
<b>-l</b>).</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p><b>-T</b></p></td>
<td width="8%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Causes to use a new TCP connection for each request if
multiple requests are sent with vlmcsd. This is useful when
you want to test an emulated KMS server whether it suffers
from memory leaks. To test for memory leaks use <b>-n</b>
with a large number of requests (&gt; 100000) and then test
twice (with and without <b>-T</b>). This option may become
neccessary for future versions of Microsoft&rsquo;s KMS
server because multiple requests with different
<i>clients-guid</i>s for the same <i>kms-id-guid</i> are
impossible in a real KMS szenario over the same TCP
connection.</p> </td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-c</b>
<i>client-machine-guid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Normally vlmcs generates a
random <i>client-machine-guid</i> for each request. By using
this option you can specify a fixed
<i>client-machine-guid</i> This causes a Microsoft KMS not
to increment its client count because it receives multiple
requests for the same client. Thus do not use <b>-c</b> if
you want to charge a real KMS server.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-o</b>
<i>previous-client-machine-guid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">If the
<i>client-machine-guid</i> changes for some reason, the real
KMS client stores a <i>previous-client-machine-guid</i>
which is sent to the KMS server. This happens rarely and
usually 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 is used. You
can use <b>-o</b> to specify a different
<i>previous-client-machine-guid</i>.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-G</b> <i>filename</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Grabs ePIDs and HWIDs from a
KMS server and writes the information to <i>filename</i> in
format suitable to be used as a configuration file (aka ini
file) for <b>vlmcsd</b>(8). This is especially useful if you
have access to a genuine KMS server and want to use the same
data with <b>vlmcsd</b>(8).</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">If
<i>filename</i> does not exist, it will be created. If you
specify an existing <i>filename</i>, it will be updated to
use the information received from the remote KMS server and
a backup <i>filename</i>~ will be created.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em"><b>-G</b>
cannot be used with <b>-l</b>, <b>-4</b>, <b>-5</b>,
<b>-6</b>, <b>-a</b>, <b>-s</b>, <b>-k</b>, <b>-r</b> and
<b>-n</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-w</b>
<i>workstation-name</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Send requests with a specific
<i>workstation-name</i>. This disables the random generator
for the workstation name. Since it is a comment only, this
option does not have much effect.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-r</b>
<i>required-client-count</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Also known as the &quot;N count
policy&quot;. Tells the KMS server that successful
activation requires <i>required-client-count</i> clients.
The default is the <i>required-client-count</i> that the
product would need if the request was a real activation. A
Microsoft KMS server counts clients up to the double amount
what was specified with <b>-r</b>. This option can be used
to &quot;overcharge&quot; a Microsoft KMS server.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-t&nbsp;</b><i>status</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Reports a specific license
status to the KMS server. <i>status</i> is a number that can
be from 0 to 6. 0=unlicensed, 1=licensed, 2=OOB grace, 3=OOT
grace, 4=Non-genuinue grace, 5=notification, 6=extended
grace. Refer to
<a href="http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff686879.aspx#_Toc257201371">TechNet</a>
for more information. A Microsoft KMS server collects this
information for statistics only.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-g</b>
<i>binding-expiration</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">This tells the KMS server how
long a client will stay in its current license status. This
can be the remaining OOB time (the grace peroid that is
granted between installation of a product and when
activation is actuall required) or the remaining time when
KMS activation must be renewed. <i>binding-expiration</i> is
specified in minutes. A Microsoft KMS server apparantly does
not use this information.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-i</b>
<i>protocol-version</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Force the use of Internet
protocol <i>protocol-version</i>. Allowed values are 4
(IPv4) and 6 (IPv6). This option is useful only if you
specfiy a <i>hostname</i> and not an <i>ip-address</i> on
the command line.</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p><b>-p</b></p></td>
<td width="8%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Do not set the RPC_PF_MULTIPLEX flag in the RPC bind
request. This can be used to test if the KMS server uses the
same setting of this flag in the RPC bind respone. Some KMS
emulators don&rsquo;t set this correctly.</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-N0</b> and <b>-N1</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Disables (<b>-N0</b>) or
enables (<b>-N1</b>) the NDR64 transfer syntax in the RPC
protocol. Disable NDR64 only in case of problems. If NDR64
is not used, vlmcs cannot detect many RPC protocol errors in
KMS emulators. If you want to test whether a KMS emulator
fully supports NDR64, you must use the <b>-n</b> option to
send at least two requests. This is because
Microsoft&rsquo;s client always sends the first request
using NDR32 syntax and subsequent requests using NDR64
syntax.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>-B0</b> and <b>-B1</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Disables (<b>-B0</b>) or
enables (<b>-B1</b>) bind time feature negotiation (BTFN) in
the RPC protocol. Disable BTFN only in case of problems. If
BTFN is not used, vlmcs cannot detect many RPC protocol
errors in KMS emulators.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Options that do
not require an argument can be specified together with a
single dash, e.g. vlmcs -6mvT. If you specify an option more
than once, the last occurence will be in effect.</p>
<h2>FILES
<a name="FILES"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd.ini</b>(5)</p>
<h2>EXAMPLES
<a name="EXAMPLES"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcs
kms.example.com</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Request activation for Windows
Vista using v4 protocol from kms.example.com. Repeat
activation requests until server is charged for all Windows
products.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>vlmcs -</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Request activation for Windows
Vista using v4 protocol from a KMS server that is published
via DNS for the current domain.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>vlmcs .example.com</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Request activation for Windows
Vista using v4 protocol from a KMS server that is published
via DNS for domain example.com.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>vlmcs -6 -l Office2013 -v -n
1</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Request exactly one activation
for Office2013 using v6 protocol from localhost. Display
verbose results.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>vlmcs kms.bigcompany.com -G
/etc/vlmcsd.ini</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Get ePIDs and HWIDs from
kms.bigcompany.com and create/update /etc/vlmcsd.ini
accordingly.</p>
<h2>BUGS
<a name="BUGS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Some platforms
(e.g. Solaris) may have a <b>man</b>(7) system that does not
handle URLs. URLs may be omitted in the documentation on
those platforms. Cygwin, Linux, FreeBSD and Mac OS X are
known to work correctly.</p>
<h2>AUTHOR
<a name="AUTHOR"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Written by
Hotbird64</p>
<h2>CREDITS
<a name="CREDITS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Thanks to
CODYQX4, crony12, deagles, DougQaid, eIcn, mikmik38,
nosferati87, qad, Ratiborus, vityan666, ...</p>
<h2>SEE ALSO
<a name="SEE ALSO"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd</b>(7),
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8), <b>vlmcsdmulti</b>(1)</p>
<hr>
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VLMCS(1) KMS Activation Manual VLMCS(1)
NAME
vlmcs - a client for testing and/or charging KMS servers
SYNOPSIS
vlmcs [ options ] [ target ] [ options ]
target can be one of the following:
hostname|ipaddress[:tcp-port] to query a specific KMS server
(example: vlmcs kms.example.com:1688).
.domain to automatically detect KMS servers via DNS for domain
(example: vlmcs .example.com). Please note the dot before
domain.
- (a single dash) to detect KMS servers in your own domain.
If you use ipaddress:port as the target, the ipaddress must be enclosed
in brackets if it contains colons, e.g. [2001:db8:dead:beef::1]:1688.
If you use a link-local IPv6 address on Unix systems, you must append a
percent sign and the interface identifier of the source interface, for
example fe80::dead:beef%eth0.
If you omit the target, 127.0.0.1:1688 will be used except if you use
-i6. In this case the default target is [::1]:1688.
DESCRIPTION
vlmcs is a program that can be used to test a KMS server that provides
activation for several Microsoft products. The KMS server may also be
an emulator. It supports KMS protocol versions 4, 5 and 6.
vlmcs generates one or more activation requests for a Microsoft KMS
product and sends it to a KMS server. It then analyzes and displays the
responses of the KMS server.
vlcms checks both the DCE-RPC protocol and the activation message for
correctness and reports any errors that it finds.
vlmcs can also be used to "charge" a KMS server. A Microsoft KMS server
sends correct activation messages only if it detects a certain minimum
of clients (25 for Windows client OSses, 5 otherwise) on the network.
This is Microsoft's futile attempt to prevent running a KMS server in a
home environment.
OPTIONS
-h or -?
Show help.
-V Displays extended version information. This includes the com-
piler used to build vlmcs, the intended platform and flags (com-
pile time options) to build vlmcs. If you have the source code
of vlmcsd, you can type make help (or gmake help on systems that
do not use the GNU version of make(1) by default) to see the
meaning of those flags.
-x Show valid applications that can be used with -l.
-e Show some examples how to use vlmcs correctly.
-v Be verbose. Instead of just displaying the returned ePID and the
HwId (protocol v6 only) vlmcsd shows all details of the query
and the response.
-l application
Request activation for a specific application. Valid applica-
tions can be displayed by using -x. The default application is
Windows Vista Business. The list of available applications is
not complete. You may supply GUIDs with -a, -k and -s to specify
applications that are not listed with -x. The -l option is used
as a shortcut for the most common applications.
-K protocol-version
Force a specific version of the KMS protocol. Valid versions are
4.0, 5.0 and 6.0. The default is to select a suitable version
according to the application selected. You may use -K to send an
incorrect protocol version to the KMS server and see how it
behaves. Genuine KMS servers return HRESULT 0x8007000D if the
KMS protocol is not 4.0, 5.0 or 6.0. Emulators should do the
same. When sending a request with an incorrect protocol number,
vlmcs ignores the minor protocol number (e.g. sends a v4 request
for version 4.1). If the major version number is less then 4, it
sends a v4 request. If the major version is greater then 6, it
sends a v6 request. In any case the protocol-version as speci-
fied by -K is put in the version fields of the request.
-4, -5 and -6
Force version 4, 5 or 6 of the KMS protocol. These options are
actually shortcuts of -K 4.0, -K 5.0 and -K 6.0.
-j filename
Use KMS data file filename. By default vlmcs contains product
data that is recent when vlmcs was compiled. You may use a more
recent KMS data file that contains additional products.
If vlmcsd has been compiled to use a default KMS data file, you
may use -j- to ignore the default configuration file.
-m Let the client pretend to be a virtual machine. Early versions
of Microsoft's KMS server did not increase the client count if
the request came from a virtual machine. Newer versions ignore
this flag.
-d Use NetBIOS names instead of DNS names. By default vlmcsd gener-
ates some random DNS names for each request. If you prefer Net-
BIOS names, you may use -d. A real Microsoft activation client
uses DNS names or NetBIOS depending on the client name configu-
ration. KMS servers treat the workstation name as a comment that
affects logging only. Clients will be identified by a GUID that
can be specified using -c. -d has no effect if you also specify
-w.
-a application-guid
Send requests with a specific application-guid. There are cur-
rently only three known valid application-guids:
55c92734-d682-4d71-983e-d6ec3f16059f (Windows)
59a52881-a989-479d-af46-f275c6370663 (Office 2010)
0ff1ce15-a989-479d-af46-f275c6370663 (Office 2013)
A Microsoft KMS server uses these GUIDs to have seperate coun-
ters for the already activated clients. A client that does not
contact the KMS server within 30 days will be deleted from the
database. Emulated KMS servers are always fully charged.
-k kms-guid
Send requests with a specific kms-guid. A Microsoft KMS server
uses these GUIDs as a product id to decide whether to grant
activation or not. A list of current kms-guids can be found in
kms.c (table KmsIdList). Emulated KMS servers grant activation
unconditionally and do not check the kms-guid.
-s activation-guid
The activation-guid defines the actual product, e.g. "Windows
8.1 Professional WMC KMSCLIENT edition". A activation-guid maps
1:1 to a product key. However, neither a Microsoft KMS server
nor emulated servers check this id. The activation-guid is use-
ful in logging to get a specific product description like "Win-
dows 8.1 Professional WMC". A list of current activation-guids
can be found in kms.c (table ExtendedProductList).
-n requests
Send requests requests to the server. The default is to send at
least one request and enough subsequent requests that the server
is fully charged afterwards for the application-guid you
selected (explicitly with -a or implicitly by using -l).
-T Causes to use a new TCP connection for each request if multiple
requests are sent with vlmcsd. This is useful when you want to
test an emulated KMS server whether it suffers from memory
leaks. To test for memory leaks use -n with a large number of
requests (> 100000) and then test twice (with and without -T).
This option may become neccessary for future versions of Micro-
soft's KMS server because multiple requests with different
clients-guids for the same kms-id-guid are impossible in a real
KMS szenario over the same TCP connection.
-c client-machine-guid
Normally vlmcs generates a random client-machine-guid for each
request. By using this option you can specify a fixed client-
machine-guid This causes a Microsoft KMS not to increment its
client count because it receives multiple requests for the same
client. Thus do not use -c if you want to charge a real KMS
server.
-o previous-client-machine-guid
If the client-machine-guid changes for some reason, the real KMS
client stores a previous-client-machine-guid which is sent to
the KMS server. This happens rarely and usually
00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 is used. You can use -o to
specify a different previous-client-machine-guid.
-G filename
Grabs ePIDs and HWIDs from a KMS server and writes the informa-
tion to filename in format suitable to be used as a configura-
tion file (aka ini file) for vlmcsd(8). This is especially use-
ful if you have access to a genuine KMS server and want to use
the same data with vlmcsd(8).
If filename does not exist, it will be created. If you specify
an existing filename, it will be updated to use the information
received from the remote KMS server and a backup filename~ will
be created.
-G cannot be used with -l, -4, -5, -6, -a, -s, -k, -r and -n
-w workstation-name
Send requests with a specific workstation-name. This disables
the random generator for the workstation name. Since it is a
comment only, this option does not have much effect.
-r required-client-count
Also known as the "N count policy". Tells the KMS server that
successful activation requires required-client-count clients.
The default is the required-client-count that the product would
need if the request was a real activation. A Microsoft KMS
server counts clients up to the double amount what was specified
with -r. This option can be used to "overcharge" a Microsoft KMS
server.
-t status
Reports a specific license status to the KMS server. status is a
number that can be from 0 to 6. 0=unlicensed, 1=licensed, 2=OOB
grace, 3=OOT grace, 4=Non-genuinue grace, 5=notification,
6=extended grace. Refer to TechNet <http://
technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff686879.aspx#_Toc257201371>
for more information. A Microsoft KMS server collects this
information for statistics only.
-g binding-expiration
This tells the KMS server how long a client will stay in its
current license status. This can be the remaining OOB time (the
grace peroid that is granted between installation of a product
and when activation is actuall required) or the remaining time
when KMS activation must be renewed. binding-expiration is
specified in minutes. A Microsoft KMS server apparantly does not
use this information.
-i protocol-version
Force the use of Internet protocol protocol-version. Allowed
values are 4 (IPv4) and 6 (IPv6). This option is useful only if
you specfiy a hostname and not an ip-address on the command
line.
-p Do not set the RPC_PF_MULTIPLEX flag in the RPC bind request.
This can be used to test if the KMS server uses the same setting
of this flag in the RPC bind respone. Some KMS emulators don't
set this correctly.
-N0 and -N1
Disables (-N0) or enables (-N1) the NDR64 transfer syntax in the
RPC protocol. Disable NDR64 only in case of problems. If NDR64
is not used, vlmcs cannot detect many RPC protocol errors in KMS
emulators. If you want to test whether a KMS emulator fully sup-
ports NDR64, you must use the -n option to send at least two
requests. This is because Microsoft's client always sends the
first request using NDR32 syntax and subsequent requests using
NDR64 syntax.
-B0 and -B1
Disables (-B0) or enables (-B1) bind time feature negotiation
(BTFN) in the RPC protocol. Disable BTFN only in case of prob-
lems. If BTFN is not used, vlmcs cannot detect many RPC protocol
errors in KMS emulators.
Options that do not require an argument can be specified together with
a single dash, e.g. vlmcs -6mvT. If you specify an option more than
once, the last occurence will be in effect.
FILES
vlmcsd.ini(5)
EXAMPLES
vlmcs kms.example.com
Request activation for Windows Vista using v4 protocol from
kms.example.com. Repeat activation requests until server is
charged for all Windows products.
vlmcs -
Request activation for Windows Vista using v4 protocol from a
KMS server that is published via DNS for the current domain.
vlmcs .example.com
Request activation for Windows Vista using v4 protocol from a
KMS server that is published via DNS for domain example.com.
vlmcs -6 -l Office2013 -v -n 1
Request exactly one activation for Office2013 using v6 protocol
from localhost. Display verbose results.
vlmcs kms.bigcompany.com -G /etc/vlmcsd.ini
Get ePIDs and HWIDs from kms.bigcompany.com and create/update
/etc/vlmcsd.ini accordingly.
BUGS
Some platforms (e.g. Solaris) may have a man(7) system that does not
handle URLs. URLs may be omitted in the documentation on those plat-
forms. Cygwin, Linux, FreeBSD and Mac OS X are known to work correctly.
AUTHOR
Written by Hotbird64
CREDITS
Thanks to CODYQX4, crony12, deagles, DougQaid, eIcn, mikmik38, nos-
ferati87, qad, Ratiborus, vityan666, ...
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd(7), vlmcsd(8), vlmcsdmulti(1)
Hotbird64 November 2016 VLMCS(1)

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@ -1,548 +0,0 @@
VLMCSD-FLOPPY(7) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSD-FLOPPY(7)
NAME
floppy144.vfd - a bootable floppy disk with Linux and vlmcsd(8)
DESCRIPTION
floppy144.vfd is an image of a bootable floppy that contains a minimal
version of Linux and vlmcsd(8). It requires only 16 MB of RAM. Its pri-
mary purpose is to run vlmcsd(8) in a small virtual machine which makes
it easy to use vlmcsd(8) to activate the virtual machine's host com-
puter which is not possible in Windows 8.1 and up. The floppy image is
a standard 3,5" floppy with 1.44 MB storage. It is formatted with a
FAT12 filesystem. The floppy can be mounted to apply several customiza-
tions.
SUPPORTED HYPERVISORS
The floppy image has been tested with the following hypervisors:
VMWare, VirtualBox, Hyper-V and QEMU
Others are likely to work.
SETUP
Create a new virtual machine. Assign 16 MB of RAM. Add a floppy drive
and attach floppy144.vfd to this drive. Do not create a virtual hard
disk. Setup the virtual machine to boot from a floppy drive (VirtualBox
has floppy boot disabled by default). If possible, setup a virtual
machine with plain old BIOS (not UEFI). If you created an UEFI virtual
machine, enable the compatibility support mode (CSM) to allow a BIOS
compatible boot. Set number of CPUs to 1. The Linux kernel is not capa-
ble of SMP. Remove IDE, SATA, SCSI and USB support if possible. The
Linux kernel can't handle this and ignores any devices connected to
these buses.
Setup an ethernet card. The following models are supported:
Intel PRO/1000
AMD PCNET III
AMD PCNET32
VMWare vmxnet3 (paravirtualized driver used by VMWare)
virtio (paravirtualized driver used by VirtualBox, QEMU, KVM and
lguest)
Most hypervisors emulate an Intel PRO/1000 or AMD PCNET32 by default.
Selecting a paravirtualized driver slightly improves performance. In
VirtualBox you can simply select virtio in the network configuration
dialog. VMWare requires that you add or change the VMX file. Use 'eth-
ernet0.virtualDev = "vmxnet3"' in your VMWare config file.
If you are using QEMU, you must also setup a TAP adapter. Port redi-
rection does not work to activate your own computer.
CONFIGURATION
floppy144.vfd can be customized to fit your needs. This is done by
editing the file syslinux.cfg on the floppy image. The floppy image
must be mounted. Under Linux you can simply attach floppy144.vfd to a
loop device which is mountable like any other block device. For Windows
you must use some software that allows mounting a floppy image, e.g.
OSFMount <http://www.osforensics.com/tools/mount-disk-images.html>
OSFMount works under all Windows versions beginning with Windows XP up
to Windows 10 (32- and 64-bit).
The default syslinux.cfg file looks like this:
prompt 0
TIMEOUT 50
default dhcp
LABEL dhcp
KERNEL bzImage
APPEND vga=773 quiet initrd=initrd KBD=us LIS-
TEN=[::]:1688,0.0.0.0:1688 TZ=UTC0 IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP
NTP_SERVER=pool.ntp.org HOST_NAME=vlmcsd ROOT_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
USER_NAME=user USER_PASSWORD=vlmcsd GUEST_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
INETD=Y WINDOWS=06401-00206-271-395032-03-1033-9600.0000-1652016
OFFICE2010=06401-00096-199-204970-03-1033-9600.0000-1652016
OFFICE2013=06401-00206-234-921934-03-1033-9600.0000-1652016
HWID=36:4F:46:3A:88:63:D3:5F
LABEL static
KERNEL bzImage
APPEND vga=773 quiet initrd=initrd KBD=fr LIS-
TEN=[::]:1688,0.0.0.0:1688 TZ=CET-1CEST,M3.5.0,M10.5.0/3
IPV4_CONFIG=STATIC IPV4_ADDRESS=192.168.20.123/24 IPV4_GATE-
WAY=192.168.20.2 IPV4_DNS1=192.168.20.2 IPV4_DNS2=NONE
NTP_SERVER=pool.ntp.org HOST_NAME=vlmcsd ROOT_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
USER_NAME=user USER_PASSWORD=vlmcsd GUEST_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
INETD=Y
There are two configurations in this files: dhcp (for configuring the
IPv4 network via DHCP) and static (for a static IPv4 configuration).
The kernel always boots the dhcp configuration without asking (lines
'prompt 0' and 'default dhcp'). You can simply change the default con-
figuration to static and then customize the APPEND line in the static
configuration. For more details how to customize the syslinux.cfg file
see syslinux(1).
Each APPPEND line contains one or more items seperated by spaces. All
items are case-sensitive. The following parameters can be customized:
vga=vesa-video-mode
Sets the VESA display mode for the virtual machine. The parame-
ter is not optional. If you ommit it, you will not see anything
on the screen. 773 means 1024x768 with 256 colors. See Wikipedia
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
VESA_BIOS_Extensions#Linux_video_mode_numbers> for more video
modes. Note that all 16 color (4-bit) modes will not work. Use
8-bit (256 colors), 16-bit (65536 colors), 24-bit and 32-bit (>
16 Million colors) only. All modes above 1280x1024 are non-VESA-
standard and vary for all (virtual) graphic cards.
quiet This causes the kernel not display the its log during boot. You
may omit quiet but it doesn't make much sense. The boot log is
actually very verbose and scrolls away from screen quickly. If
any errors occur during boot, they will be displayed even if
quiet is present in the APPEND line. You may evaluate the com-
plete boot log later by using the dmesg command or the menu on
/dev/tty8.
initrd=initial-ram-disk-file
This defines the initial ram disk that the kernel will read.
There is only one initial ram disk on the floppy thus leave ini-
trd=initrd as it is.
KBD=keyboard-layout-name
This allows you to select the keyboard layout. keyboard-layout-
name is usually the ISO 3166-1 (top level domain) code for a
country. A list of valid keyboard-layout-names can be accessed
via the menu system on /dev/tty8 (press ALT-F8). Note, that this
is a keyboard driver only. There is no Unicode font support in
floppy144.vfd (due to the fact that the kernel uses a generic
VESA framebuffer device only). Characters beyond ASCII work for
Western European languages only but not Eastern European, Greek,
Cyrillic, Arabic, Hebrew, CJK and other languages. There is no
need in floppy144.vfd to enter any characters outside ASCII. The
purpose of the keyboard maps are that you will find characters
like dash, backslash, brackets, braces, etc. at the usual place
on your keyboard.
LISTEN=PRIVATE[:tcp-port] | ip-address[:tcp-port][,ip-address[:tcp-
port]][,...]
One or more combinations of IP addresses and optional TCP port
seperated by commas that vlmcsd(8) should listen on or PRIVATE
to listen on all private IP addresses only. The default port is
1688. If you use an explicit port number, append it to the IP
address seperated by a colon. If you use a port number and the
IP address contains colons, you must enclose the IP address in
brackets. For example 192.168.0.2,[fd00::dead:beef]:5678 causes
vlmcsd(8) to listen on 192.168.0.2 port 1688 and fd00::dead:beef
port 5678.
WINDOWS=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Windows activations. If you
ommit this parameter, vlmcsd generates a random ePID when it is
started.
OFFICE2010=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Office 2010 activations. If
you ommit this parameter, vlmcsd(8) generates a random ePID when
it is started.
OFFICE2013=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Office 2016 activations. If
you ommit this parameter, vlmcsd(8) generates a random ePID when
it is started.
OFFICE2016=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Office 2016 activations. If
you ommit this parameter, vlmcsd(8) generates a random ePID when
it is started.
WINCHINAGOV=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Windows China Government Edi-
tion activations (Enterprise G/GN). If you ommit this parameter,
vlmcsd(8) generates a random ePID when it is started.
HWID=hwid
Defines the HwId that is sent to clients. hwid must be specified
as 16 hex digits that are interpreted as a series of 8 bytes
(big endian). Any character that is not a hex digit will be
ignored. This is for better readability.
TZ=posix-time-zone-string
Set the time zone to posix-time-zone-string. It must conform to
the POSIX <http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/
basedefs/xbd_chap08.html> specification. Simplified time zone
strings like "Europe/London" or "America/Detroit" are not
allowed. This has the very simple reason that there is no space
on the floppy to store the time zone database.
The string CET-1CEST,M3.5.0,M10.5.0/3 (most countries in Europe)
reads as follows:
CET The standard (winter) time zone has the name CET.
-1 The standard time zone is one hour east of UTC. Nega-
tive numbers are east of UTC. Positive numbers are
west of UTC.
CEST The daylight saving (summer) time zone has the name
CEST.
M3.5.0 Daylight saving time starts in the 3rd month (March)
on the 5th (=last) occurence of weekday 0 (Sunday) at
2 o'clock (2 o'clock is a default value).
M10.5.0/3 Daylight saving time ends in the 10th month (October)
on the 5th (=last) occurence of weekday 0 (Sunday) at
3 o'clock.
If you don't have daylight saving time, things are easier. For
Chinese Standard Time for example, just use CST-8 as the time
zone string.
On a Linux desktop system, you can use a command like
strings /usr/share/zoneinfo/America/New_York | tail -n1. This
should return EST5EDT,M3.2.0,M11.1.0. You can use the returned
string for the TZ=posix-time-zone-string parameter.
IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP | STATIC
This determines how you want to configure IPv4 networking. If
you use IPV4_CONFIG=STATIC, you must supply additional para-
maters to the APPEND command line.
IPV4_ADDRESS=ipv4-address/CIDR-mask
Use ipv4-address with netmask CIDR-mask for static IPv4 configu-
ration. The netmask must not be ommitted. For IPv4 address
192.168.12.17 with a netmask of 255.255.255.0 use
192.168.12.17/24. For IPv4 address 10.4.0.8 with a netmask of
255.255.0.0 use 10.4.0.8/16. This paramater is ignored, if you
used IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP.
IPV4_GATEWAY=ipv4-address | NONE
Use ipv4-address as the default gateway. This is usually the
IPv4 address of your router. You may specify NONE explicitly for
no gateway. In this case your virtual machine is only visible on
its local LAN. This paramater is ignored, if you used IPV4_CON-
FIG=DHCP.
IPV4_DNS1=ipv4-address | NONE
Use ipv4-address as the primary name server. In home networks
this is often the IPv4 address of your router. You may specify
NONE explicitly. If you specified NONE for both IPV4_DNS1= and
IPV4_DNS2=, your virtual machine cannot resolve host names to IP
addresses. While vlmcsd(8) works perfectly without DNS servers,
you must use IP addresses when referring to a host, e.g. for
specifying an NTP server. This paramater is ignored, if you used
IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP.
IPV4_DNS2=ipv4-address | NONE
Use ipv4-address as the secondary name server. It serves as a
backup if the primary name server is not available. Home net-
works often don't have a secondary name server. In this case set
this to NONE. This paramater is ignored, if you used IPV4_CON-
FIG=DHCP.
NTP_SERVER=host-name | ipv4-address | NONE
This sets the name of a time server using the NTP protocol. If
your virtualization environment reliably provides time, you can
set this to NONE. Don't use a public time service like
pool.ntp.org or time.nist.gov if you have a (at least somewhat
reliable) NTP server in your LAN.
HOST_NAME=host-name
Sets the local host name for your virtual machine. It can be a
single name or a fully-qualified domain name FQDN. If you used
IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP and your DHCP server returns a domain name, the
domain part of an FQDN will be replaced by that name. This host
name or host part of an FQDN will not replaced by a host name
returned via DHCP. The host name is not important for the opera-
tion of floppy144.vfd.
ROOT_PASSWORD=password
Sets the password of the root user.
USER_NAME=username
Sets the name of for a general user with no special privileges.
This user can login but can't do much.
USER_PASSWORD=password
Sets the password for the user defined by USER_NAME=username.
GUEST_PASSWORD=password
Sets the password for the pre-defined guest user. This user has
the same priviliges (none) as the user defined by
USER_NAME=username.
INETD=Y | N
INETD=Y specifies that inetd(8) should automatically be started.
That means you can telnet and ftp to your virtual machine.
VLMCSD_EXTRA_ARGS=comma-seperated-argument-list
Allows you to specify additional command line options that will
be passed to vlmcsd(8). Instead of spaces you use commas between
arguments. Example: VLMCSD_EXTRA_ARGS=-c1,-K3,-M1
OPERATION
Diskless System
The floppy144.vfd virtual machine is a diskless system that works
entirely from RAM. The file system is actually a RAM disk that is cre-
ated from the initrd(4) file on the floppy image.
Anything you'll do from inside the virtual machine, for instance edit-
ing a config file, will be lost when you reboot the machine. So, if you
ever asked yourself if rm -fr / (root privileges required) really
deletes all files from all mounted partitions, the floppy144.vfd VM is
the right place to test it (Yes, it does).
The VM uses a RAM disk, because the Linux kernel had to be stripped
down to essential features to fit on a 1.44 MB floppy. It has no floppy
driver, no disk file system drivers and no block layer (cannot use
disks of any type).
System startup
The kernel boots up very quickly and the init script (/sbin/init) waits
5 seconds. In these 5 seconds you can:
Press 'm' to manually enter the time zone and the IPv4 parame-
ters. These will be queried interactively.
Press 't' to manually enter the time zone only.
Press 's' to escape to a shell.
If you don't want to 5 seconds for continuing the init process, you can
press any other key to speed things up. At the end of the init script
you should see thatvlmcsd(8) has started. You should also see the IP
addresses and all user names and passwords.
Logging into the system
There are 5 local logins provided on /dev/tty2 to /dev/tty6. To switch
to these logins, simply press ALT-F2 to ALT-F6. To return to the con-
sole on /dev/tty1, press ALT-F1. If inetd(8) is running you can also
use telnet(1). This allows you use a terminal program (e.g. putty) that
can utilize your keyboard layout, can be resized and has full UTF-8
support. The local terminals support US keyboard layout only. Please be
aware that telnet(1) is unencrypted and everything including passwords
is transmitted in clear text. There is not enough space for an ssh
server like sshd(8) or dropbear(8).
The floppy image only provides basic Unix commands. Type busybox or ll
/bin to get a list. The only editor available is vi(1). If you don't
like vi, you may transfer config files via ftp(1) edit them with the
editor of your choice and transfer them back to the floppy144.vfd VM.
The menu system
You'll find a menu system on /dev/tty8 (press ALT-F8 to see it). It
allows you performing some administrative tasks and to view various
system information. It is mainly for users that do not have much expe-
rience with Unix commands.
1) (Re)start vlmcsd
Starts or restarts vlmcsd(8). This is useful if you changed
/etc/vlmcsd.ini(5).
2) Stop vlmcsd
Stops vlmcsd(8).
3) (Re)start inetd
Starts or restarts inetd(8). If inetd(8) is restarted, current
clients connected via telnet(1) or ftp(1) will not be dropped.
They can continue their sessions. This is useful if you changed
/etc/inetd.conf(5).
4) Stop inet
Stops inetd(8). All clients connected via telnet(1) or ftp(1)
will be dropped immediately.
5) Change the time zone
Just in case you missed pressing 't' during system startup. This
also restarts vlmcsd(8) if it was running to notify it that the
time zone has changed. Restarting vlmcsd(8) allows currently
connected clients to finish their activation.
k) Change keyboard layout
This allows you to select a different keyboard layout.
6) Show all kernel boot parameters
Shows all parameters passed to the kernel via syslinux.cfg. If
you experience any unexpected behavior, you can use this to
check if your APPEND line in syslinux.cfg is correct. The output
is piped through less(1). So press 'q' to return to the menu.
7) Show boot log (dmesg)
Shows the boot log of the kernel. The output is piped through
less(1). So press 'q' to return to the menu.
8) Show TCP/IP configuration
Shows the TCP/IP configuration, listening sockets and current
TCP and UDP connections. Useful, if you problems with net con-
nectivity. The output is piped through less(1). So press 'q' to
return to the menu.
9) Show running processes
Shows all processes including memory and CPU usage. Display will
updated every second. Press 'q' or CTRL-C to return to the menu.
s) Shutdown
Shuts down the floppy144.vfd virtual machine. Proper shutdown is
not required. It is ok to use a hard power off in your virtual-
ization program.
r) Reboot
Reboots the floppy144.vfd virtual machine. Proper reboot is not
required. It is ok to use a hard reset in your virtualization
program.
PERMANENT CHANGES OF INITRD
If you want to change any file or script of the file system (e.g. the
init script /sbin/init or /etc/vlmcsd.ini), you'll need to mount the
floppy image, unpack the initrd(4) file, make any modfications you
like, create a new initrd(4) file and copy it to the mounted floppy.
To unpack the initrd(4) file you'll need xz(1) (or lzma(1) on older
unix-like OSses) and cpio(1). These can be installed using your package
manager on all major distros. It is ok to use the BSD version of
cpio(1). No need to get the GNU version for BSD users. Provided the
floppy is mounted in /mnt/floppy do the following:
Create an empty directory
mkdir ~/vlmcsd-floppy-initrd
cd into that directory
cd ~/vlmcsd-floppy-initrd
Unpack initrd
cat /mnt/floppy/initrd | unlzma | cpio -i
After applying your changes build a new initrd(4) file:
cd into your directory
cd ~/vlmcsd-floppy-initrd
Create the packed file
find . | cpio -o -H newc | lzma > /mnt/floppy/initrd
Do not try to use 'lzma -9' to achive better compression. The kernel
can't read the resulting file. While customizing the initrd(4) file
works on almost any unix-like OS, it does not work on Windows even not
with Cygwin. The reason is that the NTFS file system can't handle uids
and gids. These cannot be preserved when unpacking the cpio(1) archive
to NTFS. If you use the WSL subsystem of Windows 10 Redstone (Anniver-
sary Update) and later, you must make sure to unpack the initrd(4) file
to a directory on VolFs (normally everything that is not mounted under
/mnt). The initrd(4) file can be on a VolFs or DriveFs.
FAQ
On what distro is the floppy image based?
None. Besides the boot loader ldlinux.sys, there are only three bina-
ries: The Linux kernel bzImage, busybox(1) and vlmcsdmulti-x86-musl-
static. bzImage and busybox(1) have been compiled with carefully
selected configuration parameters not found in any distro. This was
neccesary to fit everything on a 1.44 MB floppy.
Why is a rather old Linux kernel (3.12) used?
Linux 3.12 is the last kernel that can be booted with 16 MB of RAM.
Beginning with Linux 3.13 it requires much more memory (about 80 MB) to
boot. The floppy image is regularly tested with newer kernels. Every-
thing works except that you need to assign much more main memory to the
virtual machine.
Can the floppy be booted on bare metal?
Basically yes. However, only Intel Pro/1000 and AMD PCNET32 ethernet
cards are supported by the kernel. In addition there is no USB support
compiled into the kernel. That means you can only use an IBM AT or IBM
PS/2 keyboard which are not available on newer hardware.
FILES
syslinux.cfg, vlmcsd.ini(5)
BUGS
IPv6 cannot be configured with static or manual parameters.
DHCPv6 is not supported.
'ip route add ...' does not work. Use 'route add ...' instead.
AUTHOR
floppy144.vfd has been created by Hotbird64
CREDITS
Linus Torvalds et al. for the Linux kernel
Erik Andersen et al. for the original uClibc
Waldemar Brodkorb et al. for uClibc-ng
Denys Vlasenko et al. for BusyBox
H. Peter Anvin et al. for SYSLINUX
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd(8), vlmcsd.ini(5), initrd(4), busybox(1), syslinux(1)
Hotbird64 May 2017 VLMCSD-FLOPPY(7)

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@ -1,832 +0,0 @@
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<title>VLMCSD-FLOPPY</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1 align="center">VLMCSD-FLOPPY</h1>
<a href="#NAME">NAME</a><br>
<a href="#DESCRIPTION">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
<a href="#SUPPORTED HYPERVISORS">SUPPORTED HYPERVISORS</a><br>
<a href="#SETUP">SETUP</a><br>
<a href="#CONFIGURATION">CONFIGURATION</a><br>
<a href="#OPERATION">OPERATION</a><br>
<a href="#PERMANENT CHANGES OF INITRD">PERMANENT CHANGES OF INITRD</a><br>
<a href="#FAQ">FAQ</a><br>
<a href="#FILES">FILES</a><br>
<a href="#BUGS">BUGS</a><br>
<a href="#AUTHOR">AUTHOR</a><br>
<a href="#CREDITS">CREDITS</a><br>
<a href="#SEE ALSO">SEE ALSO</a><br>
<hr>
<h2>NAME
<a name="NAME"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">floppy144.vfd -
a bootable floppy disk with Linux and <b>vlmcsd</b>(8)</p>
<h2>DESCRIPTION
<a name="DESCRIPTION"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>floppy144.vfd</b>
is an image of a bootable floppy that contains a minimal
version of Linux and <b>vlmcsd</b>(8). It requires only 16
MB of RAM. Its primary purpose is to run <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) in
a small virtual machine which makes it easy to use
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) to activate the virtual machine&rsquo;s
host computer which is not possible in Windows 8.1 and up.
The floppy image is a standard 3,5&quot; floppy with 1.44 MB
storage. It is formatted with a FAT12 filesystem. The floppy
can be mounted to apply several customizations.</p>
<h2>SUPPORTED HYPERVISORS
<a name="SUPPORTED HYPERVISORS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">The floppy
image has been tested with the following hypervisors:</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">VMWare,
VirtualBox, Hyper-V and QEMU</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Others are
likely to work.</p>
<h2>SETUP
<a name="SETUP"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Create a new
virtual machine. Assign 16 MB of RAM. Add a floppy drive and
attach <b>floppy144.vfd</b> to this drive. Do not create a
virtual hard disk. Setup the virtual machine to boot from a
floppy drive (VirtualBox has floppy boot disabled by
default). If possible, setup a virtual machine with plain
old BIOS (not UEFI). If you created an UEFI virtual machine,
enable the compatibility support mode (CSM) to allow a BIOS
compatible boot. Set number of CPUs to 1. The Linux kernel
is not capable of SMP. Remove IDE, SATA, SCSI and USB
support if possible. The Linux kernel can&rsquo;t handle
this and ignores any devices connected to these buses.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Setup an
ethernet card. The following models are supported:</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">Intel PRO/1000
<br>
AMD PCNET III <br>
AMD PCNET32 <br>
VMWare vmxnet3 (paravirtualized driver used by VMWare) <br>
virtio (paravirtualized driver used by VirtualBox, QEMU, KVM
and lguest)</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Most
hypervisors emulate an Intel PRO/1000 or AMD PCNET32 by
default. Selecting a paravirtualized driver slightly
improves performance. In VirtualBox you can simply select
virtio in the network configuration dialog. VMWare requires
that you add or change the VMX file. Use
&rsquo;ethernet0.virtualDev&nbsp;=&nbsp;&quot;vmxnet3&quot;&rsquo;
in your VMWare config file.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">If you are
using QEMU, you must also setup a TAP adapter. Port
redirection does not work to activate your own computer.</p>
<h2>CONFIGURATION
<a name="CONFIGURATION"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>floppy144.vfd</b>
can be customized to fit your needs. This is done by editing
the file syslinux.cfg on the floppy image. The floppy image
must be mounted. Under Linux you can simply attach
<b>floppy144.vfd</b> to a loop device which is mountable
like any other block device. For Windows you must use some
software that allows mounting a floppy image, e.g.
<a href="http://www.osforensics.com/tools/mount-disk-images.html">OSFMount</a></p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">OSFMount works
under all Windows versions beginning with Windows XP up to
Windows 10 (32- and 64-bit).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">The default
syslinux.cfg file looks like this:</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em"><small>prompt 0
<br>
TIMEOUT 50 <br>
default dhcp</small></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em"><small>LABEL
dhcp <br>
KERNEL bzImage <br>
APPEND vga=773 quiet initrd=initrd KBD=us
LISTEN=[::]:1688,0.0.0.0:1688 TZ=UTC0 IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP
NTP_SERVER=pool.ntp.org HOST_NAME=vlmcsd
ROOT_PASSWORD=vlmcsd USER_NAME=user USER_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
GUEST_PASSWORD=vlmcsd INETD=Y
WINDOWS=06401-00206-271-395032-03-1033-9600.0000-1652016
OFFICE2010=06401-00096-199-204970-03-1033-9600.0000-1652016
OFFICE2013=06401-00206-234-921934-03-1033-9600.0000-1652016
HWID=36:4F:46:3A:88:63:D3:5F</small></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em"><small>LABEL
static <br>
KERNEL bzImage <br>
APPEND vga=773 quiet initrd=initrd KBD=fr
LISTEN=[::]:1688,0.0.0.0:1688 TZ=CET-1CEST,M3.5.0,M10.5.0/3
IPV4_CONFIG=STATIC IPV4_ADDRESS=192.168.20.123/24
IPV4_GATEWAY=192.168.20.2 IPV4_DNS1=192.168.20.2
IPV4_DNS2=NONE NTP_SERVER=pool.ntp.org HOST_NAME=vlmcsd
ROOT_PASSWORD=vlmcsd USER_NAME=user USER_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
GUEST_PASSWORD=vlmcsd INETD=Y</small></p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">There are two
configurations in this files: <i>dhcp</i> (for configuring
the IPv4 network via DHCP) and <i>static</i> (for a static
IPv4 configuration). The kernel always boots the <i>dhcp</i>
configuration without asking (lines &rsquo;prompt 0&rsquo;
and &rsquo;default dhcp&rsquo;). You can simply change the
default configuration to <i>static</i> and then customize
the APPEND line in the <i>static</i> configuration. For more
details how to customize the syslinux.cfg file see
<b>syslinux</b>(1).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Each APPPEND
line contains one or more items seperated by spaces. <b>All
items are case-sensitive</b>. The following parameters can
be customized: <b><br>
vga=</b><i>vesa-video-mode</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Sets the VESA display mode for
the virtual machine. The parameter is not optional. If you
ommit it, you will not see anything on the screen. 773 means
1024x768 with 256 colors. See
<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VESA_BIOS_Extensions#Linux_video_mode_numbers">Wikipedia</a>
for more video modes. Note that all 16 color (4-bit) modes
will not work. Use 8-bit (256 colors), 16-bit (65536
colors), 24-bit and 32-bit (&gt; 16 Million colors) only.
All modes above 1280x1024 are non-VESA-standard and vary for
all (virtual) graphic cards.</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="7%">
<p><b>quiet</b></p></td>
<td width="4%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>This causes the kernel not display the its log during
boot. You may omit <b>quiet</b> but it doesn&rsquo;t make
much sense. The boot log is actually very verbose and
scrolls away from screen quickly. If any errors occur during
boot, they will be displayed even if <b>quiet</b> is present
in the APPEND line. You may evaluate the complete boot log
later by using the dmesg command or the menu on
/dev/tty8.</p> </td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>initrd=</b><i>initial-ram-disk-file</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">This defines the initial ram
disk that the kernel will read. There is only one initial
ram disk on the floppy thus leave <i>initrd=initrd</i> as it
is.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>KBD=</b><i>keyboard-layout-name</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">This allows you to select the
keyboard layout. <i>keyboard-layout-name</i> is usually the
ISO 3166-1 (top level domain) code for a country. A list of
valid <i>keyboard-layout-name</i>s can be accessed via the
menu system on /dev/tty8 (press ALT-F8). Note, that this is
a keyboard driver only. There is no Unicode font support in
<b>floppy144.vfd</b> (due to the fact that the kernel uses a
generic VESA framebuffer device only). Characters beyond
ASCII work for Western European languages only but not
Eastern European, Greek, Cyrillic, Arabic, Hebrew, CJK and
other languages. There is no need in <b>floppy144.vfd</b> to
enter any characters outside ASCII. The purpose of the
keyboard maps are that you will find characters like dash,
backslash, brackets, braces, etc. at the usual place on your
keyboard.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>LISTEN=</b>PRIVATE[:<i>tcp-port</i>]
| <i><br>
ip-address</i>[:<i>tcp-port</i>][,<i>ip-address</i>[:<i>tcp-port</i>]][,...]</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">One or more combinations of IP
addresses and optional TCP port seperated by commas that
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) should listen on or PRIVATE to listen on
all private IP addresses only. The default port is 1688. If
you use an explicit port number, append it to the IP address
seperated by a colon. If you use a port number and the IP
address contains colons, you must enclose the IP address in
brackets. For example
<i>192.168.0.2,[fd00::dead:beef]:5678</i> causes
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) to listen on 192.168.0.2 port 1688 and
fd00::dead:beef port 5678.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>WINDOWS=</b><i>epid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Defines the ePID that is used
for Windows activations. If you ommit this parameter, vlmcsd
generates a random ePID when it is started.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>OFFICE2010=</b><i>epid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Defines the ePID that is used
for Office 2010 activations. If you ommit this parameter,
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) generates a random ePID when it is
started.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>OFFICE2013=</b><i>epid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Defines the ePID that is used
for Office 2016 activations. If you ommit this parameter,
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) generates a random ePID when it is
started.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>OFFICE2016=</b><i>epid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Defines the ePID that is used
for Office 2016 activations. If you ommit this parameter,
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) generates a random ePID when it is
started.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>WINCHINAGOV=</b><i>epid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Defines the ePID that is used
for Windows China Government Edition activations (Enterprise
G/GN). If you ommit this parameter, <b>vlmcsd</b>(8)
generates a random ePID when it is started.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>HWID=</b><i>hwid</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Defines the HwId that is sent
to clients. <i>hwid</i> must be specified as 16 hex digits
that are interpreted as a series of 8 bytes (big endian).
Any character that is not a hex digit will be ignored. This
is for better readability.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>TZ=</b><i>posix-time-zone-string</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Set the time zone to
<i>posix-time-zone-string</i>. It must conform to the
<a href="http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/basedefs/xbd_chap08.html">POSIX</a>
specification. Simplified time zone strings like
&quot;Europe/London&quot; or &quot;America/Detroit&quot; are
not allowed. This has the very simple reason that there is
no space on the floppy to store the time zone database.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">The string
<i>CET-1CEST,M3.5.0,M10.5.0/3</i> (most countries in Europe)
reads as follows:</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="22%"></td>
<td width="13%">
<p><i>CET</i></p></td>
<td width="2%"></td>
<td width="63%">
<p>The standard (winter) time zone has the name CET.</p></td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="22%"></td>
<td width="13%">
<p><i>-1</i></p></td>
<td width="2%"></td>
<td width="63%">
<p>The standard time zone is one hour east of UTC. Negative
numbers are east of UTC. Positive numbers are west of
UTC.</p> </td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="22%"></td>
<td width="13%">
<p><i>CEST</i></p></td>
<td width="2%"></td>
<td width="63%">
<p>The daylight saving (summer) time zone has the name
CEST.</p> </td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="22%"></td>
<td width="13%">
<p><i>M3.5.0</i></p></td>
<td width="2%"></td>
<td width="63%">
<p>Daylight saving time starts in the 3rd month (March) on
the 5th (=last) occurence of weekday 0 (Sunday) at 2
o&rsquo;clock (2 o&rsquo;clock is a default value).</p></td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="22%"></td>
<td width="13%">
<p><i>M10.5.0/3</i></p></td>
<td width="2%"></td>
<td width="63%">
<p>Daylight saving time ends in the 10th month (October) on
the 5th (=last) occurence of weekday 0 (Sunday) at 3
o&rsquo;clock.</p> </td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">If you
don&rsquo;t have daylight saving time, things are easier.
For Chinese Standard Time for example, just use <i>CST-8</i>
as the time zone string.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">On a Linux
desktop system, you can use a command like
<b>strings&nbsp;/usr/share/zoneinfo/America/New_York&nbsp;|&nbsp;tail&nbsp;-n1</b>.
This should return <i>EST5EDT,M3.2.0,M11.1.0</i>. You can
use the returned string for the
<b>TZ=</b><i>posix-time-zone-string</i> parameter.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>IPV4_CONFIG=</b>DHCP |
STATIC</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">This determines how you want to
configure IPv4 networking. If you use
<b>IPV4_CONFIG=</b>STATIC, you must supply additional
paramaters to the APPEND command line.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>IPV4_ADDRESS=</b><i>ipv4-address</i>/<i>CIDR-mask</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Use <i>ipv4-address</i> with
netmask <i>CIDR-mask</i> for static IPv4 configuration. The
netmask must not be ommitted. For IPv4 address 192.168.12.17
with a netmask of 255.255.255.0 use <i>192.168.12.17/24</i>.
For IPv4 address 10.4.0.8 with a netmask of 255.255.0.0 use
10.4.0.8/16. This paramater is ignored, if you used
<b>IPV4_CONFIG=</b>DHCP.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>IPV4_GATEWAY=</b><i>ipv4-address</i>
| NONE</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Use <i>ipv4-address</i> as the
default gateway. This is usually the IPv4 address of your
router. You may specify NONE explicitly for no gateway. In
this case your virtual machine is only visible on its local
LAN. This paramater is ignored, if you used
<b>IPV4_CONFIG=</b>DHCP.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>IPV4_DNS1=</b><i>ipv4-address</i>
| NONE</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Use <i>ipv4-address</i> as the
primary name server. In home networks this is often the IPv4
address of your router. You may specify NONE explicitly. If
you specified NONE for both <b>IPV4_DNS1=</b> and
<b>IPV4_DNS2=</b>, your virtual machine cannot resolve host
names to IP addresses. While <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) works
perfectly without DNS servers, you must use IP addresses
when referring to a host, e.g. for specifying an NTP server.
This paramater is ignored, if you used
<b>IPV4_CONFIG=</b>DHCP.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>IPV4_DNS2=</b><i>ipv4-address</i>
| NONE</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Use <i>ipv4-address</i> as the
secondary name server. It serves as a backup if the primary
name server is not available. Home networks often
don&rsquo;t have a secondary name server. In this case set
this to NONE. This paramater is ignored, if you used
<b>IPV4_CONFIG=</b>DHCP.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>NTP_SERVER=</b><i>host-name</i>
| <i>ipv4-address</i> | NONE</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">This sets the name of a time
server using the NTP protocol. If your virtualization
environment reliably provides time, you can set this to
NONE. Don&rsquo;t use a public time service like
pool.ntp.org or time.nist.gov if you have a (at least
somewhat reliable) NTP server in your LAN.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>HOST_NAME=</b><i>host-name</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Sets the local host name for
your virtual machine. It can be a single name or a
fully-qualified domain name FQDN. If you used
<b>IPV4_CONFIG=</b>DHCP and your DHCP server returns a
domain name, the domain part of an FQDN will be replaced by
that name. This host name or host part of an FQDN will not
replaced by a host name returned via DHCP. The host name is
not important for the operation of <b>floppy144.vfd</b>.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>ROOT_PASSWORD=</b><i>password</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Sets the password of the root
user.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>USER_NAME=</b><i>username</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Sets the name of for a general
user with no special privileges. This user can login but
can&rsquo;t do much.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>USER_PASSWORD=</b><i>password</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Sets the password for the user
defined by <b>USER_NAME=</b><i>username</i>.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>GUEST_PASSWORD=</b><i>password</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Sets the password for the
pre-defined guest user. This user has the same priviliges
(none) as the user defined by
<b>USER_NAME=</b><i>username</i>.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>INETD=</b>Y | N</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;"><b>INETD=</b>Y specifies that
<b>inetd</b>(8) should automatically be started. That means
you can telnet and ftp to your virtual machine.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>VLMCSD_EXTRA_ARGS=</b><i>comma-seperated-argument-list</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Allows you to specify
additional command line options that will be passed to
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8). Instead of spaces you use commas between
arguments. Example: <b>VLMCSD_EXTRA_ARGS=</b>-c1,-K3,-M1</p>
<h2>OPERATION
<a name="OPERATION"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Diskless
System</b> <br>
The <b>floppy144.vfd</b> virtual machine is a diskless
system that works entirely from RAM. The file system is
actually a RAM disk that is created from the
<b>initrd</b>(4) file on the floppy image.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Anything
you&rsquo;ll do from inside the virtual machine, for
instance editing a config file, will be lost when you reboot
the machine. So, if you ever asked yourself if <b>rm -fr
/</b> (root privileges required) really deletes all files
from all mounted partitions, the <b>floppy144.vfd</b> VM is
the right place to test it (Yes, it does).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">The VM uses a
RAM disk, because the Linux kernel had to be stripped down
to essential features to fit on a 1.44 MB floppy. It has no
floppy driver, no disk file system drivers and no block
layer (cannot use disks of any type).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>System
startup</b> <br>
The kernel boots up very quickly and the init script
(/sbin/init) waits 5 seconds. In these 5 seconds you
can:</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">Press
&rsquo;m&rsquo; to manually enter the time zone and the IPv4
parameters. These will be queried interactively. <br>
Press &rsquo;t&rsquo; to manually enter the time zone only.
<br>
Press &rsquo;s&rsquo; to escape to a shell.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">If you
don&rsquo;t want to 5 seconds for continuing the init
process, you can press any other key to speed things up. At
the end of the init script you should see
that<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) has started. You should also see the IP
addresses and all user names and passwords.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Logging into
the system</b> <br>
There are 5 local logins provided on /dev/tty2 to /dev/tty6.
To switch to these logins, simply press ALT-F2 to ALT-F6. To
return to the console on /dev/tty1, press ALT-F1. If
<b>inetd</b>(8) is running you can also use
<b>telnet</b>(1). This allows you use a terminal program
(e.g. putty) that can utilize your keyboard layout, can be
resized and has full UTF-8 support. The local terminals
support US keyboard layout only. Please be aware that
<b>telnet</b>(1) is unencrypted and everything including
passwords is transmitted in clear text. There is not enough
space for an ssh server like <b>sshd</b>(8) or
<b>dropbear</b>(8).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">The floppy
image only provides basic Unix commands. Type <i>busybox</i>
or <i>ll /bin</i> to get a list. The only editor available
is <b>vi</b>(1). If you don&rsquo;t like vi, you may
transfer config files via <b>ftp</b>(1) edit them with the
editor of your choice and transfer them back to the
<b>floppy144.vfd</b> VM.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>The menu
system</b> <br>
You&rsquo;ll find a menu system on /dev/tty8 (press ALT-F8
to see it). It allows you performing some administrative
tasks and to view various system information. It is mainly
for users that do not have much experience with Unix
commands. <b><br>
1) (Re)start vlmcsd</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Starts or restarts
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8). This is useful if you changed
<b>/etc/vlmcsd.ini</b>(5).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>2) Stop vlmcsd</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Stops <b>vlmcsd</b>(8).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>3) (Re)start inetd</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Starts or restarts
<b>inetd</b>(8). If <b>inetd</b>(8) is restarted, current
clients connected via <b>telnet</b>(1) or <b>ftp</b>(1) will
<b>not</b> be dropped. They can continue their sessions.
This is useful if you changed <b>/etc/inetd.conf</b>(5).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>4) Stop inet</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Stops <b>inetd</b>(8). All
clients connected via <b>telnet</b>(1) or <b>ftp</b>(1) will
be dropped immediately.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>5) Change the time
zone</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Just in case you missed
pressing &rsquo;t&rsquo; during system startup. This also
restarts <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) if it was running to notify it
that the time zone has changed. Restarting <b>vlmcsd</b>(8)
allows currently connected clients to finish their
activation.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>k) Change keyboard
layout</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">This allows you to select a
different keyboard layout.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>6) Show all kernel boot
parameters</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Shows all parameters passed to
the kernel via syslinux.cfg. If you experience any
unexpected behavior, you can use this to check if your
APPEND line in syslinux.cfg is correct. The output is piped
through <b>less(1)</b>. So press &rsquo;q&rsquo; to return
to the menu.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>7) Show boot log
(dmesg)</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Shows the boot log of the
kernel. The output is piped through <b>less(1)</b>. So press
&rsquo;q&rsquo; to return to the menu.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>8) Show TCP/IP
configuration</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Shows the TCP/IP configuration,
listening sockets and current TCP and UDP connections.
Useful, if you problems with net connectivity. The output is
piped through <b>less(1)</b>. So press &rsquo;q&rsquo; to
return to the menu.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>9) Show running
processes</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Shows all processes including
memory and CPU usage. Display will updated every second.
Press &rsquo;q&rsquo; or CTRL-C to return to the menu.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>s) Shutdown</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Shuts down the
<b>floppy144.vfd</b> virtual machine. Proper shutdown is not
required. It is ok to use a hard power off in your
virtualization program.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>r) Reboot</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Reboots the
<b>floppy144.vfd</b> virtual machine. Proper reboot is not
required. It is ok to use a hard reset in your
virtualization program.</p>
<h2>PERMANENT CHANGES OF INITRD
<a name="PERMANENT CHANGES OF INITRD"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">If you want to
change any file or script of the file system (e.g. the init
script /sbin/init or /etc/vlmcsd.ini), you&rsquo;ll need to
mount the floppy image, unpack the <b>initrd</b>(4) file,
make any modfications you like, create a new
<b>initrd</b>(4) file and copy it to the mounted floppy.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">To unpack the
<b>initrd</b>(4) file you&rsquo;ll need <b>xz</b>(1) (or
<b>lzma</b>(1) on older unix-like OSses) and <b>cpio</b>(1).
These can be installed using your package manager on all
major distros. It is ok to use the BSD version of
<b>cpio</b>(1). No need to get the GNU version for BSD
users. Provided the floppy is mounted in /mnt/floppy do the
following: <br>
Create an empty directory</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">mkdir
~/vlmcsd-floppy-initrd</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;">cd into that directory</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">cd ~/vlmcsd-floppy-initrd</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;">Unpack initrd</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">cat /mnt/floppy/initrd | unlzma
| cpio -i</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">After applying
your changes build a new <b>initrd</b>(4) file: <br>
cd into your directory</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">cd ~/vlmcsd-floppy-initrd</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;">Create the packed file</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">find . | cpio -o -H newc | lzma
&gt; /mnt/floppy/initrd</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Do not try to
use &rsquo;lzma -9&rsquo; to achive better compression. The
kernel can&rsquo;t read the resulting file. While
customizing the <b>initrd</b>(4) file works on almost any
unix-like OS, it does not work on Windows even not with
Cygwin. The reason is that the NTFS file system can&rsquo;t
handle uids and gids. These cannot be preserved when
unpacking the <b>cpio</b>(1) archive to NTFS. If you use the
WSL subsystem of Windows 10 Redstone (Anniversary Update)
and later, you must make sure to unpack the <b>initrd</b>(4)
file to a directory on VolFs (normally everything that is
<b>not</b> mounted under /mnt). The <b>initrd</b>(4) file
can be on a VolFs or DriveFs.</p>
<h2>FAQ
<a name="FAQ"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>On what
distro is the floppy image based?</b> <br>
None. Besides the boot loader <b>ldlinux.sys</b>, there are
only three binaries: The Linux kernel <b>bzImage</b>,
<b>busybox</b>(1) and <b>vlmcsdmulti-x86-musl-static</b>.
<b>bzImage</b> and <b>busybox</b>(1) have been compiled with
carefully selected configuration parameters not found in any
distro. This was neccesary to fit everything on a 1.44 MB
floppy.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Why is a
rather old Linux kernel (3.12) used?</b> <br>
Linux 3.12 is the last kernel that can be booted with 16 MB
of RAM. Beginning with Linux 3.13 it requires much more
memory (about 80 MB) to boot. The floppy image is regularly
tested with newer kernels. Everything works except that you
need to assign much more main memory to the virtual
machine.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Can the
floppy be booted on bare metal?</b> <br>
Basically yes. However, only Intel Pro/1000 and AMD PCNET32
ethernet cards are supported by the kernel. In addition
there is no USB support compiled into the kernel. That means
you can only use an IBM AT or IBM PS/2 keyboard which are
not available on newer hardware.</p>
<h2>FILES
<a name="FILES"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>syslinux.cfg</b>,
<b>vlmcsd.ini</b>(5)</p>
<h2>BUGS
<a name="BUGS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">IPv6 cannot be
configured with static or manual parameters. <br>
DHCPv6 is not supported. <br>
&acute;ip route add ...&rsquo; does not work. Use
&rsquo;route add ...&rsquo; instead.</p>
<h2>AUTHOR
<a name="AUTHOR"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>floppy144.vfd</b>
has been created by Hotbird64</p>
<h2>CREDITS
<a name="CREDITS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Linus Torvalds
et al. for the Linux kernel <br>
Erik Andersen et al. for the original uClibc <br>
Waldemar Brodkorb et al. for uClibc-ng <br>
Denys Vlasenko et al. for BusyBox <br>
H. Peter Anvin et al. for SYSLINUX</p>
<h2>SEE ALSO
<a name="SEE ALSO"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd</b>(8),
<b>vlmcsd.ini</b>(5), <b>initrd</b>(4), <b>busybox</b>(1),
<b>syslinux(1)</b></p>
<hr>
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VLMCSD-FLOPPY(7) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSD-FLOPPY(7)
NAME
floppy144.vfd - a bootable floppy disk with Linux and vlmcsd(8)
DESCRIPTION
floppy144.vfd is an image of a bootable floppy that contains a minimal
version of Linux and vlmcsd(8). It requires only 16 MB of RAM. Its pri-
mary purpose is to run vlmcsd(8) in a small virtual machine which makes
it easy to use vlmcsd(8) to activate the virtual machine's host com-
puter which is not possible in Windows 8.1 and up. The floppy image is
a standard 3,5" floppy with 1.44 MB storage. It is formatted with a
FAT12 filesystem. The floppy can be mounted to apply several customiza-
tions.
SUPPORTED HYPERVISORS
The floppy image has been tested with the following hypervisors:
VMWare, VirtualBox, Hyper-V and QEMU
Others are likely to work.
SETUP
Create a new virtual machine. Assign 16 MB of RAM. Add a floppy drive
and attach floppy144.vfd to this drive. Do not create a virtual hard
disk. Setup the virtual machine to boot from a floppy drive (VirtualBox
has floppy boot disabled by default). If possible, setup a virtual
machine with plain old BIOS (not UEFI). If you created an UEFI virtual
machine, enable the compatibility support mode (CSM) to allow a BIOS
compatible boot. Set number of CPUs to 1. The Linux kernel is not capa-
ble of SMP. Remove IDE, SATA, SCSI and USB support if possible. The
Linux kernel can't handle this and ignores any devices connected to
these buses.
Setup an ethernet card. The following models are supported:
Intel PRO/1000
AMD PCNET III
AMD PCNET32
VMWare vmxnet3 (paravirtualized driver used by VMWare)
virtio (paravirtualized driver used by VirtualBox, QEMU, KVM and
lguest)
Most hypervisors emulate an Intel PRO/1000 or AMD PCNET32 by default.
Selecting a paravirtualized driver slightly improves performance. In
VirtualBox you can simply select virtio in the network configuration
dialog. VMWare requires that you add or change the VMX file. Use 'eth-
ernet0.virtualDev = "vmxnet3"' in your VMWare config file.
If you are using QEMU, you must also setup a TAP adapter. Port redi-
rection does not work to activate your own computer.
CONFIGURATION
floppy144.vfd can be customized to fit your needs. This is done by
editing the file syslinux.cfg on the floppy image. The floppy image
must be mounted. Under Linux you can simply attach floppy144.vfd to a
loop device which is mountable like any other block device. For Windows
you must use some software that allows mounting a floppy image, e.g.
OSFMount <http://www.osforensics.com/tools/mount-disk-images.html>
OSFMount works under all Windows versions beginning with Windows XP up
to Windows 10 (32- and 64-bit).
The default syslinux.cfg file looks like this:
prompt 0
TIMEOUT 50
default dhcp
LABEL dhcp
KERNEL bzImage
APPEND vga=773 quiet initrd=initrd KBD=us LIS-
TEN=[::]:1688,0.0.0.0:1688 TZ=UTC0 IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP
NTP_SERVER=pool.ntp.org HOST_NAME=vlmcsd ROOT_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
USER_NAME=user USER_PASSWORD=vlmcsd GUEST_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
INETD=Y WINDOWS=06401-00206-271-395032-03-1033-9600.0000-1652016
OFFICE2010=06401-00096-199-204970-03-1033-9600.0000-1652016
OFFICE2013=06401-00206-234-921934-03-1033-9600.0000-1652016
HWID=36:4F:46:3A:88:63:D3:5F
LABEL static
KERNEL bzImage
APPEND vga=773 quiet initrd=initrd KBD=fr LIS-
TEN=[::]:1688,0.0.0.0:1688 TZ=CET-1CEST,M3.5.0,M10.5.0/3
IPV4_CONFIG=STATIC IPV4_ADDRESS=192.168.20.123/24 IPV4_GATE-
WAY=192.168.20.2 IPV4_DNS1=192.168.20.2 IPV4_DNS2=NONE
NTP_SERVER=pool.ntp.org HOST_NAME=vlmcsd ROOT_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
USER_NAME=user USER_PASSWORD=vlmcsd GUEST_PASSWORD=vlmcsd
INETD=Y
There are two configurations in this files: dhcp (for configuring the
IPv4 network via DHCP) and static (for a static IPv4 configuration).
The kernel always boots the dhcp configuration without asking (lines
'prompt 0' and 'default dhcp'). You can simply change the default con-
figuration to static and then customize the APPEND line in the static
configuration. For more details how to customize the syslinux.cfg file
see syslinux(1).
Each APPPEND line contains one or more items seperated by spaces. All
items are case-sensitive. The following parameters can be customized:
vga=vesa-video-mode
Sets the VESA display mode for the virtual machine. The parame-
ter is not optional. If you ommit it, you will not see anything
on the screen. 773 means 1024x768 with 256 colors. See Wikipedia
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
VESA_BIOS_Extensions#Linux_video_mode_numbers> for more video
modes. Note that all 16 color (4-bit) modes will not work. Use
8-bit (256 colors), 16-bit (65536 colors), 24-bit and 32-bit (>
16 Million colors) only. All modes above 1280x1024 are non-VESA-
standard and vary for all (virtual) graphic cards.
quiet This causes the kernel not display the its log during boot. You
may omit quiet but it doesn't make much sense. The boot log is
actually very verbose and scrolls away from screen quickly. If
any errors occur during boot, they will be displayed even if
quiet is present in the APPEND line. You may evaluate the com-
plete boot log later by using the dmesg command or the menu on
/dev/tty8.
initrd=initial-ram-disk-file
This defines the initial ram disk that the kernel will read.
There is only one initial ram disk on the floppy thus leave ini-
trd=initrd as it is.
KBD=keyboard-layout-name
This allows you to select the keyboard layout. keyboard-layout-
name is usually the ISO 3166-1 (top level domain) code for a
country. A list of valid keyboard-layout-names can be accessed
via the menu system on /dev/tty8 (press ALT-F8). Note, that this
is a keyboard driver only. There is no Unicode font support in
floppy144.vfd (due to the fact that the kernel uses a generic
VESA framebuffer device only). Characters beyond ASCII work for
Western European languages only but not Eastern European, Greek,
Cyrillic, Arabic, Hebrew, CJK and other languages. There is no
need in floppy144.vfd to enter any characters outside ASCII. The
purpose of the keyboard maps are that you will find characters
like dash, backslash, brackets, braces, etc. at the usual place
on your keyboard.
LISTEN=PRIVATE[:tcp-port] | ip-address[:tcp-port][,ip-address[:tcp-
port]][,...]
One or more combinations of IP addresses and optional TCP port
seperated by commas that vlmcsd(8) should listen on or PRIVATE
to listen on all private IP addresses only. The default port is
1688. If you use an explicit port number, append it to the IP
address seperated by a colon. If you use a port number and the
IP address contains colons, you must enclose the IP address in
brackets. For example 192.168.0.2,[fd00::dead:beef]:5678 causes
vlmcsd(8) to listen on 192.168.0.2 port 1688 and fd00::dead:beef
port 5678.
WINDOWS=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Windows activations. If you
ommit this parameter, vlmcsd generates a random ePID when it is
started.
OFFICE2010=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Office 2010 activations. If
you ommit this parameter, vlmcsd(8) generates a random ePID when
it is started.
OFFICE2013=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Office 2016 activations. If
you ommit this parameter, vlmcsd(8) generates a random ePID when
it is started.
OFFICE2016=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Office 2016 activations. If
you ommit this parameter, vlmcsd(8) generates a random ePID when
it is started.
WINCHINAGOV=epid
Defines the ePID that is used for Windows China Government Edi-
tion activations (Enterprise G/GN). If you ommit this parameter,
vlmcsd(8) generates a random ePID when it is started.
HWID=hwid
Defines the HwId that is sent to clients. hwid must be specified
as 16 hex digits that are interpreted as a series of 8 bytes
(big endian). Any character that is not a hex digit will be
ignored. This is for better readability.
TZ=posix-time-zone-string
Set the time zone to posix-time-zone-string. It must conform to
the POSIX <http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/
basedefs/xbd_chap08.html> specification. Simplified time zone
strings like "Europe/London" or "America/Detroit" are not
allowed. This has the very simple reason that there is no space
on the floppy to store the time zone database.
The string CET-1CEST,M3.5.0,M10.5.0/3 (most countries in Europe)
reads as follows:
CET The standard (winter) time zone has the name CET.
-1 The standard time zone is one hour east of UTC. Nega-
tive numbers are east of UTC. Positive numbers are
west of UTC.
CEST The daylight saving (summer) time zone has the name
CEST.
M3.5.0 Daylight saving time starts in the 3rd month (March)
on the 5th (=last) occurence of weekday 0 (Sunday) at
2 o'clock (2 o'clock is a default value).
M10.5.0/3 Daylight saving time ends in the 10th month (October)
on the 5th (=last) occurence of weekday 0 (Sunday) at
3 o'clock.
If you don't have daylight saving time, things are easier. For
Chinese Standard Time for example, just use CST-8 as the time
zone string.
On a Linux desktop system, you can use a command like
strings /usr/share/zoneinfo/America/New_York | tail -n1. This
should return EST5EDT,M3.2.0,M11.1.0. You can use the returned
string for the TZ=posix-time-zone-string parameter.
IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP | STATIC
This determines how you want to configure IPv4 networking. If
you use IPV4_CONFIG=STATIC, you must supply additional para-
maters to the APPEND command line.
IPV4_ADDRESS=ipv4-address/CIDR-mask
Use ipv4-address with netmask CIDR-mask for static IPv4 configu-
ration. The netmask must not be ommitted. For IPv4 address
192.168.12.17 with a netmask of 255.255.255.0 use
192.168.12.17/24. For IPv4 address 10.4.0.8 with a netmask of
255.255.0.0 use 10.4.0.8/16. This paramater is ignored, if you
used IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP.
IPV4_GATEWAY=ipv4-address | NONE
Use ipv4-address as the default gateway. This is usually the
IPv4 address of your router. You may specify NONE explicitly for
no gateway. In this case your virtual machine is only visible on
its local LAN. This paramater is ignored, if you used IPV4_CON-
FIG=DHCP.
IPV4_DNS1=ipv4-address | NONE
Use ipv4-address as the primary name server. In home networks
this is often the IPv4 address of your router. You may specify
NONE explicitly. If you specified NONE for both IPV4_DNS1= and
IPV4_DNS2=, your virtual machine cannot resolve host names to IP
addresses. While vlmcsd(8) works perfectly without DNS servers,
you must use IP addresses when referring to a host, e.g. for
specifying an NTP server. This paramater is ignored, if you used
IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP.
IPV4_DNS2=ipv4-address | NONE
Use ipv4-address as the secondary name server. It serves as a
backup if the primary name server is not available. Home net-
works often don't have a secondary name server. In this case set
this to NONE. This paramater is ignored, if you used IPV4_CON-
FIG=DHCP.
NTP_SERVER=host-name | ipv4-address | NONE
This sets the name of a time server using the NTP protocol. If
your virtualization environment reliably provides time, you can
set this to NONE. Don't use a public time service like
pool.ntp.org or time.nist.gov if you have a (at least somewhat
reliable) NTP server in your LAN.
HOST_NAME=host-name
Sets the local host name for your virtual machine. It can be a
single name or a fully-qualified domain name FQDN. If you used
IPV4_CONFIG=DHCP and your DHCP server returns a domain name, the
domain part of an FQDN will be replaced by that name. This host
name or host part of an FQDN will not replaced by a host name
returned via DHCP. The host name is not important for the opera-
tion of floppy144.vfd.
ROOT_PASSWORD=password
Sets the password of the root user.
USER_NAME=username
Sets the name of for a general user with no special privileges.
This user can login but can't do much.
USER_PASSWORD=password
Sets the password for the user defined by USER_NAME=username.
GUEST_PASSWORD=password
Sets the password for the pre-defined guest user. This user has
the same priviliges (none) as the user defined by
USER_NAME=username.
INETD=Y | N
INETD=Y specifies that inetd(8) should automatically be started.
That means you can telnet and ftp to your virtual machine.
VLMCSD_EXTRA_ARGS=comma-seperated-argument-list
Allows you to specify additional command line options that will
be passed to vlmcsd(8). Instead of spaces you use commas between
arguments. Example: VLMCSD_EXTRA_ARGS=-c1,-K3,-M1
OPERATION
Diskless System
The floppy144.vfd virtual machine is a diskless system that works
entirely from RAM. The file system is actually a RAM disk that is cre-
ated from the initrd(4) file on the floppy image.
Anything you'll do from inside the virtual machine, for instance edit-
ing a config file, will be lost when you reboot the machine. So, if you
ever asked yourself if rm -fr / (root privileges required) really
deletes all files from all mounted partitions, the floppy144.vfd VM is
the right place to test it (Yes, it does).
The VM uses a RAM disk, because the Linux kernel had to be stripped
down to essential features to fit on a 1.44 MB floppy. It has no floppy
driver, no disk file system drivers and no block layer (cannot use
disks of any type).
System startup
The kernel boots up very quickly and the init script (/sbin/init) waits
5 seconds. In these 5 seconds you can:
Press 'm' to manually enter the time zone and the IPv4 parame-
ters. These will be queried interactively.
Press 't' to manually enter the time zone only.
Press 's' to escape to a shell.
If you don't want to 5 seconds for continuing the init process, you can
press any other key to speed things up. At the end of the init script
you should see thatvlmcsd(8) has started. You should also see the IP
addresses and all user names and passwords.
Logging into the system
There are 5 local logins provided on /dev/tty2 to /dev/tty6. To switch
to these logins, simply press ALT-F2 to ALT-F6. To return to the con-
sole on /dev/tty1, press ALT-F1. If inetd(8) is running you can also
use telnet(1). This allows you use a terminal program (e.g. putty) that
can utilize your keyboard layout, can be resized and has full UTF-8
support. The local terminals support US keyboard layout only. Please be
aware that telnet(1) is unencrypted and everything including passwords
is transmitted in clear text. There is not enough space for an ssh
server like sshd(8) or dropbear(8).
The floppy image only provides basic Unix commands. Type busybox or ll
/bin to get a list. The only editor available is vi(1). If you don't
like vi, you may transfer config files via ftp(1) edit them with the
editor of your choice and transfer them back to the floppy144.vfd VM.
The menu system
You'll find a menu system on /dev/tty8 (press ALT-F8 to see it). It
allows you performing some administrative tasks and to view various
system information. It is mainly for users that do not have much expe-
rience with Unix commands.
1) (Re)start vlmcsd
Starts or restarts vlmcsd(8). This is useful if you changed
/etc/vlmcsd.ini(5).
2) Stop vlmcsd
Stops vlmcsd(8).
3) (Re)start inetd
Starts or restarts inetd(8). If inetd(8) is restarted, current
clients connected via telnet(1) or ftp(1) will not be dropped.
They can continue their sessions. This is useful if you changed
/etc/inetd.conf(5).
4) Stop inet
Stops inetd(8). All clients connected via telnet(1) or ftp(1)
will be dropped immediately.
5) Change the time zone
Just in case you missed pressing 't' during system startup. This
also restarts vlmcsd(8) if it was running to notify it that the
time zone has changed. Restarting vlmcsd(8) allows currently
connected clients to finish their activation.
k) Change keyboard layout
This allows you to select a different keyboard layout.
6) Show all kernel boot parameters
Shows all parameters passed to the kernel via syslinux.cfg. If
you experience any unexpected behavior, you can use this to
check if your APPEND line in syslinux.cfg is correct. The output
is piped through less(1). So press 'q' to return to the menu.
7) Show boot log (dmesg)
Shows the boot log of the kernel. The output is piped through
less(1). So press 'q' to return to the menu.
8) Show TCP/IP configuration
Shows the TCP/IP configuration, listening sockets and current
TCP and UDP connections. Useful, if you problems with net con-
nectivity. The output is piped through less(1). So press 'q' to
return to the menu.
9) Show running processes
Shows all processes including memory and CPU usage. Display will
updated every second. Press 'q' or CTRL-C to return to the menu.
s) Shutdown
Shuts down the floppy144.vfd virtual machine. Proper shutdown is
not required. It is ok to use a hard power off in your virtual-
ization program.
r) Reboot
Reboots the floppy144.vfd virtual machine. Proper reboot is not
required. It is ok to use a hard reset in your virtualization
program.
PERMANENT CHANGES OF INITRD
If you want to change any file or script of the file system (e.g. the
init script /sbin/init or /etc/vlmcsd.ini), you'll need to mount the
floppy image, unpack the initrd(4) file, make any modfications you
like, create a new initrd(4) file and copy it to the mounted floppy.
To unpack the initrd(4) file you'll need xz(1) (or lzma(1) on older
unix-like OSses) and cpio(1). These can be installed using your package
manager on all major distros. It is ok to use the BSD version of
cpio(1). No need to get the GNU version for BSD users. Provided the
floppy is mounted in /mnt/floppy do the following:
Create an empty directory
mkdir ~/vlmcsd-floppy-initrd
cd into that directory
cd ~/vlmcsd-floppy-initrd
Unpack initrd
cat /mnt/floppy/initrd | unlzma | cpio -i
After applying your changes build a new initrd(4) file:
cd into your directory
cd ~/vlmcsd-floppy-initrd
Create the packed file
find . | cpio -o -H newc | lzma > /mnt/floppy/initrd
Do not try to use 'lzma -9' to achive better compression. The kernel
can't read the resulting file. While customizing the initrd(4) file
works on almost any unix-like OS, it does not work on Windows even not
with Cygwin. The reason is that the NTFS file system can't handle uids
and gids. These cannot be preserved when unpacking the cpio(1) archive
to NTFS. If you use the WSL subsystem of Windows 10 Redstone (Anniver-
sary Update) and later, you must make sure to unpack the initrd(4) file
to a directory on VolFs (normally everything that is not mounted under
/mnt). The initrd(4) file can be on a VolFs or DriveFs.
FAQ
On what distro is the floppy image based?
None. Besides the boot loader ldlinux.sys, there are only three bina-
ries: The Linux kernel bzImage, busybox(1) and vlmcsdmulti-x86-musl-
static. bzImage and busybox(1) have been compiled with carefully
selected configuration parameters not found in any distro. This was
neccesary to fit everything on a 1.44 MB floppy.
Why is a rather old Linux kernel (3.12) used?
Linux 3.12 is the last kernel that can be booted with 16 MB of RAM.
Beginning with Linux 3.13 it requires much more memory (about 80 MB) to
boot. The floppy image is regularly tested with newer kernels. Every-
thing works except that you need to assign much more main memory to the
virtual machine.
Can the floppy be booted on bare metal?
Basically yes. However, only Intel Pro/1000 and AMD PCNET32 ethernet
cards are supported by the kernel. In addition there is no USB support
compiled into the kernel. That means you can only use an IBM AT or IBM
PS/2 keyboard which are not available on newer hardware.
FILES
syslinux.cfg, vlmcsd.ini(5)
BUGS
IPv6 cannot be configured with static or manual parameters.
DHCPv6 is not supported.
'ip route add ...' does not work. Use 'route add ...' instead.
AUTHOR
floppy144.vfd has been created by Hotbird64
CREDITS
Linus Torvalds et al. for the Linux kernel
Erik Andersen et al. for the original uClibc
Waldemar Brodkorb et al. for uClibc-ng
Denys Vlasenko et al. for BusyBox
H. Peter Anvin et al. for SYSLINUX
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd(8), vlmcsd.ini(5), initrd(4), busybox(1), syslinux(1)
Hotbird64 May 2017 VLMCSD-FLOPPY(7)

View File

@ -1,226 +0,0 @@
VLMCSD(7) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSD(7)
NAME
vlmcsd - a guide to KMS activation using vlmcsd
SYNOPSIS
vlmcsd [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
This manual describes the concepts of Microsoft KMS activation using
vlmcsd. For detailed usage of vlmcsd see vlmcsd(8).
What is KMS?
KMS is a way to activate Microsoft products that was designed for
medium and large businesses. In a standard SOHO environment you enter a
product key during installation and then activate your product over the
Internet. This is done by sending a request to a server at micro-
soft.com which then either grants or refuses activation.
By entering a special key called General Volume License Key (GVLK),
a.k.a "KMS client key", the product no longer asks the Microsoft server
for activation but a user-defined server (called the KMS server) which
usually resides in a company's intranet. vlmcsd is an independent open
source implementation of a KMS server that is available for everyone
while Microsoft gives their KMS server only to corporations that signed
a so called "Select contract". In addition vlmcsd never refuses activa-
tion while the Microsoft KMS server only activates the products the
customer has paid for.
Product activation using vlmcsd is performed in three easy steps:
1) Run vlmcsd (or any other KMS emulator) on a computer in your net-
work. This will be your KMS server. New users should simply run the
program without any parameters. The defaults should fit the needs of
most users.
2) Install your product and enter the GVLK when you are asked for a key
3) Configure your client (the machine where you installed your product)
to use your KMS server.
However, when it comes to the details, some things turn out to be more
difficult than you might think.
The most important thing to know is that KMS activation is not perma-
nent. The computer remains activated for 180 days (30 or 45 days with
consumer-only products). KMS activation however is not an evaluation
license. You can repeat the activation anytime and as often as you like
to extend activation to another 180 days. This normally happens auto-
matically. For this to work, you have to ensure that a KMS server is
always reachable for the clients on your network.
Beginning with Windows 8.1 the KMS server must be a different computer
than the client. You cannot use vlmcsd on the same computer where you
want to activate a product. If you have only one computer, you can run
vlmcsd in a virtual machine. vlmcsd is also designed to run on "always-
on devices", for example a router. The router becomes your KMS server
then.
How to get a GVLK?
That is relatively simple. The GVLKs are published on Microsoft's Tech-
net web site.
Windows: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj612867.aspx
Office 2010: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-
us/library/ee624355(v=office.14).aspx#section2_3
Office 2013: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn385360.aspx
These lists only include products that Microsoft sells to corporations
via volume license contracts. For Windows there are inofficial GVLKs
that work with consumer-only versions of Windows. Here is a list:
TX9XD-98N7V-6WMQ6-BX7FG-H8Q99 - Windows 10 Home
3KHY7-WNT83-DGQKR-F7HPR-844BM - Windows 10 Home N
7HNRX-D7KGG-3K4RQ-4WPJ4-YTDFH - Windows 10 Home Single Language
PVMJN-6DFY6-9CCP6-7BKTT-D3WVR - Windows 10 Home Country Specific
789NJ-TQK6T-6XTH8-J39CJ-J8D3P - Windows 8.1 Professional with Media
Center
M9Q9P-WNJJT-6PXPY-DWX8H-6XWKK - Windows 8.1 Core
7B9N3-D94CG-YTVHR-QBPX3-RJP64 - Windows 8.1 Core N
BB6NG-PQ82V-VRDPW-8XVD2-V8P66 - Windows 8.1 Core Single Language
NCTT7-2RGK8-WMHRF-RY7YQ-JTXG3 - Windows 8.1 Core Country Specific
GNBB8-YVD74-QJHX6-27H4K-8QHDG - Windows 8 Professional with Media Cen-
ter
BN3D2-R7TKB-3YPBD-8DRP2-27GG4 - Windows 8 Core
8N2M2-HWPGY-7PGT9-HGDD8-GVGGY - Windows 8 Core N
2WN2H-YGCQR-KFX6K-CD6TF-84YXQ - Windows 8 Core Single Language
4K36P-JN4VD-GDC6V-KDT89-DYFKP - Windows 8 Core Country Specific
The above keys require activation renewal every 45 days (Win 8.1) or 30
days (Win 8). All GVLKs from the Microsoft Technet web site require
renewal every 180 days.
What are SLMGR and OSPP and how to use them?
You will need these utilities later. So please continue reading this
section.
These are two Visual Basic script utilities that are used to control
Microsoft's Software Protection system. To use them open a Windows Com-
mand Prompt. slmgr.vbs is for Windows. ospp.vbs is for Office 2010 and
2013. These utilities are installed with Windows and Office and you
don't need to download them.
slmgr.vbs resides in the system32 directory. So you just have to type
"slmgr" in the Windows Command prompt to use it. To use ospp.vbs you'll
have to change the current directory to your Office installation. This
is usually something like "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office14".
You may type "slmgr" or "cscript ospp.vbs" without parameters to see
help for these commands but this produces some rather confusing output
for newbies.
How to get the GVLK into the product?
Normally every product asks you to enter a key during installation. At
this time simply enter the GVLK. If you skipped this step or entered
some other key which later turned out to be non-working, you can use
"slmgr /ipk GVLK" (Windows) or "cscript ospp.vbs /inpkey:GVLK" (Office)
at any time.
Examples
slmgr /ipk GCRJD-8NW9H-F2CDX-CCM8D-9D6T9
cscript ospp.vbs /inpkey:YC7DK-G2NP3-2QQC3-J6H88-GVGXT
Why doesn't Office accpet a GVLK?
You'll have to install a volume license (VL) version of Office. Office
versions downloaded from MSDN and/or Technet are non-VL.
How to configure a client to use a KMS server?
After you have installed a GVLK you can set your product to use your
KMS server. vlmcsd or another KMS server must already be running on
your server machine.
Windows
Type "slmgr /skms kms-server[:tcp-port]". Example:
"slmgr /skms 192.168.1.17:1688"
Office
1) Type "cscript ospp.vbs /sethst:kms-server". Example "cscript
ospp.vbs /sethst:192.168.1.17"
2) Type "cscript ospp.vbs /setprt:tcp-port". Example: cscript
ospp.vbs /setprt:1688
tcp-port is usually 1688 unless you instructed vlmcsd to use a differ-
ent port which is rarely necessary.
How to activate my product?
If you have installed a product with GVLK and pointed it to working KMS
server like vlmcsd, activation occurs automatically. This may take a
while.
You may type
slmgr /ato
-or-
cscript ospp.vbs /act
at any time to speed up that process. You may repeat these commands
later to extend your activation for another 180 (45) days.
Does vlmcsd work correctly?
If something does not work, it may have the cause that vlmcsd does not
work correctly although this is unlikely. You can test this with the
KMS client vlmcs(1). First type "vlmcs" on the same machine where you
started vlmcsd. If things are ok, you should see something like this:
Connecting to 127.0.0.1:1688 ... successful
Sending activation request (KMS V4) 1 of 1 ->
06401-00206-296-206344-03-5179-9600.0000-3432013
If anything goes wrong, you'll see an error message. Next try "vlmcs
kms-server" from another machine where kms-server is the hostname or IP
address of your KMS server. If that fails while it works locally,
you'll most likely have to configure your firewall that it accepts
incoming connections on TCP port 1688.
Is there an easier way than using OSPP and SLMGR?
Yes and no. KMS activation was designed for large corporations. Thus
Microsoft designed KMS in a way that corporations can configure their
network infrastructure to fully automate KMS activation. Since this
involves DHCP and DNS, it is not that easy to accomplish that for home
users. However, if you are using an open source router firmware like
OpenWRT or DD-WRT, it is easy to customize DHCP and DNS.
1) Configure DHCP that it assigns a DNS domain name to your clients (if
it doesn't already), e.g. my-home-net.local
2) Create zone my-home-net.local in your DNS server (if it doesn't
exist already).
3) Add the following records to your DNS
_vlmcs._tcp.my-home-net.local. 10800 IN SRV 100 100 kms1.my-home-
net.local.
kms1.my-home-net.local. 10800 IN A 192.168.1.17
Replace 192.168.1.17 with the IP address of your KMS server. If you
don't like a cache time of 10800 seconds (3 hours), replace it with
another number.
This causes that clients will find the KMS server automatically.
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Hotbird64.
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd(8), vlmcs(1)
Hotbird64 March 2016 VLMCSD(7)

View File

@ -1,416 +0,0 @@
<!-- Creator : groff version 1.22.3 -->
<!-- CreationDate: Sat Oct 20 09:49:39 2018 -->
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<meta name="generator" content="groff -Thtml, see www.gnu.org">
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII">
<meta name="Content-Style" content="text/css">
<style type="text/css">
p { margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0; vertical-align: top }
pre { margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0; vertical-align: top }
table { margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0; vertical-align: top }
h1 { text-align: center }
</style>
<title>VLMCSD</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1 align="center">VLMCSD</h1>
<a href="#NAME">NAME</a><br>
<a href="#SYNOPSIS">SYNOPSIS</a><br>
<a href="#DESCRIPTION">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
<a href="#AUTHOR">AUTHOR</a><br>
<a href="#SEE ALSO">SEE ALSO</a><br>
<hr>
<h2>NAME
<a name="NAME"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">vlmcsd&nbsp;-&nbsp;a
guide to KMS activation using vlmcsd</p>
<h2>SYNOPSIS
<a name="SYNOPSIS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd</b> [
<i>options</i> ]</p>
<h2>DESCRIPTION
<a name="DESCRIPTION"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">This manual
describes the concepts of Microsoft KMS activation using
<b>vlmcsd</b>. For detailed usage of <b>vlmcsd</b> see
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>What is
KMS?</b> <br>
KMS is a way to activate Microsoft products that was
designed for medium and large businesses. In a standard SOHO
environment you enter a product key during installation and
then activate your product over the Internet. This is done
by sending a request to a server at microsoft.com which then
either grants or refuses activation.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">By entering a
special key called General Volume License Key (<b>GVLK</b>),
a.k.a &quot;KMS client key&quot;, the product no longer asks
the Microsoft server for activation but a user-defined
server (called the KMS server) which usually resides in a
company&rsquo;s intranet. <b>vlmcsd</b> is an independent
open source implementation of a KMS server that is available
for everyone while Microsoft gives their KMS server only to
corporations that signed a so called &quot;Select
contract&quot;. In addition <b>vlmcsd</b> never refuses
activation while the Microsoft KMS server only activates the
products the customer has paid for.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Product
activation using <b>vlmcsd</b> is performed in three easy
steps:</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p>1)</p></td>
<td width="1%"></td>
<td width="85%">
<p>Run <b>vlmcsd</b> (or any other KMS emulator) on a
computer in your network. This will be your KMS server. New
users should simply run the program without any parameters.
The defaults should fit the needs of most users.</p></td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p>2)</p></td>
<td width="1%"></td>
<td width="85%">
<p>Install your product and enter the GVLK when you are
asked for a key</p></td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p>3)</p></td>
<td width="1%"></td>
<td width="85%">
<p>Configure your client (the machine where you installed
your product) to use your KMS server.</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">However, when
it comes to the details, some things turn out to be more
difficult than you might think.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">The most
important thing to know is that KMS activation is not
permanent. The computer remains activated for 180 days (30
or 45 days with consumer-only products). KMS activation
however is not an evaluation license. You can repeat the
activation anytime and as often as you like to extend
activation to another 180 days. This normally happens
automatically. For this to work, you have to ensure that a
KMS server is always reachable for the clients on your
network.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Beginning with
Windows 8.1 the KMS server must be a different computer than
the client. You cannot use <b>vlmcsd</b> on the same
computer where you want to activate a product. If you have
only one computer, you can run <b>vlmcsd</b> in a virtual
machine. <b>vlmcsd</b> is also designed to run on
&quot;always-on devices&quot;, for example a router. The
router becomes your KMS server then.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>How to get a
GVLK?</b> <br>
That is relatively simple. The GVLKs are published on
Microsoft&rsquo;s Technet web site.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Windows:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj612867.aspx
<br>
Office 2010:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee624355(v=office.14).aspx#section2_3
<br>
Office 2013:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn385360.aspx</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">These lists
only include products that Microsoft sells to corporations
via volume license contracts. For Windows there are
inofficial GVLKs that work with consumer-only versions of
Windows. Here is a list:</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">TX9XD-98N7V-6WMQ6-BX7FG-H8Q99
- Windows 10 Home <br>
3KHY7-WNT83-DGQKR-F7HPR-844BM - Windows 10 Home N <br>
7HNRX-D7KGG-3K4RQ-4WPJ4-YTDFH - Windows 10 Home Single
Language <br>
PVMJN-6DFY6-9CCP6-7BKTT-D3WVR - Windows 10 Home Country
Specific <br>
789NJ-TQK6T-6XTH8-J39CJ-J8D3P - Windows 8.1 Professional
with Media Center <br>
M9Q9P-WNJJT-6PXPY-DWX8H-6XWKK - Windows 8.1 Core <br>
7B9N3-D94CG-YTVHR-QBPX3-RJP64 - Windows 8.1 Core N <br>
BB6NG-PQ82V-VRDPW-8XVD2-V8P66 - Windows 8.1 Core Single
Language <br>
NCTT7-2RGK8-WMHRF-RY7YQ-JTXG3 - Windows 8.1 Core Country
Specific <br>
GNBB8-YVD74-QJHX6-27H4K-8QHDG - Windows 8 Professional with
Media Center <br>
BN3D2-R7TKB-3YPBD-8DRP2-27GG4 - Windows 8 Core <br>
8N2M2-HWPGY-7PGT9-HGDD8-GVGGY - Windows 8 Core N <br>
2WN2H-YGCQR-KFX6K-CD6TF-84YXQ - Windows 8 Core Single
Language <br>
4K36P-JN4VD-GDC6V-KDT89-DYFKP - Windows 8 Core Country
Specific</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">The above keys
require activation renewal every 45 days (Win 8.1) or 30
days (Win 8). All GVLKs from the Microsoft Technet web site
require renewal every 180 days.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>What are
SLMGR and OSPP and how to use them?</b> <br>
You will need these utilities later. So please continue
reading this section.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">These are two
Visual Basic script utilities that are used to control
Microsoft&rsquo;s Software Protection system. To use them
open a Windows Command Prompt. slmgr.vbs is for Windows.
ospp.vbs is for Office 2010 and 2013. These utilities are
installed with Windows and Office and you don&rsquo;t need
to download them.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">slmgr.vbs
resides in the system32 directory. So you just have to type
&quot;slmgr&quot; in the Windows Command prompt to use it.
To use ospp.vbs you&rsquo;ll have to change the current
directory to your Office installation. This is usually
something like
&quot;C:\Program&nbsp;Files\Microsoft&nbsp;Office\Office14&quot;.
You may type &quot;slmgr&quot; or &quot;cscript
ospp.vbs&quot; without parameters to see help for these
commands but this produces some rather confusing output for
newbies.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>How to get
the GVLK into the product?</b> <br>
Normally every product asks you to enter a key during
installation. At this time simply enter the GVLK. If you
skipped this step or entered some other key which later
turned out to be non-working, you can use
&quot;slmgr&nbsp;/ipk&nbsp;<i>GVLK</i>&quot; (Windows) or
&quot;cscript ospp.vbs&nbsp;/inpkey:<i>GVLK</i>&quot;
(Office) at any time. <b><br>
Examples</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">slmgr&nbsp;/ipk
GCRJD-8NW9H-F2CDX-CCM8D-9D6T9 <br>
cscript
ospp.vbs&nbsp;/inpkey:YC7DK-G2NP3-2QQC3-J6H88-GVGXT</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Why
doesn&rsquo;t Office accpet a GVLK?</b> <br>
You&rsquo;ll have to install a volume license (VL) version
of Office. Office versions downloaded from MSDN and/or
Technet are non-VL.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>How to
configure a client to use a KMS server?</b> <br>
After you have installed a GVLK you can set your product to
use your KMS server. <b>vlmcsd</b> or another KMS server
must already be running on your server machine. <b><br>
Windows</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Type
&quot;slmgr&nbsp;/skms&nbsp;<i>kms-server</i>[:<i>tcp-port</i>]&quot;.
Example: &quot;slmgr&nbsp;/skms&nbsp;192.168.1.17:1688&quot;
<b><br>
Office</b></p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p>1)</p></td>
<td width="1%"></td>
<td width="85%">
<p>Type &quot;cscript
ospp.vbs&nbsp;/sethst:<i>kms-server</i>&quot;. Example
&quot;cscript ospp.vbs&nbsp;/sethst:192.168.1.17&quot;</p></td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p>2)</p></td>
<td width="1%"></td>
<td width="85%">
<p>Type &quot;cscript
ospp.vbs&nbsp;/setprt:<i>tcp-port</i>&quot;. Example:
cscript ospp.vbs&nbsp;/setprt:1688</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><i>tcp-port</i>
is usually 1688 unless you instructed <b>vlmcsd</b> to use a
different port which is rarely necessary.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>How to
activate my product?</b> <br>
If you have installed a product with GVLK and pointed it to
working KMS server like <b>vlmcsd</b>, activation occurs
automatically. This may take a while. <br>
You may type</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">slmgr&nbsp;/ato <br>
-or- <br>
cscript ospp.vbs&nbsp;/act</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">at any time to
speed up that process. You may repeat these commands later
to extend your activation for another 180 (45) days.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Does vlmcsd
work correctly?</b> <br>
If something does not work, it may have the cause that
vlmcsd does not work correctly although this is unlikely.
You can test this with the KMS client <b>vlmcs</b>(1). First
type &quot;vlmcs&quot; on the same machine where you started
<b>vlmcsd</b>. If things are ok, you should see something
like this:</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">Connecting to
127.0.0.1:1688 ... successful <br>
Sending&nbsp;activation&nbsp;request&nbsp;(KMS&nbsp;V4)&nbsp;1&nbsp;of&nbsp;1&nbsp;-&gt;
06401-00206-296-206344-03-5179-9600.0000-3432013</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">If anything
goes wrong, you&rsquo;ll see an error message. Next try
&quot;vlmcs <i>kms-server</i>&quot; from another machine
where <i>kms-server</i> is the hostname or IP address of
your KMS server. If that fails while it works locally,
you&rsquo;ll most likely have to configure your firewall
that it accepts incoming connections on TCP port 1688.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Is there an
easier way than using OSPP and SLMGR?</b> <br>
Yes and no. KMS activation was designed for large
corporations. Thus Microsoft designed KMS in a way that
corporations can configure their network infrastructure to
fully automate KMS activation. Since this involves DHCP and
DNS, it is not that easy to accomplish that for home users.
However, if you are using an open source router firmware
like OpenWRT or DD-WRT, it is easy to customize DHCP and
DNS.</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p>1)</p></td>
<td width="1%"></td>
<td width="85%">
<p>Configure DHCP that it assigns a DNS domain name to your
clients (if it doesn&rsquo;t already), e.g.
my-home-net.local</p> </td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p>2)</p></td>
<td width="1%"></td>
<td width="85%">
<p>Create zone my-home-net.local in your DNS server (if it
doesn&rsquo;t exist already).</p></td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="3%">
<p>3)</p></td>
<td width="1%"></td>
<td width="85%">
<p>Add the following records to your DNS</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:15%; margin-top: 1em">_vlmcs._tcp.my-home-net.local.
10800 IN SRV 100 100 kms1.my-home-net.local. <br>
kms1.my-home-net.local. 10800 IN A 192.168.1.17</p>
<p style="margin-left:15%; margin-top: 1em">Replace
192.168.1.17 with the IP address of your KMS server. If you
don&rsquo;t like a cache time of 10800 seconds (3 hours),
replace it with another number.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">This causes
that clients will find the KMS server automatically.</p>
<h2>AUTHOR
<a name="AUTHOR"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">This manual
page was written by Hotbird64.</p>
<h2>SEE ALSO
<a name="SEE ALSO"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd</b>(8),
<b>vlmcs</b>(1)</p>
<hr>
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VLMCSD(7) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSD(7)
NAME
vlmcsd - a guide to KMS activation using vlmcsd
SYNOPSIS
vlmcsd [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
This manual describes the concepts of Microsoft KMS activation using
vlmcsd. For detailed usage of vlmcsd see vlmcsd(8).
What is KMS?
KMS is a way to activate Microsoft products that was designed for
medium and large businesses. In a standard SOHO environment you enter a
product key during installation and then activate your product over the
Internet. This is done by sending a request to a server at micro-
soft.com which then either grants or refuses activation.
By entering a special key called General Volume License Key (GVLK),
a.k.a "KMS client key", the product no longer asks the Microsoft server
for activation but a user-defined server (called the KMS server) which
usually resides in a company's intranet. vlmcsd is an independent open
source implementation of a KMS server that is available for everyone
while Microsoft gives their KMS server only to corporations that signed
a so called "Select contract". In addition vlmcsd never refuses activa-
tion while the Microsoft KMS server only activates the products the
customer has paid for.
Product activation using vlmcsd is performed in three easy steps:
1) Run vlmcsd (or any other KMS emulator) on a computer in your net-
work. This will be your KMS server. New users should simply run the
program without any parameters. The defaults should fit the needs of
most users.
2) Install your product and enter the GVLK when you are asked for a key
3) Configure your client (the machine where you installed your product)
to use your KMS server.
However, when it comes to the details, some things turn out to be more
difficult than you might think.
The most important thing to know is that KMS activation is not perma-
nent. The computer remains activated for 180 days (30 or 45 days with
consumer-only products). KMS activation however is not an evaluation
license. You can repeat the activation anytime and as often as you like
to extend activation to another 180 days. This normally happens auto-
matically. For this to work, you have to ensure that a KMS server is
always reachable for the clients on your network.
Beginning with Windows 8.1 the KMS server must be a different computer
than the client. You cannot use vlmcsd on the same computer where you
want to activate a product. If you have only one computer, you can run
vlmcsd in a virtual machine. vlmcsd is also designed to run on "always-
on devices", for example a router. The router becomes your KMS server
then.
How to get a GVLK?
That is relatively simple. The GVLKs are published on Microsoft's Tech-
net web site.
Windows: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj612867.aspx
Office 2010: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-
us/library/ee624355(v=office.14).aspx#section2_3
Office 2013: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn385360.aspx
These lists only include products that Microsoft sells to corporations
via volume license contracts. For Windows there are inofficial GVLKs
that work with consumer-only versions of Windows. Here is a list:
TX9XD-98N7V-6WMQ6-BX7FG-H8Q99 - Windows 10 Home
3KHY7-WNT83-DGQKR-F7HPR-844BM - Windows 10 Home N
7HNRX-D7KGG-3K4RQ-4WPJ4-YTDFH - Windows 10 Home Single Language
PVMJN-6DFY6-9CCP6-7BKTT-D3WVR - Windows 10 Home Country Specific
789NJ-TQK6T-6XTH8-J39CJ-J8D3P - Windows 8.1 Professional with Media
Center
M9Q9P-WNJJT-6PXPY-DWX8H-6XWKK - Windows 8.1 Core
7B9N3-D94CG-YTVHR-QBPX3-RJP64 - Windows 8.1 Core N
BB6NG-PQ82V-VRDPW-8XVD2-V8P66 - Windows 8.1 Core Single Language
NCTT7-2RGK8-WMHRF-RY7YQ-JTXG3 - Windows 8.1 Core Country Specific
GNBB8-YVD74-QJHX6-27H4K-8QHDG - Windows 8 Professional with Media Cen-
ter
BN3D2-R7TKB-3YPBD-8DRP2-27GG4 - Windows 8 Core
8N2M2-HWPGY-7PGT9-HGDD8-GVGGY - Windows 8 Core N
2WN2H-YGCQR-KFX6K-CD6TF-84YXQ - Windows 8 Core Single Language
4K36P-JN4VD-GDC6V-KDT89-DYFKP - Windows 8 Core Country Specific
The above keys require activation renewal every 45 days (Win 8.1) or 30
days (Win 8). All GVLKs from the Microsoft Technet web site require
renewal every 180 days.
What are SLMGR and OSPP and how to use them?
You will need these utilities later. So please continue reading this
section.
These are two Visual Basic script utilities that are used to control
Microsoft's Software Protection system. To use them open a Windows Com-
mand Prompt. slmgr.vbs is for Windows. ospp.vbs is for Office 2010 and
2013. These utilities are installed with Windows and Office and you
don't need to download them.
slmgr.vbs resides in the system32 directory. So you just have to type
"slmgr" in the Windows Command prompt to use it. To use ospp.vbs you'll
have to change the current directory to your Office installation. This
is usually something like "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office14".
You may type "slmgr" or "cscript ospp.vbs" without parameters to see
help for these commands but this produces some rather confusing output
for newbies.
How to get the GVLK into the product?
Normally every product asks you to enter a key during installation. At
this time simply enter the GVLK. If you skipped this step or entered
some other key which later turned out to be non-working, you can use
"slmgr /ipk GVLK" (Windows) or "cscript ospp.vbs /inpkey:GVLK" (Office)
at any time.
Examples
slmgr /ipk GCRJD-8NW9H-F2CDX-CCM8D-9D6T9
cscript ospp.vbs /inpkey:YC7DK-G2NP3-2QQC3-J6H88-GVGXT
Why doesn't Office accpet a GVLK?
You'll have to install a volume license (VL) version of Office. Office
versions downloaded from MSDN and/or Technet are non-VL.
How to configure a client to use a KMS server?
After you have installed a GVLK you can set your product to use your
KMS server. vlmcsd or another KMS server must already be running on
your server machine.
Windows
Type "slmgr /skms kms-server[:tcp-port]". Example:
"slmgr /skms 192.168.1.17:1688"
Office
1) Type "cscript ospp.vbs /sethst:kms-server". Example "cscript
ospp.vbs /sethst:192.168.1.17"
2) Type "cscript ospp.vbs /setprt:tcp-port". Example: cscript
ospp.vbs /setprt:1688
tcp-port is usually 1688 unless you instructed vlmcsd to use a differ-
ent port which is rarely necessary.
How to activate my product?
If you have installed a product with GVLK and pointed it to working KMS
server like vlmcsd, activation occurs automatically. This may take a
while.
You may type
slmgr /ato
-or-
cscript ospp.vbs /act
at any time to speed up that process. You may repeat these commands
later to extend your activation for another 180 (45) days.
Does vlmcsd work correctly?
If something does not work, it may have the cause that vlmcsd does not
work correctly although this is unlikely. You can test this with the
KMS client vlmcs(1). First type "vlmcs" on the same machine where you
started vlmcsd. If things are ok, you should see something like this:
Connecting to 127.0.0.1:1688 ... successful
Sending activation request (KMS V4) 1 of 1 ->
06401-00206-296-206344-03-5179-9600.0000-3432013
If anything goes wrong, you'll see an error message. Next try "vlmcs
kms-server" from another machine where kms-server is the hostname or IP
address of your KMS server. If that fails while it works locally,
you'll most likely have to configure your firewall that it accepts
incoming connections on TCP port 1688.
Is there an easier way than using OSPP and SLMGR?
Yes and no. KMS activation was designed for large corporations. Thus
Microsoft designed KMS in a way that corporations can configure their
network infrastructure to fully automate KMS activation. Since this
involves DHCP and DNS, it is not that easy to accomplish that for home
users. However, if you are using an open source router firmware like
OpenWRT or DD-WRT, it is easy to customize DHCP and DNS.
1) Configure DHCP that it assigns a DNS domain name to your clients (if
it doesn't already), e.g. my-home-net.local
2) Create zone my-home-net.local in your DNS server (if it doesn't
exist already).
3) Add the following records to your DNS
_vlmcs._tcp.my-home-net.local. 10800 IN SRV 100 100 kms1.my-home-
net.local.
kms1.my-home-net.local. 10800 IN A 192.168.1.17
Replace 192.168.1.17 with the IP address of your KMS server. If you
don't like a cache time of 10800 seconds (3 hours), replace it with
another number.
This causes that clients will find the KMS server automatically.
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Hotbird64.
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd(8), vlmcs(1)
Hotbird64 March 2016 VLMCSD(7)

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@ -1,783 +0,0 @@
VLMCSD(8) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSD(8)
NAME
vlmcsd - a fully Microsoft compatible KMS server
SYNOPSIS
vlmcsd [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
vlmcsd is a fully Microsoft compatible KMS server that provides product
activation services to clients. It is meant as a drop-in replacement
for a Microsoft KMS server (Windows computer with KMS key entered). It
currently supports KMS protocol versions 4, 5 and 6.
vlmcsd is designed to run on POSIX compatible operating systens. It
only requires a basic C library with a BSD-style sockets API and either
fork(2) or pthreads(7). That allows it to run on most embedded systems
like routers, NASes, mobile phones, tablets, TVs, settop boxes, etc.
Some efforts have been made that it also runs on Windows.
Although vlmcsd does neither require an activation key nor a payment to
anyone, it is not meant to run illegal copies of Windows. Its purpose
is to ensure that owners of legal copies can use their software without
restrictions, e.g. if you buy a new computer or motherboard and your
key will be refused activation from Microsoft servers due to hardware
changes.
vlmcsd may be started via an internet superserver like inetd(8) or
xinetd(8) as well as an advanced init system like systemd(8) or
launchd(8) using socket based activation. If vlmcsd detects that
stdin(3) is a socket, it assumes that there is already a connected
client on stdin that wants to be activated.
All options that control setting up listening sockets will be ignored
when in inetd mode. The sockets will be set up by your internet super-
server. You also cannot limit the number of simultanous clients (option
-m). You need to configure the limit in your internet superserver.
The followong features that require that vlmcsd is permanently loaded
will not work if started from an internet superserver:
You cannot maintain a client list (option -M1)
EPID Randomization Level 1 (option -r1) works like Level 2
(-r2). You may want to use Level 0 (-r0) or custom EPIDs
(options -w, -G, -0, -3 and -6) instead.
OPTIONS
Since vlmcsd can be configured at compile time, some options may not be
available on your system.
All options that do no require an argument may be combined with a sin-
gle dash, for instance "vlmcsd -D -e" is identical to "vlmcsd -De". For
all options that require an argument a space between the option and the
option argument is optional. Thus "vlmcsd -r 2" and "vlmcsd -r2" are
identical too.
-h or -?
Displays help.
-V Displays extended version information. This includes the com-
piler used to build vlmcsd, the intended platform and flags
(compile time options) to build vlmcsd. If you have the source
code of vlmcsd, you can type make help (or gmake help on systems
that do not use the GNU version of make(1) by default) to see
the meaning of those flags.
-L ipaddress[:port]
Instructs vlmcsd to listen on ipaddress with optional port
(default 1688). You can use this option more than once. If you
do not specify -L at least once, IP addresses 0.0.0.0 (IPv4) and
:: (IPv6) are used. If the IP address contains colons (IPv6) you
must enclose the IP address in brackets if you specify the
optional port, e.g. [2001:db8::dead:beef]:1688.
If no port is specified, vlmcsd uses the default port according
to a preceding -P option. If you specify a port, it can be a
number (1-65535) or a name (usually found in /etc/services if
not provided via LDAP, NIS+ or another name service).
If you specify a link local IPv6 address (fe80::/10, usually
starting with fe80::), it must be followed by a percent sign (%)
and a scope id (=network interface name or number) on most
unixoid OSses including Linux, Android, MacOS X and iOS, e.g.
fe80::1234:56ff:fe78:9abc%eth0 or
[fe80::1234:56ff:fe78:9abc%2]:1688. Windows (including cygwin)
does not require a scope id unless the same link local address
is used on more than one network interface. Windows does not
accept a name and the scope id must be a number.
-o level
Sets the level of protection against activations from public IP
addresses. The default is -o0 for no protection.
-o1 causes vlmcsd not to listen on all IP addresses but on pri-
vate IP addresses only. IPv4 addresses in the 100.64.0.0/10
range (see RFC6598) are not treated as private since they can be
reached from other users of your ISP. Private IPv4 addresses are
10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12, 192.168.0.0/16, 169.254.0.0/16 and
127.0.0.0/8. vlmcsd treats all IPv6 addresses not within
2000::/3 as private addresses.
If -o1 is combined with -L, it will listen on all private IP
addresses plus the ones specified by one or more -L statements.
If -o1 is combined with -P, only the last -P statement will be
used.
Using -o1 does not protect you if you enable NAT port forwarding
on your router to your vlmcsd machine. It is identical to using
multiple -L statements with all of your private IP addresses.
What -o1 does for you, is automatically enumerating your private
IP addresses.
-o2 does not affect the interfaces, vlmcsd is listening on. When
a clients connects, vlmcsd immediately drops the connection if
the client has a public IP address. Unlike -o1 clients will be
able to establish a TCP connection but it will be closed without
a single byte sent over the connection. This protects against
clients with public IP addresses even if NAT port forwarding is
used. While -o2 offers a higher level of protection than -o1,
the client sees that the KMS TCP port (1688 by default) is actu-
ally accepting connections.
If vlmcsd is compiled to use MS RPC, -o2 can only offer very
poor protection. Control is passed from MS RPC to vlmcsd after
the KMS protocol has already been negotiated. Thus a client can
always verify that the KMS protocol is available even though it
receives an RPC_S_ACCESS_DENIED error message. vlmcsd will issue
a warning if -o2 is used with MS RPC. For adaequate protection
do not use a MS RPC build of vlmcsd with -o2.
-o3 combines -o1 and -o2. vlmcsd listens on private interfaces
only and if a public client manages to connect anyway due to NAT
port forwarding, it will be immediately dropped.
If you use any form of TCP level port forwarding (e.g. nc(1),
netcat(1), ssh(1) port forwarding or similar) to redirect KMS
requests to vlmcsd, there will be no protection even if you use
-o2 or -o3. This is due to the simple fact that vlmcsd sees the
IP address of the redirector and not the IP address of the
client.
-o1 (and thus -o3) is not (yet) available in some scenarios:
FreeBSD: There is a longtime unfixed bug <https://
bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=178881> in the
32-bit ABI of the 64-bit kernel. If you have a 64-bit Free-
BSD kernel, you must run the 64-bit version of vlmcsd if
you use -o1 or -o3. The 32-bit version causes undefined
behavior up to crashing vlmcsd. Other BSDs (NetBSD, Open-
BSD, Dragonfly and Mac OS X) work correctly.
If vlmcsd was started by an internet superserver or was
compiled to use Microsoft RPC (Windows only) or simple
sockets, -o1 and -o3 are not available by design.
-P port
Use TCP port for all subsequent -L statements that do not
include an optional port. If you use -P and -L, -P must be spec-
ified before -L.
-O vpn-adapter-name[=ipv4-address][/cidr-mask][:dhcp-lease-duration]
Enables a compatible VPN adapter to create additional local IPv4
addresses (like 127.0.0.1) that appear as remote IPv4 addresses
to the system. This allows product activation using a local
instance of vlmcsd. This feature is only available in Windows
and Cygwin builds of vlmcsd since it is not of any use on other
operating systems. Compatible VPN adapters are Tap-windows ver-
sion 8.2 or higher (from OpenVPN) and the TeamViewer VPN
adapter. There are two special vpn-adapter-names. A single
period (.) instructs vlmcsd to use the first available compati-
ble VPN adapter. A single dash (-) disables the use of a VPN
adapter if one has been configured in vlmcsd.ini(5). The vpn-
adapter-name is not case-sensitive. If the vpn-adapter-name con-
tains spaces (e.g. Ethernet 3), you must enclose it in quotes.
The default ipv4-address is 10.10.10.9 and the default cidr-mask
is 30. If you are using the default values, your VPN adapter
uses an IPv4 address of 10.10.10.9 and you can set your activa-
tion client to use the easy to remember address 10.10.10.10
(e.g. slmgr /skms 10.10.10.10 or cscript ospp.vbs
/sethst:10.10.10.10).
The dhcp-lease-duration is a number optionally followed by s, m,
h, d or w to indicate seconds, minutes, hours, days or weeks.
The default dhcp-lease-duration is 1d (one day). It is normally
not required to change this value.
It is advised not to manually configure your OpenVPN TAP or
TeamViewer VPN adapter in "Network Connections". If you set the
IPv4 configuration manually anyway, the IPv4 address and the
subnet mask must match the -O parameter. It is safe leave the
IPv4 configuration to automatic (DHCP). vlmcsd will wait up to
four seconds for the DHCP configuration to complete before bind-
ing to and listenin on any interfaces.
You should be aware that only one program can use a VPN adapter
at a time. If you use the TeamViewer VPN adapter for example,
you will not be able to use the VPN feature of TeamViewer as
long as vlmcsd is running. The same applies to OpenVPN TAP
adapters that are in use by other programs (for example OpenVPN,
QEMU, Ratiborus VM, aiccu, etc.). The best way to avoid con-
flicts is to install Tap-Windows from OpenVPN, cd to C:\Program
Files\TAP-Windows\bin and run addtap.bat to install an addi-
tional TAP adapter. Go to "Network Connections" and rename the
new adapter to "vlmcsd" and specify -O vlmcsd to use it.
Example: -O "Ethernet 7"=192.168.123.1/24 (uses VPN adapter Eth-
ernet 7 with IPv4 address 192.168.123.1 and have 192.168.123.2
to 192.168.123.254 as additional local (but apparently remote)
IPv4 addresses.
-x0 and -x1
Controls under what circumstances vlmcsd will exit. Using the
default of -x0 vlmcsd stays active as long as it can perform
some useful operations. If vlmcsd is run by any form of a watch-
dog, e.g. NT service manager (Windows), systemd (Linux) or
launchd (Mac OS / iOS), it may be desirable to end vlmcsd and
let the watchdog restart it. This is especially true if some
pre-requisites are not yet met but will be some time later, e.g.
network is not yet fully setup.
By using -x0 vlmcsd will
exit if none of the listening sockets specified with -L can
be used. It continues if at least one socket can be setup
for listening.
exit any TAP mirror thread (Windows version only) if there
is an error condition while reading or writing from or to
the VPN adapter but continue to work without utilizing a
VPN adapter.
By using -x1 vlmcsd will
exit if not all listening sockets specified with -L can be
used.
exit completely if there is a problem with a VPN adapter it
is using. This can happen for instance if the VPN adapter
has been disabled using "Control Panel - Network - Adapter
Settings" while vlmcsd is using it.
Please note that -x1 is kind of a workaround option. While it
may help under some circumstances, it is better to solve the
problem at its origin, e.g. properly implementing dependencies
in your startup script to ensure all network interfaces and the
VPN adapter you will use are completely setup before you start
vlmcsd.
-F0 and -F1
Allow (-F1) or disallow (-F0) binding to IP addresses that are
currently not configured on your system. The default is -F0. -F1
allows you to bind to an IP address that may be configured after
you started vlmcsd. vlmcsd will listen on that address as soon
as it becomes available. This feature is only available under
Linux (IPv4 and IPv6) and FreeBSD (IPv4 only). FreeBSD allows
this feature only for the root user (more correctly: processes
that have the PRIV_NETINET_BINDANY privilege). Linux does not
require a capability for this.
-t seconds
Timeout the TCP connection with the client after seconds sec-
onds. After sending an activation request. RPC keeps the TCP
connection for a while. The default is 30 seconds. You may spec-
ify a shorter period to free ressources on your device faster.
This is useful for devices with limited main memory or if you
used -m to limit the concurrent clients that may request activa-
tion. Microsoft RPC clients disconnect after 30 seconds by
default. Setting seconds to a greater value does not make much
sense.
-m concurrent-clients
Limit the number of clients that will be handled concurrently.
This is useful for devices with limited ressources or if you are
experiencing DoS attacks that spawn thousands of threads or
forked processes. If additional clients connect to vlmcsd, they
need to wait until another client disconnects. If you set con-
current-clients to a small value ( <10 ), you should also select
a reasonable timeout of 2 or 3 seconds with -t. The default is
no limit.
-d Disconnect each client after processing one activation request.
This is a direct violation of DCE RPC but may help if you
receive malicous fake RPC requests that block your threads or
forked processes. Some other KMS emulators (e.g. py-kms) behave
this way.
-k Do not disconnect clients after processing an activation
request. This selects the default behavior. -k is useful only if
you used an ini file (see vlmcsd.ini(5) and -i). If the ini file
contains the line "DisconnectClientsImmediately = true", you can
use this switch to restore the default behavior.
-N0 and -N1
Disables (-N0) or enables (-N1) the use of the NDR64 transfer
syntax in the RPC protocol. Unlike Microsoft vlmcsd supports
NDR64 on 32-bit operating systems. Microsoft introduced NDR64 in
Windows Vista but their KMS servers started using it with Win-
dows 8. Thus if you choose random ePIDs, vlmcsd will select
ePIDs with build numbers 9200 and 9600 if you enable NDR64 and
build numbers 6002 and 7601 if you disable NDR64. The default is
to enable NDR64.
-B0 and -B1
Disables (-B0) or enables (-B1) bind time feature negotiation
(BTFN) in the RPC protocol. All Windows operating systems start-
ing with Vista support BTFN and try to negotiate it when initi-
ating an RPC connection. Thus consider turning it off as a debug
/ troubleshooting feature only. Some older firewalls that selec-
tively block or redirect RPC traffic may get confused when they
detect NDR64 or BTFN.
-l filename
Use filename as a log file. The log file records all activations
with IP address, Windows workstation name (no reverse DNS
lookup), activated product, KMS protocol, time and date. If you
do not specify a log file, no log is created. For a live view of
the log file type tail -f file.
If you use the special filename "syslog", vlmcsd uses syslog(3)
for logging. If your system has no syslog service (/dev/log)
installed, logging output will go to /dev/console. Syslog log-
ging is not available in the native Windows version. The Cygwin
version does support syslog logging.
-T0 and -T1
Disable (-T0) or enable (-T1) the inclusion of date and time in
each line of the log. The default is -T1. -T0 is useful if you
log to stdout(3) which is redirected to another logging mecha-
nism that already includes date and time in its output, for
instance systemd-journald(8). If you log to syslog(3), -T1 is
ignored and date and time will never be included in the output
sent to syslog(3).
-D Normally vlmcsd daemonizes and runs in background (except the
native Windows version). If -D is specified, vlmcsd does not
daemonize and runs in foreground. This is useful for testing and
allows you to simply press <Ctrl-C> to exit vlmcsd.
The native Windows version never daemonizes and always behaves
as if -D had been specified. You may want to install vlmcsd as a
service instead. See -s.
-e If specified, vlmcsd ignores -l and writes all logging output to
stdout(3). This is mainly useful for testing and debugging and
often combined with -D.
-v Use verbose logging. Logs every parameter of the base request
and the base response. It also logs the HWID of the KMS server
if KMS protocol version 6 is used. This option is mainly for
debugging purposes. It only has an effect if some form of log-
ging is used. Thus -v does not make sense if not used with -l,
-e or -f.
-q Do not use verbose logging. This is actually the default behav-
ior. It only makes sense if you use vlmcsd with an ini file (see
-i and vlmcsd.ini(5)). If the ini file contains the line
"LogVerbose = true" you can use -q to restore the default behav-
ior.
-p filename
Create pid file filename. This has nothing to do with KMS ePIDs.
A pid file is a file where vlmcsd writes its own process id.
This is used by standard init scripts (typically found in
/etc/init.d). The default is not to write a pid file.
-u user and -g group
Causes vlmcsd to run in the specified user and group security
context. The main purpose for this is to drop root privileges
after it has been started from the root account. To use this
feature from cygwin you must run cyglsa-config and the account
from which vlmcsd is started must have the rights "Act as part
of the operating system" and "Replace a process level token".
The native Windows version does not support these options.
The actual security context switch is performed after the TCP
sockets have been created. This allows you to use privileged
ports (< 1024) when you start vlmcsd from the root account.
However if you use an ini, pid or log file, you must ensure that
the unprivileged user has access to these files. You can always
log to syslog(3) from an unprivileged account on most platforms
(see -l).
-a CSVLK = ePID [ / HwId ]
Use ePID and HwId for a specific CSVLK. When you use it, -r is
disregarded for this CSVLK. If vlmcsd uses the default vlm-
csd.kmd database, you can use the following CSVLKs: Windows,
WinChinaGov, Office2010, Office2013, Office2016 and Office2019.
The -a option requires that database version 1.6 or later is
used.
HwId must be specified as 16 hex digits that are interpreted as
a series of 8 bytes (big endian). Any character that is not a
hex digit will be ignored. This is for better readability.
-i filename
Use configuration file (aka ini file) filename. Most configura-
tion parameters can be set either via the command line or an ini
file. The command line always has precedence over configuration
items in the ini file. See vlmcsd.ini(5) for the format of the
configuration file.
If vlmcsd has been compiled to use a default configuration file
(often /etc/vlmcsd.ini), you may use -i- to ignore the default
configuration file.
-j filename
Use KMS data file filename. By default vlmcsd only contains the
minimum product data that is required to perform all operations
correctly. You may use a more complete KMS data file that con-
tains all detailed product names. This is especially useful if
you are logging KMS requests. If you don't log, there is no need
to load an external KMS data file.
If vlmcsd has been compiled to use a default KMS data file, you
may use -j- to ignore the default configuration file.
-r0, -r1 (default) and -r2
These options determine how ePIDs are generated if
- you did not sprecify an ePID in the command line and
- you haven't used -i or
- the file specified by -i cannot be opened or
- the file specified by -i does not contain an ePID for the KMS
request
-r0 means there are no random ePIDs. vlmcsd simply issues
default ePIDs that are built into the binary at compile time.
Pro: behaves like real KMS server that also always issues the
same ePID. Con: Microsoft may start blacklisting again and the
default ePID may not work any longer.
-r1 instructs vlmcsd to generate random ePIDs when the program
starts or receives a SIGHUP signal and uses these ePIDs until it
is stopped or receives another SIGHUP. Most other KMS emulators
generate a new ePID on every KMS request. This is easily
detectable. Microsoft could just modify sppsvc.exe in a way that
it always sends two identical KMS requests in two RPC requests
but over the same TCP connection. If both KMS responses contain
the different ePIDs, the KMS server is not genuine. -r1 is the
default mode. -r1 also ensures that all three ePIDs (Windows,
Office 2010 and Office 2013) use the same OS build number and
LCID (language id).
If vlmcsd has been started by an internet superserver, -r1 works
almost identically to -r2. The only exception occurs if you send
more than one activation request over the same TCP connection.
This is simply due to the fact that vlmcsd is started upon a
connection request and does not stay in memory after servicing a
KMS request. Consider using -r0 or -w, -G, -0, -3 and -6 when
starting vlmcsd by an internet superserver.
-r2 behaves like most other KMS server emulators with random
support and generates a new random ePID on every request. -r2
should be treated as debugging option only because it allows
very easy emulator detection.
-C LCID
Do not randomize the locale id part of the ePID and use LCID
instead. The LCID must be specified as a decimal number, e.g.
1049 for "Russian - Russia". This option has no effect if the
ePID is not randomized at all, e.g. if it is selected from the
command line or an ini file.
By default vlmcsd generates a valid locale id that is recognized
by .NET Framework 4.0. This may lead to a locale id which is
unlikely to occur in your country, for instance 2155 for "Quecha
- Ecuador". You may want to select the locale id of your country
instead. See MSDN <http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/goglobal/
bb964664.aspx> for a list of valid LCIDs. Please note that some
of them are not recognized by .NET Framework 4.0.
Most other KMS emulators use a fixed LCID of 1033 (English -
US). To achive the same behavior in vlmcsd use -C 1033.
-H HostBuild
Do not randomize the host build number in the ePID and use Host-
Build instead, for instance 17763 for Windows Server 2019 / Win-
dows 10 1809.
-K0, -K1, -K2 and -K3
Sets the whitelisting level to determine which products vlmcsd
activates or refuses. The default is -K0.
-K0: activate all products with an unknown, retail or
beta/preview KMS ID.
-K1: activate products with a retail or beta/preview KMS ID
but refuse to activate products with an unknown KMS ID.
-K2: activate products with an unknown KMS ID but refuse
products with a retail or beta/preview KMS ID.
-K3: activate only products with a known volume license RTM
KMS ID and refuse all others.
The SKU ID is not checked. Like a genuine KMS server vlmcsd
activates a product that has a random or unknown SKU ID. If you
select -K1 or -K3, vlmcsd also checks the Application ID for
correctness. If Microsoft introduces a new KMS ID for a new
product, you cannot activate it if you used -K1 or -K3 until a
new version of vlmcsd is available.
-c0 and -c1
-c1 causes vlmcsd to check if the client time differs no more
than four hours from the system time. -c0 (the default) disables
this check. -c1 is useful to prevent emulator detection. A
client that tries to detect an emulator could simply send two
subsequent request with two time stamps that differ more than
four hours from each other. If both requests succeed, the server
is an emulator. If you specify -c1 on a system with no reliable
time source, activations will fail. It is ok to set the correct
system time after you started vlmcsd.
-M0 and -M1
Disables (-M0) or enables (-M1) maintaining a list of client
machine IDs (CMIDs). The default is -M0. -M1 is useful to pre-
vent emulator detection. By maintaing a CMID list, vlmcsd
reports current active clients exactly like a genuine KMS emula-
tor. This includes bug compatibility to the extent that you can
permanently kill a genuine KMS emulator by sending an "over-
charge request" with a required client count of 376 or more and
then request activation for 671 clients. vlmcsd can be reset
from this condition by restarting it. If -M0 is used, vlmcsd
reports current active clients as good as possible. If no client
sends an "overcharge request", it is not possible to detect vlm-
csd as an emulator with -M0. -M1 requires the allocation of a
buffer that is about 50 kB in size. On hardware with few memory
resources use it only if you really need it.
If you start vlmcsd from an internet superserver, -M1 cannot be
used. Since vlmcsd exits after each activation, it cannot main-
tain any state in memory.
-E0 and -E1
These options are ignored if you do not also specify -M1. If you
use -E0 (the default), vlmcsd starts up as a fully "charged" KMS
server. Clients activate immediately. -E1 lets you start up vlm-
csd with an empty CMID list. Activation will start when the
required minimum clients (25 for Windows Client OSses, 5 for
Windows Server OSses and Office) have registered with the KMS
server. As long as the minimum client count has not been
reached, clients end up in HRESULT 0xC004F038 "The count
reported by your Key Management Service (KMS) is insufficient.
Please contact your system administrator". You may use vlmcs(1)
or another KMS client emulator to "charge" vlmcsd. -E1 does not
improve emulator detection prevention. It's primary purpose is
to help developers of KMS clients to test "charging" a KMS
server.
-R renewal-interval
Instructs clients to renew activation every renewal-interval.
The renewal-interval is a number optionally immediately followed
by a letter indicating the unit. Valid unit letters are s (sec-
onds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days) and w (weeks). If you do
not specify a letter, minutes is assumed.
-R3d for instance instructs clients to renew activation every 3
days. The default renewal-interval is 10080 (identical to 7d and
1w).
Due to poor implementation of Microsofts KMS Client it cannot be
guaranteed that activation is renewed on time as specfied by the
-R option. Don't care about that. Renewal will happen well
before your activation expires (usually 180 days).
Even though you can specify seconds, the granularity of this
option is 1 minute. Seconds are rounded down to the next multi-
ple of 60.
-A activation-interval
Instructs clients to retry activation every activation-interval
if it was unsuccessful, e.g. because it could not reach the
server. The default is 120 (identical to 2h). activation-inter-
val follows the same syntax as renewal-interval in the -R
option.
-s Installs vlmcsd as a Windows service. This option only works
with the native Windows version and Cygwin. Combine -s with
other command line options. These will be in effect when you
start the service. The service automatically starts when you
reboot your machine. To start it manually, type "net start vlm-
csd".
If you use Cygwin, you must include your Cygwin system DLL
directory (usually C:\Cygwin\bin or C:\Cygwin64\bin) into the
PATH environment variable or the service will not start.
You can reinstall the service anytime using vlmcsd -s again,
e.g. with a different command line. If the service is running,
it will be restarted with the new command line.
When using -s the command line is checked for basic syntax
errors only. For example "vlmcsd -s -L 1.2.3.4" reports no error
but the service will not start if 1.2.3.4 is not an IP address
on your system.
-S Uninstalls the vlmcsd service. Works only with the native Win-
dows version and Cygwin. All other options will be ignored if
you include -S in the command line.
-U [domain\]username
Can only be used together with -s. Starts the service as a dif-
ferent user than the local SYSTEM account. This is used to run
the service under an account with low privileges. If you omit
the domain, an account from the local computer will be used.
You may use "NT AUTHORITY\NetworkService". This is a pseudo user
with low privileges. You may also use "NT AUTHORITY\LocalSer-
vice" which has more privileges but these are of no use for run-
ning vlmcsd.
Make sure that the user you specify has at least execute permis-
sion for your executable. "NT AUTHORITY\NetworkService" normally
has no permission to run binaries from your home directory.
For your convenience you can use the special username "/l" as a
shortcut for "NT AUTHORITY\LocalService" and "/n" for "NT
AUTHORITY\NetworkService". "vlmcsd -s -U /n" installs the ser-
vice to run as "NT AUTHORITY\NetworkService".
-W password
Can only be used together with -s. Specifies a password for the
corresponding username you use with -U. SYSTEM, "NT AUTHOR-
ITY\NetworkService", "NT AUTHORITY\LocalService" do not require
a password.
If you specify a user with even lower privileges than "NT
AUTHORITY\NetworkService", you must specify its password. You
also have to grant the "Log on as a service" right to that user.
SIGNALS
The following signals differ from the default behavior:
SIGTERM, SIGINT
These signals cause vlmcsd to exit gracefully. All global sema-
phores and shared memory pages will be released, the pid file
will be unlinked (deleted) and a shutdown message will be
logged.
SIGHUP Causes vlmcsd to be restarted completely. This is useful if you
started vlmcsd with an ini file. You can modify the ini file
while vlmcsd is running and then sending SIGHUP, e.g. by typing
"killall -SIGHUP vlmcsd" or "kill -SIGHUP `cat /var/run/vlm-
csd.pid`".
The SIGHUP handler has been implemented relatively simple. It is
virtually the same as stopping vlmcsd and starting it again
immediately with the following exceptions:
-- The new process does not get a new process id.
-- If you used a pid file, it is not deleted and recreated
because the process id stays the same.
-- If you used the 'user' and/or 'group' directive in an ini
file these are ignored. This is because once you switched to
lower privileged users and groups, there is no way back. Any-
thing else would be a severe security flaw in the OS.
Signaling is not available in the native Windows version and in the
Cygwin version when vlmcsd runs as a Windows service.
SUPPORTED OPERATING SYSTEMS
vlmcsd compiles and runs on Linux, Windows (no Cygwin required but
explicitly supported), Mac OS X, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Dragonfly
BSD, Minix, Solaris, OpenIndiana, Android and iOS. Other POSIX or
unixoid OSses may work with unmodified sources or may require minor
porting efforts.
SUPPORTED PRODUCTS
vlmcsd can answer activation requests for the following products: Win-
dows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10 (up to 1703),
Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2012, Win-
dows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2016, Office 2010, Project 2010,
Visio 2010, Office 2013, Project 2013, Visio 2013, Office 2016, Project
2016, Visio 2016. Newer products may work as long as the KMS protocol
does not change. A complete list of fully supported products can be
obtained using the -x option of vlmcs(1).
Office, Project and Visio must be volume license versions.
FILES
vlmcsd.ini(5)
EXAMPLES
vlmcsd -De
Starts vlmcsd in foreground. Useful if you use it for the first
time and want to see what's happening when a client requests
activation.
vlmcsd -l /var/log/vlmcsd.log
Starts vlmcsd as a daemon and logs everything to /var/log/vlm-
csd.log.
vlmcsd -L 192.168.1.17
Starts vlmcsd as a daemon and listens on IP address 192.168.1.17
only. This is useful for routers that have a public and a pri-
vate IP address to prevent your KMS server from becoming public.
vlmcsd -s -U /n -l C:\logs\vlmcsd.log
Installs vlmcsd as a Windows service with low privileges and
logs everything to C:\logs\vlmcsd.log when the service is
started with "net start vlmcsd".
BUGS
An ePID specified in an ini file must not contain spaces.
AUTHOR
Written by crony12, Hotbird64 and vityan666. With contributions from
DougQaid.
CREDITS
Thanks to abbodi1406, CODYQX4, deagles, eIcn, mikmik38, nosferati87,
qad, Ratiborus, ...
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd.ini(5), vlmcsd(7), vlmcs(1), vlmcsdmulti(1)
Hotbird64 October 2018 VLMCSD(8)

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VLMCSD(8) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSD(8)
NAME
vlmcsd - a fully Microsoft compatible KMS server
SYNOPSIS
vlmcsd [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
vlmcsd is a fully Microsoft compatible KMS server that provides product
activation services to clients. It is meant as a drop-in replacement
for a Microsoft KMS server (Windows computer with KMS key entered). It
currently supports KMS protocol versions 4, 5 and 6.
vlmcsd is designed to run on POSIX compatible operating systens. It
only requires a basic C library with a BSD-style sockets API and either
fork(2) or pthreads(7). That allows it to run on most embedded systems
like routers, NASes, mobile phones, tablets, TVs, settop boxes, etc.
Some efforts have been made that it also runs on Windows.
Although vlmcsd does neither require an activation key nor a payment to
anyone, it is not meant to run illegal copies of Windows. Its purpose
is to ensure that owners of legal copies can use their software without
restrictions, e.g. if you buy a new computer or motherboard and your
key will be refused activation from Microsoft servers due to hardware
changes.
vlmcsd may be started via an internet superserver like inetd(8) or
xinetd(8) as well as an advanced init system like systemd(8) or
launchd(8) using socket based activation. If vlmcsd detects that
stdin(3) is a socket, it assumes that there is already a connected
client on stdin that wants to be activated.
All options that control setting up listening sockets will be ignored
when in inetd mode. The sockets will be set up by your internet super-
server. You also cannot limit the number of simultanous clients (option
-m). You need to configure the limit in your internet superserver.
The followong features that require that vlmcsd is permanently loaded
will not work if started from an internet superserver:
You cannot maintain a client list (option -M1)
EPID Randomization Level 1 (option -r1) works like Level 2
(-r2). You may want to use Level 0 (-r0) or custom EPIDs
(options -w, -G, -0, -3 and -6) instead.
OPTIONS
Since vlmcsd can be configured at compile time, some options may not be
available on your system.
All options that do no require an argument may be combined with a sin-
gle dash, for instance "vlmcsd -D -e" is identical to "vlmcsd -De". For
all options that require an argument a space between the option and the
option argument is optional. Thus "vlmcsd -r 2" and "vlmcsd -r2" are
identical too.
-h or -?
Displays help.
-V Displays extended version information. This includes the com-
piler used to build vlmcsd, the intended platform and flags
(compile time options) to build vlmcsd. If you have the source
code of vlmcsd, you can type make help (or gmake help on systems
that do not use the GNU version of make(1) by default) to see
the meaning of those flags.
-L ipaddress[:port]
Instructs vlmcsd to listen on ipaddress with optional port
(default 1688). You can use this option more than once. If you
do not specify -L at least once, IP addresses 0.0.0.0 (IPv4) and
:: (IPv6) are used. If the IP address contains colons (IPv6) you
must enclose the IP address in brackets if you specify the
optional port, e.g. [2001:db8::dead:beef]:1688.
If no port is specified, vlmcsd uses the default port according
to a preceding -P option. If you specify a port, it can be a
number (1-65535) or a name (usually found in /etc/services if
not provided via LDAP, NIS+ or another name service).
If you specify a link local IPv6 address (fe80::/10, usually
starting with fe80::), it must be followed by a percent sign (%)
and a scope id (=network interface name or number) on most
unixoid OSses including Linux, Android, MacOS X and iOS, e.g.
fe80::1234:56ff:fe78:9abc%eth0 or
[fe80::1234:56ff:fe78:9abc%2]:1688. Windows (including cygwin)
does not require a scope id unless the same link local address
is used on more than one network interface. Windows does not
accept a name and the scope id must be a number.
-o level
Sets the level of protection against activations from public IP
addresses. The default is -o0 for no protection.
-o1 causes vlmcsd not to listen on all IP addresses but on pri-
vate IP addresses only. IPv4 addresses in the 100.64.0.0/10
range (see RFC6598) are not treated as private since they can be
reached from other users of your ISP. Private IPv4 addresses are
10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12, 192.168.0.0/16, 169.254.0.0/16 and
127.0.0.0/8. vlmcsd treats all IPv6 addresses not within
2000::/3 as private addresses.
If -o1 is combined with -L, it will listen on all private IP
addresses plus the ones specified by one or more -L statements.
If -o1 is combined with -P, only the last -P statement will be
used.
Using -o1 does not protect you if you enable NAT port forwarding
on your router to your vlmcsd machine. It is identical to using
multiple -L statements with all of your private IP addresses.
What -o1 does for you, is automatically enumerating your private
IP addresses.
-o2 does not affect the interfaces, vlmcsd is listening on. When
a clients connects, vlmcsd immediately drops the connection if
the client has a public IP address. Unlike -o1 clients will be
able to establish a TCP connection but it will be closed without
a single byte sent over the connection. This protects against
clients with public IP addresses even if NAT port forwarding is
used. While -o2 offers a higher level of protection than -o1,
the client sees that the KMS TCP port (1688 by default) is actu-
ally accepting connections.
If vlmcsd is compiled to use MS RPC, -o2 can only offer very
poor protection. Control is passed from MS RPC to vlmcsd after
the KMS protocol has already been negotiated. Thus a client can
always verify that the KMS protocol is available even though it
receives an RPC_S_ACCESS_DENIED error message. vlmcsd will issue
a warning if -o2 is used with MS RPC. For adaequate protection
do not use a MS RPC build of vlmcsd with -o2.
-o3 combines -o1 and -o2. vlmcsd listens on private interfaces
only and if a public client manages to connect anyway due to NAT
port forwarding, it will be immediately dropped.
If you use any form of TCP level port forwarding (e.g. nc(1),
netcat(1), ssh(1) port forwarding or similar) to redirect KMS
requests to vlmcsd, there will be no protection even if you use
-o2 or -o3. This is due to the simple fact that vlmcsd sees the
IP address of the redirector and not the IP address of the
client.
-o1 (and thus -o3) is not (yet) available in some scenarios:
FreeBSD: There is a longtime unfixed bug <https://
bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=178881> in the
32-bit ABI of the 64-bit kernel. If you have a 64-bit Free-
BSD kernel, you must run the 64-bit version of vlmcsd if
you use -o1 or -o3. The 32-bit version causes undefined
behavior up to crashing vlmcsd. Other BSDs (NetBSD, Open-
BSD, Dragonfly and Mac OS X) work correctly.
If vlmcsd was started by an internet superserver or was
compiled to use Microsoft RPC (Windows only) or simple
sockets, -o1 and -o3 are not available by design.
-P port
Use TCP port for all subsequent -L statements that do not
include an optional port. If you use -P and -L, -P must be spec-
ified before -L.
-O vpn-adapter-name[=ipv4-address][/cidr-mask][:dhcp-lease-duration]
Enables a compatible VPN adapter to create additional local IPv4
addresses (like 127.0.0.1) that appear as remote IPv4 addresses
to the system. This allows product activation using a local
instance of vlmcsd. This feature is only available in Windows
and Cygwin builds of vlmcsd since it is not of any use on other
operating systems. Compatible VPN adapters are Tap-windows ver-
sion 8.2 or higher (from OpenVPN) and the TeamViewer VPN
adapter. There are two special vpn-adapter-names. A single
period (.) instructs vlmcsd to use the first available compati-
ble VPN adapter. A single dash (-) disables the use of a VPN
adapter if one has been configured in vlmcsd.ini(5). The vpn-
adapter-name is not case-sensitive. If the vpn-adapter-name con-
tains spaces (e.g. Ethernet 3), you must enclose it in quotes.
The default ipv4-address is 10.10.10.9 and the default cidr-mask
is 30. If you are using the default values, your VPN adapter
uses an IPv4 address of 10.10.10.9 and you can set your activa-
tion client to use the easy to remember address 10.10.10.10
(e.g. slmgr /skms 10.10.10.10 or cscript ospp.vbs
/sethst:10.10.10.10).
The dhcp-lease-duration is a number optionally followed by s, m,
h, d or w to indicate seconds, minutes, hours, days or weeks.
The default dhcp-lease-duration is 1d (one day). It is normally
not required to change this value.
It is advised not to manually configure your OpenVPN TAP or
TeamViewer VPN adapter in "Network Connections". If you set the
IPv4 configuration manually anyway, the IPv4 address and the
subnet mask must match the -O parameter. It is safe leave the
IPv4 configuration to automatic (DHCP). vlmcsd will wait up to
four seconds for the DHCP configuration to complete before bind-
ing to and listenin on any interfaces.
You should be aware that only one program can use a VPN adapter
at a time. If you use the TeamViewer VPN adapter for example,
you will not be able to use the VPN feature of TeamViewer as
long as vlmcsd is running. The same applies to OpenVPN TAP
adapters that are in use by other programs (for example OpenVPN,
QEMU, Ratiborus VM, aiccu, etc.). The best way to avoid con-
flicts is to install Tap-Windows from OpenVPN, cd to C:\Program
Files\TAP-Windows\bin and run addtap.bat to install an addi-
tional TAP adapter. Go to "Network Connections" and rename the
new adapter to "vlmcsd" and specify -O vlmcsd to use it.
Example: -O "Ethernet 7"=192.168.123.1/24 (uses VPN adapter Eth-
ernet 7 with IPv4 address 192.168.123.1 and have 192.168.123.2
to 192.168.123.254 as additional local (but apparently remote)
IPv4 addresses.
-x0 and -x1
Controls under what circumstances vlmcsd will exit. Using the
default of -x0 vlmcsd stays active as long as it can perform
some useful operations. If vlmcsd is run by any form of a watch-
dog, e.g. NT service manager (Windows), systemd (Linux) or
launchd (Mac OS / iOS), it may be desirable to end vlmcsd and
let the watchdog restart it. This is especially true if some
pre-requisites are not yet met but will be some time later, e.g.
network is not yet fully setup.
By using -x0 vlmcsd will
exit if none of the listening sockets specified with -L can
be used. It continues if at least one socket can be setup
for listening.
exit any TAP mirror thread (Windows version only) if there
is an error condition while reading or writing from or to
the VPN adapter but continue to work without utilizing a
VPN adapter.
By using -x1 vlmcsd will
exit if not all listening sockets specified with -L can be
used.
exit completely if there is a problem with a VPN adapter it
is using. This can happen for instance if the VPN adapter
has been disabled using "Control Panel - Network - Adapter
Settings" while vlmcsd is using it.
Please note that -x1 is kind of a workaround option. While it
may help under some circumstances, it is better to solve the
problem at its origin, e.g. properly implementing dependencies
in your startup script to ensure all network interfaces and the
VPN adapter you will use are completely setup before you start
vlmcsd.
-F0 and -F1
Allow (-F1) or disallow (-F0) binding to IP addresses that are
currently not configured on your system. The default is -F0. -F1
allows you to bind to an IP address that may be configured after
you started vlmcsd. vlmcsd will listen on that address as soon
as it becomes available. This feature is only available under
Linux (IPv4 and IPv6) and FreeBSD (IPv4 only). FreeBSD allows
this feature only for the root user (more correctly: processes
that have the PRIV_NETINET_BINDANY privilege). Linux does not
require a capability for this.
-t seconds
Timeout the TCP connection with the client after seconds sec-
onds. After sending an activation request. RPC keeps the TCP
connection for a while. The default is 30 seconds. You may spec-
ify a shorter period to free ressources on your device faster.
This is useful for devices with limited main memory or if you
used -m to limit the concurrent clients that may request activa-
tion. Microsoft RPC clients disconnect after 30 seconds by
default. Setting seconds to a greater value does not make much
sense.
-m concurrent-clients
Limit the number of clients that will be handled concurrently.
This is useful for devices with limited ressources or if you are
experiencing DoS attacks that spawn thousands of threads or
forked processes. If additional clients connect to vlmcsd, they
need to wait until another client disconnects. If you set con-
current-clients to a small value ( <10 ), you should also select
a reasonable timeout of 2 or 3 seconds with -t. The default is
no limit.
-d Disconnect each client after processing one activation request.
This is a direct violation of DCE RPC but may help if you
receive malicous fake RPC requests that block your threads or
forked processes. Some other KMS emulators (e.g. py-kms) behave
this way.
-k Do not disconnect clients after processing an activation
request. This selects the default behavior. -k is useful only if
you used an ini file (see vlmcsd.ini(5) and -i). If the ini file
contains the line "DisconnectClientsImmediately = true", you can
use this switch to restore the default behavior.
-N0 and -N1
Disables (-N0) or enables (-N1) the use of the NDR64 transfer
syntax in the RPC protocol. Unlike Microsoft vlmcsd supports
NDR64 on 32-bit operating systems. Microsoft introduced NDR64 in
Windows Vista but their KMS servers started using it with Win-
dows 8. Thus if you choose random ePIDs, vlmcsd will select
ePIDs with build numbers 9200 and 9600 if you enable NDR64 and
build numbers 6002 and 7601 if you disable NDR64. The default is
to enable NDR64.
-B0 and -B1
Disables (-B0) or enables (-B1) bind time feature negotiation
(BTFN) in the RPC protocol. All Windows operating systems start-
ing with Vista support BTFN and try to negotiate it when initi-
ating an RPC connection. Thus consider turning it off as a debug
/ troubleshooting feature only. Some older firewalls that selec-
tively block or redirect RPC traffic may get confused when they
detect NDR64 or BTFN.
-l filename
Use filename as a log file. The log file records all activations
with IP address, Windows workstation name (no reverse DNS
lookup), activated product, KMS protocol, time and date. If you
do not specify a log file, no log is created. For a live view of
the log file type tail -f file.
If you use the special filename "syslog", vlmcsd uses syslog(3)
for logging. If your system has no syslog service (/dev/log)
installed, logging output will go to /dev/console. Syslog log-
ging is not available in the native Windows version. The Cygwin
version does support syslog logging.
-T0 and -T1
Disable (-T0) or enable (-T1) the inclusion of date and time in
each line of the log. The default is -T1. -T0 is useful if you
log to stdout(3) which is redirected to another logging mecha-
nism that already includes date and time in its output, for
instance systemd-journald(8). If you log to syslog(3), -T1 is
ignored and date and time will never be included in the output
sent to syslog(3).
-D Normally vlmcsd daemonizes and runs in background (except the
native Windows version). If -D is specified, vlmcsd does not
daemonize and runs in foreground. This is useful for testing and
allows you to simply press <Ctrl-C> to exit vlmcsd.
The native Windows version never daemonizes and always behaves
as if -D had been specified. You may want to install vlmcsd as a
service instead. See -s.
-e If specified, vlmcsd ignores -l and writes all logging output to
stdout(3). This is mainly useful for testing and debugging and
often combined with -D.
-v Use verbose logging. Logs every parameter of the base request
and the base response. It also logs the HWID of the KMS server
if KMS protocol version 6 is used. This option is mainly for
debugging purposes. It only has an effect if some form of log-
ging is used. Thus -v does not make sense if not used with -l,
-e or -f.
-q Do not use verbose logging. This is actually the default behav-
ior. It only makes sense if you use vlmcsd with an ini file (see
-i and vlmcsd.ini(5)). If the ini file contains the line
"LogVerbose = true" you can use -q to restore the default behav-
ior.
-p filename
Create pid file filename. This has nothing to do with KMS ePIDs.
A pid file is a file where vlmcsd writes its own process id.
This is used by standard init scripts (typically found in
/etc/init.d). The default is not to write a pid file.
-u user and -g group
Causes vlmcsd to run in the specified user and group security
context. The main purpose for this is to drop root privileges
after it has been started from the root account. To use this
feature from cygwin you must run cyglsa-config and the account
from which vlmcsd is started must have the rights "Act as part
of the operating system" and "Replace a process level token".
The native Windows version does not support these options.
The actual security context switch is performed after the TCP
sockets have been created. This allows you to use privileged
ports (< 1024) when you start vlmcsd from the root account.
However if you use an ini, pid or log file, you must ensure that
the unprivileged user has access to these files. You can always
log to syslog(3) from an unprivileged account on most platforms
(see -l).
-a CSVLK = ePID [ / HwId ]
Use ePID and HwId for a specific CSVLK. When you use it, -r is
disregarded for this CSVLK. If vlmcsd uses the default vlm-
csd.kmd database, you can use the following CSVLKs: Windows,
WinChinaGov, Office2010, Office2013, Office2016 and Office2019.
The -a option requires that database version 1.6 or later is
used.
HwId must be specified as 16 hex digits that are interpreted as
a series of 8 bytes (big endian). Any character that is not a
hex digit will be ignored. This is for better readability.
-i filename
Use configuration file (aka ini file) filename. Most configura-
tion parameters can be set either via the command line or an ini
file. The command line always has precedence over configuration
items in the ini file. See vlmcsd.ini(5) for the format of the
configuration file.
If vlmcsd has been compiled to use a default configuration file
(often /etc/vlmcsd.ini), you may use -i- to ignore the default
configuration file.
-j filename
Use KMS data file filename. By default vlmcsd only contains the
minimum product data that is required to perform all operations
correctly. You may use a more complete KMS data file that con-
tains all detailed product names. This is especially useful if
you are logging KMS requests. If you don't log, there is no need
to load an external KMS data file.
If vlmcsd has been compiled to use a default KMS data file, you
may use -j- to ignore the default configuration file.
-r0, -r1 (default) and -r2
These options determine how ePIDs are generated if
- you did not sprecify an ePID in the command line and
- you haven't used -i or
- the file specified by -i cannot be opened or
- the file specified by -i does not contain an ePID for the KMS
request
-r0 means there are no random ePIDs. vlmcsd simply issues
default ePIDs that are built into the binary at compile time.
Pro: behaves like real KMS server that also always issues the
same ePID. Con: Microsoft may start blacklisting again and the
default ePID may not work any longer.
-r1 instructs vlmcsd to generate random ePIDs when the program
starts or receives a SIGHUP signal and uses these ePIDs until it
is stopped or receives another SIGHUP. Most other KMS emulators
generate a new ePID on every KMS request. This is easily
detectable. Microsoft could just modify sppsvc.exe in a way that
it always sends two identical KMS requests in two RPC requests
but over the same TCP connection. If both KMS responses contain
the different ePIDs, the KMS server is not genuine. -r1 is the
default mode. -r1 also ensures that all three ePIDs (Windows,
Office 2010 and Office 2013) use the same OS build number and
LCID (language id).
If vlmcsd has been started by an internet superserver, -r1 works
almost identically to -r2. The only exception occurs if you send
more than one activation request over the same TCP connection.
This is simply due to the fact that vlmcsd is started upon a
connection request and does not stay in memory after servicing a
KMS request. Consider using -r0 or -w, -G, -0, -3 and -6 when
starting vlmcsd by an internet superserver.
-r2 behaves like most other KMS server emulators with random
support and generates a new random ePID on every request. -r2
should be treated as debugging option only because it allows
very easy emulator detection.
-C LCID
Do not randomize the locale id part of the ePID and use LCID
instead. The LCID must be specified as a decimal number, e.g.
1049 for "Russian - Russia". This option has no effect if the
ePID is not randomized at all, e.g. if it is selected from the
command line or an ini file.
By default vlmcsd generates a valid locale id that is recognized
by .NET Framework 4.0. This may lead to a locale id which is
unlikely to occur in your country, for instance 2155 for "Quecha
- Ecuador". You may want to select the locale id of your country
instead. See MSDN <http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/goglobal/
bb964664.aspx> for a list of valid LCIDs. Please note that some
of them are not recognized by .NET Framework 4.0.
Most other KMS emulators use a fixed LCID of 1033 (English -
US). To achive the same behavior in vlmcsd use -C 1033.
-H HostBuild
Do not randomize the host build number in the ePID and use Host-
Build instead, for instance 17763 for Windows Server 2019 / Win-
dows 10 1809.
-K0, -K1, -K2 and -K3
Sets the whitelisting level to determine which products vlmcsd
activates or refuses. The default is -K0.
-K0: activate all products with an unknown, retail or
beta/preview KMS ID.
-K1: activate products with a retail or beta/preview KMS ID
but refuse to activate products with an unknown KMS ID.
-K2: activate products with an unknown KMS ID but refuse
products with a retail or beta/preview KMS ID.
-K3: activate only products with a known volume license RTM
KMS ID and refuse all others.
The SKU ID is not checked. Like a genuine KMS server vlmcsd
activates a product that has a random or unknown SKU ID. If you
select -K1 or -K3, vlmcsd also checks the Application ID for
correctness. If Microsoft introduces a new KMS ID for a new
product, you cannot activate it if you used -K1 or -K3 until a
new version of vlmcsd is available.
-c0 and -c1
-c1 causes vlmcsd to check if the client time differs no more
than four hours from the system time. -c0 (the default) disables
this check. -c1 is useful to prevent emulator detection. A
client that tries to detect an emulator could simply send two
subsequent request with two time stamps that differ more than
four hours from each other. If both requests succeed, the server
is an emulator. If you specify -c1 on a system with no reliable
time source, activations will fail. It is ok to set the correct
system time after you started vlmcsd.
-M0 and -M1
Disables (-M0) or enables (-M1) maintaining a list of client
machine IDs (CMIDs). The default is -M0. -M1 is useful to pre-
vent emulator detection. By maintaing a CMID list, vlmcsd
reports current active clients exactly like a genuine KMS emula-
tor. This includes bug compatibility to the extent that you can
permanently kill a genuine KMS emulator by sending an "over-
charge request" with a required client count of 376 or more and
then request activation for 671 clients. vlmcsd can be reset
from this condition by restarting it. If -M0 is used, vlmcsd
reports current active clients as good as possible. If no client
sends an "overcharge request", it is not possible to detect vlm-
csd as an emulator with -M0. -M1 requires the allocation of a
buffer that is about 50 kB in size. On hardware with few memory
resources use it only if you really need it.
If you start vlmcsd from an internet superserver, -M1 cannot be
used. Since vlmcsd exits after each activation, it cannot main-
tain any state in memory.
-E0 and -E1
These options are ignored if you do not also specify -M1. If you
use -E0 (the default), vlmcsd starts up as a fully "charged" KMS
server. Clients activate immediately. -E1 lets you start up vlm-
csd with an empty CMID list. Activation will start when the
required minimum clients (25 for Windows Client OSses, 5 for
Windows Server OSses and Office) have registered with the KMS
server. As long as the minimum client count has not been
reached, clients end up in HRESULT 0xC004F038 "The count
reported by your Key Management Service (KMS) is insufficient.
Please contact your system administrator". You may use vlmcs(1)
or another KMS client emulator to "charge" vlmcsd. -E1 does not
improve emulator detection prevention. It's primary purpose is
to help developers of KMS clients to test "charging" a KMS
server.
-R renewal-interval
Instructs clients to renew activation every renewal-interval.
The renewal-interval is a number optionally immediately followed
by a letter indicating the unit. Valid unit letters are s (sec-
onds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days) and w (weeks). If you do
not specify a letter, minutes is assumed.
-R3d for instance instructs clients to renew activation every 3
days. The default renewal-interval is 10080 (identical to 7d and
1w).
Due to poor implementation of Microsofts KMS Client it cannot be
guaranteed that activation is renewed on time as specfied by the
-R option. Don't care about that. Renewal will happen well
before your activation expires (usually 180 days).
Even though you can specify seconds, the granularity of this
option is 1 minute. Seconds are rounded down to the next multi-
ple of 60.
-A activation-interval
Instructs clients to retry activation every activation-interval
if it was unsuccessful, e.g. because it could not reach the
server. The default is 120 (identical to 2h). activation-inter-
val follows the same syntax as renewal-interval in the -R
option.
-s Installs vlmcsd as a Windows service. This option only works
with the native Windows version and Cygwin. Combine -s with
other command line options. These will be in effect when you
start the service. The service automatically starts when you
reboot your machine. To start it manually, type "net start vlm-
csd".
If you use Cygwin, you must include your Cygwin system DLL
directory (usually C:\Cygwin\bin or C:\Cygwin64\bin) into the
PATH environment variable or the service will not start.
You can reinstall the service anytime using vlmcsd -s again,
e.g. with a different command line. If the service is running,
it will be restarted with the new command line.
When using -s the command line is checked for basic syntax
errors only. For example "vlmcsd -s -L 1.2.3.4" reports no error
but the service will not start if 1.2.3.4 is not an IP address
on your system.
-S Uninstalls the vlmcsd service. Works only with the native Win-
dows version and Cygwin. All other options will be ignored if
you include -S in the command line.
-U [domain\]username
Can only be used together with -s. Starts the service as a dif-
ferent user than the local SYSTEM account. This is used to run
the service under an account with low privileges. If you omit
the domain, an account from the local computer will be used.
You may use "NT AUTHORITY\NetworkService". This is a pseudo user
with low privileges. You may also use "NT AUTHORITY\LocalSer-
vice" which has more privileges but these are of no use for run-
ning vlmcsd.
Make sure that the user you specify has at least execute permis-
sion for your executable. "NT AUTHORITY\NetworkService" normally
has no permission to run binaries from your home directory.
For your convenience you can use the special username "/l" as a
shortcut for "NT AUTHORITY\LocalService" and "/n" for "NT
AUTHORITY\NetworkService". "vlmcsd -s -U /n" installs the ser-
vice to run as "NT AUTHORITY\NetworkService".
-W password
Can only be used together with -s. Specifies a password for the
corresponding username you use with -U. SYSTEM, "NT AUTHOR-
ITY\NetworkService", "NT AUTHORITY\LocalService" do not require
a password.
If you specify a user with even lower privileges than "NT
AUTHORITY\NetworkService", you must specify its password. You
also have to grant the "Log on as a service" right to that user.
SIGNALS
The following signals differ from the default behavior:
SIGTERM, SIGINT
These signals cause vlmcsd to exit gracefully. All global sema-
phores and shared memory pages will be released, the pid file
will be unlinked (deleted) and a shutdown message will be
logged.
SIGHUP Causes vlmcsd to be restarted completely. This is useful if you
started vlmcsd with an ini file. You can modify the ini file
while vlmcsd is running and then sending SIGHUP, e.g. by typing
"killall -SIGHUP vlmcsd" or "kill -SIGHUP `cat /var/run/vlm-
csd.pid`".
The SIGHUP handler has been implemented relatively simple. It is
virtually the same as stopping vlmcsd and starting it again
immediately with the following exceptions:
-- The new process does not get a new process id.
-- If you used a pid file, it is not deleted and recreated
because the process id stays the same.
-- If you used the 'user' and/or 'group' directive in an ini
file these are ignored. This is because once you switched to
lower privileged users and groups, there is no way back. Any-
thing else would be a severe security flaw in the OS.
Signaling is not available in the native Windows version and in the
Cygwin version when vlmcsd runs as a Windows service.
SUPPORTED OPERATING SYSTEMS
vlmcsd compiles and runs on Linux, Windows (no Cygwin required but
explicitly supported), Mac OS X, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Dragonfly
BSD, Minix, Solaris, OpenIndiana, Android and iOS. Other POSIX or
unixoid OSses may work with unmodified sources or may require minor
porting efforts.
SUPPORTED PRODUCTS
vlmcsd can answer activation requests for the following products: Win-
dows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10 (up to 1703),
Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2012, Win-
dows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2016, Office 2010, Project 2010,
Visio 2010, Office 2013, Project 2013, Visio 2013, Office 2016, Project
2016, Visio 2016. Newer products may work as long as the KMS protocol
does not change. A complete list of fully supported products can be
obtained using the -x option of vlmcs(1).
Office, Project and Visio must be volume license versions.
FILES
vlmcsd.ini(5)
EXAMPLES
vlmcsd -De
Starts vlmcsd in foreground. Useful if you use it for the first
time and want to see what's happening when a client requests
activation.
vlmcsd -l /var/log/vlmcsd.log
Starts vlmcsd as a daemon and logs everything to /var/log/vlm-
csd.log.
vlmcsd -L 192.168.1.17
Starts vlmcsd as a daemon and listens on IP address 192.168.1.17
only. This is useful for routers that have a public and a pri-
vate IP address to prevent your KMS server from becoming public.
vlmcsd -s -U /n -l C:\logs\vlmcsd.log
Installs vlmcsd as a Windows service with low privileges and
logs everything to C:\logs\vlmcsd.log when the service is
started with "net start vlmcsd".
BUGS
An ePID specified in an ini file must not contain spaces.
AUTHOR
Written by crony12, Hotbird64 and vityan666. With contributions from
DougQaid.
CREDITS
Thanks to abbodi1406, CODYQX4, deagles, eIcn, mikmik38, nosferati87,
qad, Ratiborus, ...
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd.ini(5), vlmcsd(7), vlmcs(1), vlmcsdmulti(1)
Hotbird64 October 2018 VLMCSD(8)

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@ -1,486 +0,0 @@
VLMCSD.INI(5) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSD.INI(5)
NAME
vlmcsd.ini - vlmcsd KMS emulator configuration file
SYNOPSIS
vlmcsd.ini
DESCRIPTION
vlmcsd.ini (or simply called the "ini file") is a configuration file
for vlmcsd(8). By default vlmcsd does not use a configuration file. It
is completely optional and for advanced users only. You must use the -i
option on the vlmcsd command line to use an ini file. There is no
default name or default location for the ini file.
Everything, that can be configured in the ini file, may also be speci-
fied on the command line. Any configuration option specified on the
command line takes precedence over the respective configuration line in
the ini file.
Benefits of a configuration file
While you can use the configuration file to simply modify the default
behavior of vlmcsd, it can also be used to change the configuration of
vlmcsd after you sent a HUP signal(7). Whenever you send SIGHUP, the
configuration file will be re-read. Any changes you made to the ini
file will be reflected after vlmcsd received the hangup signal.
Differences between command line and configuration file
If you specify an illegal option or option argument on the command
line, vlmcsd displays help and exits. If you specify an incorrect key-
word or argument in the ini file, vlmcsd displays a warning with some
information, ignores the respective line and continues. This is inten-
tional and prevents vlmcsd from aborting after a SIGHUP if the configu-
ration was modified incorrectly.
SYNTAX
vlmcsd.ini is a UTF-8 encoded text file with each line being in the
format keyword = argument. The keyword is not case-sensitive. The argu-
ment is treated literally. It is neither required nor allowed to
enclose the argument in any form of quote characters except when quote
characters are part of the argument itself. Whitespace characters are
ignored only
- at the beginning of a line
- between the keyword and '='
- between '=' and the argument
Lines, that start with '#' or ';' are treated as comments. Empty lines
are ignored as well. If a keyword is repeated in another line, vlmcsd
will use the argument of the last occurence of the keyword. An excep-
tion to this is the Listen keyword which can be specified multiple
times and causes vlmcsd to listen on more than one IP address and/or
port.
Some arguments are binary arguments that need to be either TRUE or
FALSE. You can use "Yes", "On" or "1" as an alias for TRUE and "No",
"Off" or "0" as an alias for FALSE. Binary arguments are case-insensi-
tive.
KEYWORDS
The following keywords are defined (not all keywords may be available
depending on the operating system and the options used when vlmcsd(8)
was compiled):
Listen This defines on what combinations of IP addresses and ports vlm-
csd should listen. Listen can be specified more than once. The
argument has the form ipaddress[:port]. If you omit the port,
the default port of 1688 is used. If the ipaddress contains
colons and a port is used, you must enclose the ipaddress in
brackets. The default is to listen to 0.0.0.0:1688 and [::]:1688
which means listen to all IPv4 and all IPv6 addresses. See the
-L option in vlmcsd(8) for more info about the syntax. If you
use -L or -P on the command line, all Listen keywords in the ini
file will be ignored. The Listen keyword cannot be used if vlm-
csd has been compiled to use Microsoft RPC (Windows and Cygwin
only) or simple sockets.
Examples:
Listen = 192.168.1.123:1688
Listen = 0.0.0.0:1234
Listen = [fe80::1721:12ff:fe81:d36b%eth0]:1688
Port Can only be used if vlmcsd has been compiled to use simple sock-
ets or on Windows and Cygwin if vlmcsd(8) has been compiled to
use Microsoft RPC. Otherwise you must use Listen instead. Causes
vlmcsd to listen on that port instead of 1688.
FreeBind
Can be TRUE or FALSE. If TRUE, you can use the Listen keyword
with IP addresses that are currently not defined on your system.
vlmcsd(8) will start listening on these IP addresses as soon as
they become available. This keyword is only available under
Linux and FreeBSD because no other OS currently supports that
feature. FreeBSD supports this only for IPv4 and requires the
PRIV_NETINET_BINDANY privilege which is normally assigned to
proccesses of the root user.
PublicIPProtectionLevel
Set the level of protection against KMS activations from public
IP addresses.
0 = No protection (default)
1 = Listen on private IP addresses only (plus those specified by
one or more Listen statements)
2 = Disconnect clients with public IP addresses without activat-
ing
3 = Combines 1 and 2
For details on public IP protection levels see vlmcsd(8) command
line option -o.
VPN Has to be in the form vpn-adapter-name[=ipv4-address][/cidr-
mask][:dhcp-lease-duration].
Enables a compatible VPN adapter to create additional local IPv4
addresses (like 127.0.0.1) that appear as remote IPv4 addresses
to the system. This allows product activation using a local
instance of vlmcsd. This feature is only available in Windows
and Cygwin builds of vlmcsd since it is not of any use on other
operating systems. Compatible VPN adapters are Tap-windows ver-
sion 8.2 or higher (from OpenVPN) and the TeamViewer VPN
adapter. There is a special vpn-adapter-name. A single period
(.) instructs vlmcsd to use the first available compatible VPN
adapter. The vpn-adapter-name is not case-sensitive. If the vpn-
adapter-name contains spaces (e.g. Ethernet 3), do not enclose
it in quotes.
The default ipv4-address is 10.10.10.9 and the default cidr-mask
is 30. If you are using the default values, your VPN adapter
uses an IPv4 address of 10.10.10.9 and you can set your activa-
tion client to use the easy to remember address 10.10.10.10
(e.g. slmgr /skms 10.10.10.10 or cscript ospp.vbs
/sethst:10.10.10.10).
The dhcp-lease-duration is a number optionally followed by s, m,
h, d or w to indicate seconds, minutes, hours, days or weeks.
The default dhcp-lease-duration is 1d (one day). It is normally
not required to change this value.
It is advised not to manually configure your OpenVPN TAP or
TeamViewer VPN adapter in "Network Connections". If you set the
IPv4 configuration manually anyway, the IPv4 address and the
subnet mask must match the VPN= directive. It is safe leave the
IPv4 configuration to automatic (DHCP). vlmcsd will wait up to
four seconds for the DHCP configuration to complete before bind-
ing to and listenin on any interfaces.
You should be aware that only one program can use a VPN adapter
at a time. If you use the TeamViewer VPN adapter for example,
you will not be able to use the VPN feature of TeamViewer as
long as vlmcsd is running. The same applies to OpenVPN TAP
adapters that are in use by other programs (for example OpenVPN,
QEMU, Ratiborus VM, aiccu, etc.). The best way to avoid con-
flicts is to install Tap-Windows from OpenVPN, cd to C:\Program
Files\TAP-Windows\bin and run addtap.bat to install an addi-
tional TAP adapter. Go to "Network Connections" and rename the
new adapter to "vlmcsd" and specify VPN=vlmcsd to use it.
ExitLevel
Can be either 0 (the default) or 1. Controls under what circum-
stances vlmcsd will exit. Using the default of 0 vlmcsd stays
active as long as it can perform some useful operations. If vlm-
csd is run by any form of a watchdog, e.g. NT service manager
(Windows), systemd (Linux) or launchd (Mac OS / iOS), it may be
desirable to end vlmcsd and let the watchdog restart it. This is
especially true if some pre-requisites are not yet met but will
be some time later, e.g. network is not yet fully setup.
By using ExitLevel = 0 vlmcsd will
exit if none of the listening sockets specified with -L can
be used. It continues if at least one socket can be setup
for listening.
exit any TAP mirror thread (Windows version only) if there
is an error condition while reading or writing from or to
the VPN adapter but continue to work without utilizing a
VPN adapter.
By using ExitLevel = 1 vlmcsd will
exit if not all listening sockets specified with -L can be
used.
exit completely if there is a problem with a VPN adapter it
is using. This may happen for instance if the VPN adapter
has been disabled using "Control Panel - Network - Adapter
Settings" while vlmcsd is using it.
Please note that ExitLevel = 1 is kind of a workaround option.
While it may help under some circumstances, it is better to
solve the problem at its origin, e.g. properly implementing
dependencies in your startup script to ensure all network inter-
faces and the VPN adapter you will use are completely setup
before you start vlmcsd.
UseNDR64
Can be TRUE or FALSE. Specifies whether you want to use the
NDR64 transfer syntax. See options -n0 and -n1 in vlmcsd(8). The
default is TRUE.
UseBTFN
Can be TRUE or FALSE. Specifies whether you want to use bind
time feature negotiation in RPC. See options -b0 and -b1 in vlm-
csd(8). The default is TRUE.
RandomizationLevel
The argument must 0, 1 or 2. This specifies the ePID randomiza-
tion level. See options -r0, -r1 and -r2 in vlmcsd(8). The
default randomization level is 1. A RandomizationLevel of 2 is
not recommended and should be treated as a debugging level.
LCID Use a specific culture id (LCID) even if the ePID is randomized.
The argument must be a number between 1 and 32767. While any
number in that range is valid, you should use an offcial LCID. A
list of assigned LCIDs can be found at http://msdn.micro-
soft.com/en-us/goglobal/bb964664.aspx. On the command line you
control this setting with option -C.
HostBuild
Use a specific host build number in the ePID even if it is ran-
domized. The argument must be a number between 1 and 65535.
While you can use any number you should only use build numbers
that a released build numbers of Windows Servers, e.g. 17763 for
Windows Server 2019.
MaxWorkers
The argument specifies the maximum number of worker processes or
threads that will be used to serve activation requests concur-
rently. This is the same as specifying -m on the command line.
Minimum is 1. The maximum is platform specific and is at least
32767 but is likely to be greater on most systems. The default
is no limit.
ConnectionTimeout
Used to control when the vlmcsd disconnects idle TPC connec-
tions. The default is 30 seconds. This is the same setting as -t
on the command line.
DisconnectClientsImmediately
Set this to TRUE to disconnect a client after it got an activa-
tion response regardless whether a timeout has occured or not.
The default is FALSE. Setting this to TRUE is non-standard
behavior. Use only if you are experiencing DoS or DDoS attacks.
On the command line you control this behavior with options -d
and -k.
PidFile
Write a pid file. The argument is the full pathname of a pid
file. The pid file contains is single line containing the
process id of the vlmcsd process. It can be used to stop
(SIGTERM) or restart (SIGHUP) vlmcsd. This directive can be
overriden using -p on the command line.
LogFile
Write a log file. The argument is the full pathname of a log
file. On a unixoid OS and with Cygwin you can use the special
filename 'syslog' to log to the syslog facility. This is the
same as specifying -l on the command line.
KmsData
Use a KMS data file. The argument is the full pathname of a KMS
data file. By default vlmcsd only contains the minimum product
data that is required to perform all operations correctly. You
may use a more complete KMS data file that contains all detailed
product names. This is especially useful if you are logging KMS
requests. If you don't log, there is no need to load an external
KMS data file.
You may use KmsData = - to prevent the default KMS data file to
be loaded.
LogDateAndTime
Can be TRUE or FALSE. The default is TRUE. If set to FALSE, log-
ging output does not include date and time. This is useful if
you log to stdout(3) which is redirected to another logging
mechanism that already includes date and time in its output, for
instance systemd-journald(8). If you log to syslog(3), LogDate-
AndTime is ignored and date and time will never be included in
the output sent to syslog(3). Using the command line you control
this setting with options -T0 and -T1.
LogVerbose
Set this to either TRUE or FALSE. The default is FALSE. If set
to TRUE, more details of each activation will be logged. You use
-v and -q in the command line to control this setting. LogVer-
bose has an effect only if you specify a log file or redirect
logging to stdout(3).
WhitelistingLevel
Can be 0, 1, 2 or 3. The default is 0. Sets the whitelisting
level to determine which products vlmcsd activates or refuses.
0: activate all products with an unknown, retail or
beta/preview KMS ID.
1: activate products with a retail or beta/preview KMS ID
but refuse to activate products with an unknown KMS ID.
2: activate products with an unknown KMS ID but refuse
products with a retail or beta/preview KMS ID.
3: activate only products with a known volume license RTM
KMS ID and refuse all others.
The SKU ID is not checked. Like a genuine KMS server vlmcsd
activates a product that has a random or unknown SKU ID. If you
select 1 or 3, vlmcsd also checks the Application ID for cor-
rectness. If Microsoft introduces a new KMS ID for a new prod-
uct, you cannot activate it if you used 1 or 3 until a new ver-
sion of vlmcsd is available.
CheckClientTime
Can be TRUE or FALSE. The default is FALSE. If you set this to
TRUE vlmcsd(8) checks if the client time differs no more than
four hours from the system time. This is useful to prevent emu-
lator detection. A client that tries to detect an emulator could
simply send two subsequent request with two time stamps that
differ more than four hours from each other. If both requests
succeed, the server is an emulator. If you set this to TRUE on a
system with no reliable time source, activations will fail. It
is ok to set the correct system time after you started vlm-
csd(8).
MaintainClients
Can be TRUE or FALSE (the default). Disables (FALSE) or enables
(TRUE) maintaining a list of client machine IDs (CMIDs). TRUE is
useful to prevent emulator detection. By maintaing a CMID list,
vlmcsd(8) reports current active clients exactly like a genuine
KMS emulator. This includes bug compatibility to the extent that
you can permanently kill a genuine KMS emulator by sending an
"overcharge request" with a required client count of 376 or more
and then request activation for 671 clients. vlmcsd(8) can be
reset from this condition by restarting it. If FALSE is used,
vlmcsd(8) reports current active clients as good as possible. If
no client sends an "overcharge request", it is not possible to
detect vlmcsd(8) as an emulator with MaintainClients = FALSE.
Maintaining clients requires the allocation of a buffer that is
about 50 kB in size. On hardware with few memory resources use
it only if you really need it.
If you start vlmcsd(8) from an internet superserver, this set-
ting cannot be used. Since vlmcsd(8) exits after each activa-
tion, it cannot maintain any state in memory.
StartEmpty
This setting is ignored if you do not also specify Maintain-
Clients = TRUE. If you specify FALSE (the default), vlmcsd(8)
starts up as a fully "charged" KMS server. Clients activate
immediately. StartEmpty = TRUE lets you start up vlmcsd(8) with
an empty CMID list. Activation will start when the required min-
imum clients (25 for Windows Client OSses, 5 for Windows Server
OSses and Office) have registered with the KMS server. As long
as the minimum client count has not been reached, clients end up
in HRESULT 0xC004F038 "The count reported by your Key Management
Service (KMS) is insufficient. Please contact your system admin-
istrator". You may use vlmcs(1) or another KMS client emulator
to "charge" vlmcsd(8). Setting this parameter to TRUE does not
improve emulator detection prevention. It's primary purpose is
to help developers of KMS clients to test "charging" a KMS
server.
ActivationInterval
This is the same as specifying -A on the command line. See vlm-
csd(8) for details. The default is 2 hours. Example: Activation-
Interval = 1h
RenewalInterval
This is the same as specifying -R on the command line. See vlm-
csd(8) for details. The default is 7 days. Example: RenewalIn-
terval = 3d. Please note that the KMS client decides itself when
to renew activation. Even though vlmcsd sends the renewal inter-
val you specify, it is no more than some kind of recommendation
to the client. Older KMS clients did follow the recommendation
from a KMS server or emulator. Newer clients do not.
User Run vlmcsd as another, preferrably less privileged, user. The
argument can be a user name or a numeric user id. You must have
the required privileges (capabilities on Linux) to change the
security context of a process without providing any credentials
(a password in most cases). On most unixoid OSses 'root' is the
only user who has these privileges in the default configuration.
This setting is not available in the native Windows version of
vlmcsd. See -u in vlmcsd(8). This setting cannot be changed on
the fly by sending SIGHUP to vlmcsd.
Group Run vlmcsd as another, preferrably less privileged, group. The
argument can be a group name or a numeric group id. You must
have the required privileges (capabilities on Linux) to change
the security context of a process without providing any creden-
tials (a password in most cases). On most unixoid OSses 'root'
is the only user who has these privileges in the default config-
uration. This setting is not available in the native Windows
version of vlmcsd. See -g in vlmcsd(8). This setting cannot be
changed on the fly by sending SIGHUP to vlmcsd.
<csvlk-name>
The argument has the form ePID [ / HwId ]. Always use ePID and
HwId for activations with <csvlk-name>. If specified, Randomiza-
tionLevel for the <csvlk-name> will be ignored. With the default
vlmcsd.kmd database you can use the following <csvlk-name>s:
Windows, Office2010, Office2013, Office2016, Office2019 and
WinChinaGov. While vlmcsd is compatible with older databases,
you must use at least database version 1.6 for this feature to
work.
VALID EPIDS
The ePID is currently a comment only. You can specify any string up to
63 bytes. In Windows 7 Microsoft has blacklisted few ( < 10 ) ePIDs
that were used in KMSv5 versions of the "Ratiborus Virtual Machine".
Microsoft has given up on blacklisting when KMS emulators appeared in
the wild.
Even if you can use "Activated by cool hacker guys" as an ePID, you may
wish to use ePIDs that cannot be detected as non-MS ePIDs. If you don't
know how these "valid" ePIDs look like exactly, do not use GUIDS in
vlmcsd.ini. vlmcsd provides internal mechanisms to generate valid
ePIDs.
If you use non-ASCII characters in your ePID (you shouldn't do anyway),
these must be in UTF-8 format. This is especially important when you
run vlmcsd on Windows or cygwin because UTF-8 is not the default encod-
ing for most editors.
If you are specifying an optional HWID it follows the same syntax as in
the -H option in vlmcsd(8) ecxept that you must not enclose a HWID in
quotes even if it contains spaces.
FILES
vlmcsd.ini(5)
AUTHOR
vlmcsd(8) was written by crony12, Hotbird64 and vityan666. With contri-
butions from DougQaid.
CREDITS
Thanks to abbodi1406, CODYQX4, deagles, eIcn, mikmik38, nosferati87,
qad, Ratiborus, ...
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd(8), vlmcsd(7), vlmcs(1), vlmcsdmulti(1)
Hotbird64 October 2018 VLMCSD.INI(5)

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<title>VLMCSD.INI</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1 align="center">VLMCSD.INI</h1>
<a href="#NAME">NAME</a><br>
<a href="#SYNOPSIS">SYNOPSIS</a><br>
<a href="#DESCRIPTION">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
<a href="#SYNTAX">SYNTAX</a><br>
<a href="#KEYWORDS">KEYWORDS</a><br>
<a href="#VALID EPIDS">VALID EPIDS</a><br>
<a href="#FILES">FILES</a><br>
<a href="#AUTHOR">AUTHOR</a><br>
<a href="#CREDITS">CREDITS</a><br>
<a href="#SEE ALSO">SEE ALSO</a><br>
<hr>
<h2>NAME
<a name="NAME"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd.ini</b>
- vlmcsd KMS emulator configuration file</p>
<h2>SYNOPSIS
<a name="SYNOPSIS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd.ini</b></p>
<h2>DESCRIPTION
<a name="DESCRIPTION"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd.ini</b>
(or simply called the &quot;ini file&quot;) is a
configuration file for <b>vlmcsd</b>(8). By default vlmcsd
does not use a configuration file. It is completely optional
and for advanced users only. You must use the <b>-i</b>
option on the vlmcsd command line to use an ini file. There
is no default name or default location for the ini file.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Everything,
that can be configured in the ini file, may also be
specified on the command line. Any configuration option
specified on the command line takes precedence over the
respective configuration line in the ini file.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Benefits of
a configuration file</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">While you can
use the configuration file to simply modify the default
behavior of vlmcsd, it can also be used to change the
configuration of vlmcsd after you sent a HUP
<b>signal</b>(7). Whenever you send SIGHUP, the
configuration file will be re-read. Any changes you made to
the ini file will be reflected after vlmcsd received the
hangup signal.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Differences
between command line and configuration file</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">If you specify
an illegal option or option argument on the command line,
vlmcsd displays help and exits. If you specify an incorrect
<i>keyword</i> or <i>argument</i> in the ini file, vlmcsd
displays a warning with some information, ignores the
respective line and continues. This is intentional and
prevents vlmcsd from aborting after a SIGHUP if the
configuration was modified incorrectly.</p>
<h2>SYNTAX
<a name="SYNTAX"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">vlmcsd.ini is a
UTF-8 encoded text file with each line being in the format
<i>keyword</i> = <i>argument</i>. The <i>keyword</i> is not
case-sensitive. The <i>argument</i> is treated literally. It
is neither required nor allowed to enclose the
<i>argument</i> in any form of quote characters except when
quote characters are part of the argument itself. Whitespace
characters are ignored only</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">- at the
beginning of a line <br>
- between the <i>keyword</i> and &rsquo;=&rsquo; <br>
- between &rsquo;=&rsquo; and the <i>argument</i></p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Lines, that
start with &rsquo;#&rsquo; or &rsquo;;&rsquo; are treated as
comments. Empty lines are ignored as well. If a
<i>keyword</i> is repeated in another line, vlmcsd will use
the <i>argument</i> of the last occurence of the
<i>keyword</i>. An exception to this is the Listen
<i>keyword</i> which can be specified multiple times and
causes vlmcsd to listen on more than one IP address and/or
port.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Some
<i>argument</i>s are binary arguments that need to be either
TRUE or FALSE. You can use &quot;Yes&quot;, &quot;On&quot;
or &quot;1&quot; as an alias for TRUE and &quot;No&quot;,
&quot;Off&quot; or &quot;0&quot; as an alias for FALSE.
Binary arguments are case-insensitive.</p>
<h2>KEYWORDS
<a name="KEYWORDS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">The following
<i>keyword</i>s are defined (not all keywords may be
available depending on the operating system and the options
used when <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) was compiled):</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="9%">
<p><b>Listen</b></p></td>
<td width="2%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>This defines on what combinations of IP addresses and
ports vlmcsd should listen. <b>Listen</b> can be specified
more than once. The <i>argument</i> has the form
<i>ipaddress</i>[:<i>port</i>]. If you omit the <i>port</i>,
the default port of 1688 is used. If the <i>ipaddress</i>
contains colons and a <i>port</i> is used, you must enclose
the <i>ipaddress</i> in brackets. The default is to listen
to 0.0.0.0:1688 and [::]:1688 which means listen to all IPv4
and all IPv6 addresses. See the <b>-L</b> option in
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) for more info about the syntax. If you use
<b>-L</b> or <b>-P</b> on the command line, all
<b>Listen</b> keywords in the ini file will be ignored. The
<b>Listen</b> keyword cannot be used if vlmcsd has been
compiled to use Microsoft RPC (Windows and Cygwin only) or
simple sockets.</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">Examples:</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">Listen =
192.168.1.123:1688 <br>
Listen = 0.0.0.0:1234 <br>
Listen = [fe80::1721:12ff:fe81:d36b%eth0]:1688</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="6%">
<p style="margin-top: 1em"><b>Port</b></p></td>
<td width="5%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p style="margin-top: 1em">Can only be used if vlmcsd has
been compiled to use simple sockets or on Windows and Cygwin
if <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) has been compiled to use Microsoft RPC.
Otherwise you must use <b>Listen</b> instead. Causes vlmcsd
to listen on that port instead of 1688.</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>FreeBind</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Can be TRUE or FALSE. If TRUE,
you can use the <b>Listen</b> keyword with IP addresses that
are currently not defined on your system. <b>vlmcsd</b>(8)
will start listening on these IP addresses as soon as they
become available. This keyword is only available under Linux
and FreeBSD because no other OS currently supports that
feature. FreeBSD supports this only for IPv4 and requires
the PRIV_NETINET_BINDANY privilege which is normally
assigned to proccesses of the root user.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>PublicIPProtectionLevel</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Set the level of protection
against KMS activations from public IP addresses.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">0 = No
protection (default) <br>
1&nbsp;=&nbsp;Listen on private IP addresses only (plus
those specified by one or more <b>Listen</b> statements)
<br>
2&nbsp;=&nbsp;Disconnect clients with public IP addresses
without activating <br>
3&nbsp;=&nbsp;Combines 1 and 2</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">For details on
public IP protection levels see <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) command
line option <b>-o</b>.</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="4%">
<p><b>VPN</b></p></td>
<td width="7%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Has to be in the form
<i>vpn-adapter-name</i>[=<i>ipv4-address</i>][/<i>cidr-mask</i>][:<i>dhcp-lease-duration</i>].</p> </td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">Enables a
compatible VPN adapter to create additional local IPv4
addresses (like 127.0.0.1) that appear as remote IPv4
addresses to the system. This allows product activation
using a local instance of vlmcsd. This feature is only
available in Windows and Cygwin builds of vlmcsd since it is
not of any use on other operating systems. Compatible VPN
adapters are Tap-windows version 8.2 or higher (from
OpenVPN) and the TeamViewer VPN adapter. There is a special
<i>vpn-adapter-name</i>. A single period (.) instructs
vlmcsd to use the first available compatible VPN adapter.
The <i>vpn-adapter-name</i> is <b>not</b> case-sensitive. If
the <i>vpn-adapter-name</i> contains spaces (e.g. Ethernet
3), do <b>not</b> enclose it in quotes.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">The default
<i>ipv4-address</i> is 10.10.10.9 and the default
<i>cidr-mask</i> is 30. If you are using the default values,
your VPN adapter uses an IPv4 address of 10.10.10.9 and you
can set your activation client to use the easy to remember
address 10.10.10.10 (e.g. slmgr /skms 10.10.10.10 or cscript
ospp.vbs /sethst:10.10.10.10).</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">The
<i>dhcp-lease-duration</i> is a number optionally followed
by s, m, h, d or w to indicate seconds, minutes, hours, days
or weeks. The default <i>dhcp-lease-duration</i> is 1d (one
day). It is normally not required to change this value.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">It is advised
not to manually configure your OpenVPN TAP or TeamViewer VPN
adapter in &quot;Network Connections&quot;. If you set the
IPv4 configuration manually anyway, the IPv4 address and the
subnet mask must match the <b>VPN=</b> directive. It is safe
leave the IPv4 configuration to automatic (DHCP). vlmcsd
will wait up to four seconds for the DHCP configuration to
complete before binding to and listenin on any
interfaces.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">You should be
aware that only one program can use a VPN adapter at a time.
If you use the TeamViewer VPN adapter for example, you will
not be able to use the VPN feature of TeamViewer as long as
vlmcsd is running. The same applies to OpenVPN TAP adapters
that are in use by other programs (for example OpenVPN,
QEMU, Ratiborus VM, aiccu, etc.). The best way to avoid
conflicts is to install Tap-Windows from OpenVPN, cd to
C:\Program Files\TAP-Windows\bin and run addtap.bat to
install an additional TAP adapter. Go to &quot;Network
Connections&quot; and rename the new adapter to
&quot;vlmcsd&quot; and specify <b>VPN=vlmcsd</b> to use
it.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>ExitLevel</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Can be either 0 (the default)
or 1. Controls under what circumstances vlmcsd will exit.
Using the default of <b>0</b> vlmcsd stays active as long as
it can perform some useful operations. If vlmcsd is run by
any form of a watchdog, e.g. NT service manager (Windows),
systemd (Linux) or launchd (Mac OS / iOS), it may be
desirable to end vlmcsd and let the watchdog restart it.
This is especially true if some pre-requisites are not yet
met but will be some time later, e.g. network is not yet
fully setup.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">By using
<b>ExitLevel = 0</b> vlmcsd will</p>
<p style="margin-left:29%; margin-top: 1em">exit if none of
the listening sockets specified with <b>-L</b> can be used.
It continues if at least one socket can be setup for
listening.</p>
<p style="margin-left:29%; margin-top: 1em">exit any TAP
mirror thread (Windows version only) if there is an error
condition while reading or writing from or to the VPN
adapter but continue to work without utilizing a VPN
adapter.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">By using
<b>ExitLevel = 1</b> vlmcsd will</p>
<p style="margin-left:29%; margin-top: 1em">exit if not all
listening sockets specified with <b>-L</b> can be used.</p>
<p style="margin-left:29%; margin-top: 1em">exit completely
if there is a problem with a VPN adapter it is using. This
may happen for instance if the VPN adapter has been disabled
using &quot;Control Panel - Network - Adapter Settings&quot;
while vlmcsd is using it.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">Please note
that <b>ExitLevel = 1</b> is kind of a workaround option.
While it may help under some circumstances, it is better to
solve the problem at its origin, e.g. properly implementing
dependencies in your startup script to ensure all network
interfaces and the VPN adapter you will use are completely
setup before you start vlmcsd.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>UseNDR64</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Can be TRUE or FALSE. Specifies
whether you want to use the NDR64 transfer syntax. See
options <b>-n0</b> and <b>-n1</b> in <b>vlmcsd</b>(8). The
default is TRUE.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>UseBTFN</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Can be TRUE or FALSE. Specifies
whether you want to use bind time feature negotiation in
RPC. See options <b>-b0</b> and <b>-b1</b> in
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8). The default is TRUE.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>RandomizationLevel</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">The <i>argument</i> must 0, 1
or 2. This specifies the ePID randomization level. See
options <b>-r0</b>, <b>-r1</b> and <b>-r2</b> in
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8). The default randomization level is 1. A
<b>RandomizationLevel</b> of 2 is not recommended and should
be treated as a debugging level.</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="6%">
<p><b>LCID</b></p></td>
<td width="5%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Use a specific culture id (LCID) even if the ePID is
randomized. The <i>argument</i> must be a number between 1
and 32767. While any number in that range is valid, you
should use an offcial LCID. A list of assigned LCIDs can be
found at
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/goglobal/bb964664.aspx. On
the command line you control this setting with option
<b>-C</b>.</p> </td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>HostBuild</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Use a specific host build
number in the ePID even if it is randomized. The
<i>argument</i> must be a number between 1 and 65535. While
you can use any number you should only use build numbers
that a released build numbers of Windows Servers, e.g. 17763
for Windows Server 2019.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>MaxWorkers</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">The <i>argument</i> specifies
the maximum number of worker processes or threads that will
be used to serve activation requests concurrently. This is
the same as specifying <b>-m</b> on the command line.
Minimum is 1. The maximum is platform specific and is at
least 32767 but is likely to be greater on most systems. The
default is no limit.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>ConnectionTimeout</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Used to control when the vlmcsd
disconnects idle TPC connections. The default is 30 seconds.
This is the same setting as <b>-t</b> on the command
line.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>DisconnectClientsImmediately</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Set this to TRUE to disconnect
a client after it got an activation response regardless
whether a timeout has occured or not. The default is FALSE.
Setting this to TRUE is non-standard behavior. Use only if
you are experiencing DoS or DDoS attacks. On the command
line you control this behavior with options <b>-d</b> and
<b>-k</b>.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>PidFile</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Write a pid file. The
<i>argument</i> is the full pathname of a pid file. The pid
file contains is single line containing the process id of
the vlmcsd process. It can be used to stop (SIGTERM) or
restart (SIGHUP) vlmcsd. This directive can be overriden
using <b>-p</b> on the command line.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>LogFile</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Write a log file. The
<i>argument</i> is the full pathname of a log file. On a
unixoid OS and with Cygwin you can use the special filename
&rsquo;syslog&rsquo; to log to the syslog facility. This is
the same as specifying <b>-l</b> on the command line.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>KmsData</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Use a KMS data file. The
<i>argument</i> is the full pathname of a KMS data file. By
default vlmcsd only contains the minimum product data that
is required to perform all operations correctly. You may use
a more complete KMS data file that contains all detailed
product names. This is especially useful if you are logging
KMS requests. If you don&rsquo;t log, there is no need to
load an external KMS data file.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">You may use
<b>KmsData&nbsp;=&nbsp;-</b> to prevent the default KMS data
file to be loaded.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>LogDateAndTime</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Can be TRUE or FALSE. The
default is TRUE. If set to FALSE, logging output does not
include date and time. This is useful if you log to
<b>stdout</b>(3) which is redirected to another logging
mechanism that already includes date and time in its output,
for instance <b>systemd-journald</b>(8). If you log to
<b>syslog</b>(3), <b>LogDateAndTime</b> is ignored and date
and time will never be included in the output sent to
<b>syslog</b>(3). Using the command line you control this
setting with options <b>-T0</b> and <b>-T1</b>.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>LogVerbose</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Set this to either TRUE or
FALSE. The default is FALSE. If set to TRUE, more details of
each activation will be logged. You use <b>-v</b> and
<b>-q</b> in the command line to control this setting.
<b>LogVerbose</b> has an effect only if you specify a log
file or redirect logging to <b>stdout</b>(3).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>WhitelistingLevel</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Can be 0, 1, 2 or 3. The
default is 0. Sets the whitelisting level to determine which
products vlmcsd activates or refuses.</p>
<p style="margin-left:29%; margin-top: 1em"><b>0</b>:
activate all products with an unknown, retail or
beta/preview KMS ID. <b><br>
1</b>: activate products with a retail or beta/preview KMS
ID but refuse to activate products with an unknown KMS ID.
<b><br>
2</b>: activate products with an unknown KMS ID but refuse
products with a retail or beta/preview KMS ID. <b><br>
3</b>: activate only products with a known volume license
RTM KMS ID and refuse all others.</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="22%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>The SKU ID is not checked. Like a genuine KMS server
vlmcsd activates a product that has a random or unknown SKU
ID. If you select <b>1</b> or <b>3</b>, vlmcsd also checks
the Application ID for correctness. If Microsoft introduces
a new KMS ID for a new product, you cannot activate it if
you used <b>1</b> or <b>3</b> until a new version of vlmcsd
is available.</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>CheckClientTime</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Can be TRUE or FALSE. The
default is FALSE. If you set this to TRUE <b>vlmcsd</b>(8)
checks if the client time differs no more than four hours
from the system time. This is useful to prevent emulator
detection. A client that tries to detect an emulator could
simply send two subsequent request with two time stamps that
differ more than four hours from each other. If both
requests succeed, the server is an emulator. If you set this
to TRUE on a system with no reliable time source,
activations will fail. It is ok to set the correct system
time after you started <b>vlmcsd</b>(8).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>MaintainClients</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">Can be TRUE or FALSE (the
default). Disables (FALSE) or enables (TRUE) maintaining a
list of client machine IDs (CMIDs). TRUE is useful to
prevent emulator detection. By maintaing a CMID list,
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) reports current active clients exactly like
a genuine KMS emulator. This includes bug compatibility to
the extent that you can permanently kill a genuine KMS
emulator by sending an &quot;overcharge request&quot; with a
required client count of 376 or more and then request
activation for 671 clients. <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) can be reset
from this condition by restarting it. If FALSE is used,
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) reports current active clients as good as
possible. If no client sends an &quot;overcharge
request&quot;, it is not possible to detect <b>vlmcsd</b>(8)
as an emulator with
<b>MaintainClients&nbsp;</b>=&nbsp;FALSE. Maintaining
clients requires the allocation of a buffer that is about 50
kB in size. On hardware with few memory resources use it
only if you really need it.</p>
<p style="margin-left:22%; margin-top: 1em">If you start
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) from an internet superserver, this setting
cannot be used. Since <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) exits after each
activation, it cannot maintain any state in memory.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>StartEmpty</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">This setting is ignored if you
do not also specify <b>MaintainClients&nbsp;</b>=&nbsp;TRUE.
If you specify FALSE (the default), <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) starts
up as a fully &quot;charged&quot; KMS server. Clients
activate immediately. <b>StartEmpty&nbsp;</b>=&nbsp;TRUE
lets you start up <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) with an empty CMID list.
Activation will start when the required minimum clients (25
for Windows Client OSses, 5 for Windows Server OSses and
Office) have registered with the KMS server. As long as the
minimum client count has not been reached, clients end up in
HRESULT 0xC004F038 &quot;The count reported by your Key
Management Service (KMS) is insufficient. Please contact
your system administrator&quot;. You may use <b>vlmcs</b>(1)
or another KMS client emulator to &quot;charge&quot;
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8). Setting this parameter to TRUE does not
improve emulator detection prevention. It&rsquo;s primary
purpose is to help developers of KMS clients to test
&quot;charging&quot; a KMS server.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>ActivationInterval</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">This is the same as specifying
<b>-A</b> on the command line. See <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) for
details. The default is 2 hours. Example:
ActivationInterval&nbsp;=&nbsp;1h</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>RenewalInterval</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">This is the same as specifying
<b>-R</b> on the command line. See <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) for
details. The default is 7 days. Example: RenewalInterval =
3d. Please note that the KMS client decides itself when to
renew activation. Even though vlmcsd sends the renewal
interval you specify, it is no more than some kind of
recommendation to the client. Older KMS clients did follow
the recommendation from a KMS server or emulator. Newer
clients do not.</p>
<table width="100%" border="0" rules="none" frame="void"
cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0">
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="7%">
<p><b>User</b></p></td>
<td width="4%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Run vlmcsd as another, preferrably less privileged,
user. The <i>argument</i> can be a user name or a numeric
user id. You must have the required privileges (capabilities
on Linux) to change the security context of a process
without providing any credentials (a password in most
cases). On most unixoid OSses &rsquo;root&rsquo; is the only
user who has these privileges in the default configuration.
This setting is not available in the native Windows version
of vlmcsd. See <b>-u</b> in <b>vlmcsd</b>(8). This setting
cannot be changed on the fly by sending SIGHUP to
vlmcsd.</p> </td></tr>
<tr valign="top" align="left">
<td width="11%"></td>
<td width="7%">
<p><b>Group</b></p></td>
<td width="4%"></td>
<td width="78%">
<p>Run vlmcsd as another, preferrably less privileged,
group. The <i>argument</i> can be a group name or a numeric
group id. You must have the required privileges
(capabilities on Linux) to change the security context of a
process without providing any credentials (a password in
most cases). On most unixoid OSses &rsquo;root&rsquo; is the
only user who has these privileges in the default
configuration. This setting is not available in the native
Windows version of vlmcsd. See <b>-g</b> in
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8). This setting cannot be changed on the fly
by sending SIGHUP to vlmcsd.</p></td></tr>
</table>
<p style="margin-left:11%;"><b>&lt;csvlk-name&gt;</b></p>
<p style="margin-left:22%;">The <i>argument</i> has the
form <i>ePID</i> [ / <i>HwId</i> ]. Always use <i>ePID</i>
and <i>HwId</i> for activations with
<b>&lt;csvlk-name&gt;</b>. If specified,
<b>RandomizationLevel</b> for the <b>&lt;csvlk-name&gt;</b>
will be ignored. With the default vlmcsd.kmd database you
can use the following <b>&lt;csvlk-name&gt;</b>s: Windows,
Office2010, Office2013, Office2016, Office2019 and
WinChinaGov. While vlmcsd is compatible with older
databases, you must use at least database version 1.6 for
this feature to work.</p>
<h2>VALID EPIDS
<a name="VALID EPIDS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">The ePID is
currently a comment only. You can specify any string up to
63 bytes. In Windows 7 Microsoft has blacklisted few ( &lt;
10 ) ePIDs that were used in KMSv5 versions of the
&quot;Ratiborus Virtual Machine&quot;. Microsoft has given
up on blacklisting when KMS emulators appeared in the
wild.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Even if you can
use &quot;Activated by cool hacker guys&quot; as an ePID,
you may wish to use ePIDs that cannot be detected as non-MS
ePIDs. If you don&rsquo;t know how these &quot;valid&quot;
ePIDs look like exactly, do not use GUIDS in vlmcsd.ini.
vlmcsd provides internal mechanisms to generate valid
ePIDs.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">If you use
non-ASCII characters in your ePID (you shouldn&rsquo;t do
anyway), these must be in UTF-8 format. This is especially
important when you run vlmcsd on Windows or cygwin because
UTF-8 is not the default encoding for most editors.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">If you are
specifying an optional HWID it follows the same syntax as in
the <b>-H</b> option in <b>vlmcsd</b>(8) ecxept that you
must not enclose a HWID in quotes even if it contains
spaces.</p>
<h2>FILES
<a name="FILES"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd.ini</b>(5)</p>
<h2>AUTHOR
<a name="AUTHOR"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd</b>(8)
was written by crony12, Hotbird64 and vityan666. With
contributions from DougQaid.</p>
<h2>CREDITS
<a name="CREDITS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Thanks to
abbodi1406, CODYQX4, deagles, eIcn, mikmik38, nosferati87,
qad, Ratiborus, ...</p>
<h2>SEE ALSO
<a name="SEE ALSO"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsd</b>(8),
<b>vlmcsd</b>(7), <b>vlmcs</b>(1), <b>vlmcsdmulti</b>(1)</p>
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VLMCSD.INI(5) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSD.INI(5)
NAME
vlmcsd.ini - vlmcsd KMS emulator configuration file
SYNOPSIS
vlmcsd.ini
DESCRIPTION
vlmcsd.ini (or simply called the "ini file") is a configuration file
for vlmcsd(8). By default vlmcsd does not use a configuration file. It
is completely optional and for advanced users only. You must use the -i
option on the vlmcsd command line to use an ini file. There is no
default name or default location for the ini file.
Everything, that can be configured in the ini file, may also be speci-
fied on the command line. Any configuration option specified on the
command line takes precedence over the respective configuration line in
the ini file.
Benefits of a configuration file
While you can use the configuration file to simply modify the default
behavior of vlmcsd, it can also be used to change the configuration of
vlmcsd after you sent a HUP signal(7). Whenever you send SIGHUP, the
configuration file will be re-read. Any changes you made to the ini
file will be reflected after vlmcsd received the hangup signal.
Differences between command line and configuration file
If you specify an illegal option or option argument on the command
line, vlmcsd displays help and exits. If you specify an incorrect key-
word or argument in the ini file, vlmcsd displays a warning with some
information, ignores the respective line and continues. This is inten-
tional and prevents vlmcsd from aborting after a SIGHUP if the configu-
ration was modified incorrectly.
SYNTAX
vlmcsd.ini is a UTF-8 encoded text file with each line being in the
format keyword = argument. The keyword is not case-sensitive. The argu-
ment is treated literally. It is neither required nor allowed to
enclose the argument in any form of quote characters except when quote
characters are part of the argument itself. Whitespace characters are
ignored only
- at the beginning of a line
- between the keyword and '='
- between '=' and the argument
Lines, that start with '#' or ';' are treated as comments. Empty lines
are ignored as well. If a keyword is repeated in another line, vlmcsd
will use the argument of the last occurence of the keyword. An excep-
tion to this is the Listen keyword which can be specified multiple
times and causes vlmcsd to listen on more than one IP address and/or
port.
Some arguments are binary arguments that need to be either TRUE or
FALSE. You can use "Yes", "On" or "1" as an alias for TRUE and "No",
"Off" or "0" as an alias for FALSE. Binary arguments are case-insensi-
tive.
KEYWORDS
The following keywords are defined (not all keywords may be available
depending on the operating system and the options used when vlmcsd(8)
was compiled):
Listen This defines on what combinations of IP addresses and ports vlm-
csd should listen. Listen can be specified more than once. The
argument has the form ipaddress[:port]. If you omit the port,
the default port of 1688 is used. If the ipaddress contains
colons and a port is used, you must enclose the ipaddress in
brackets. The default is to listen to 0.0.0.0:1688 and [::]:1688
which means listen to all IPv4 and all IPv6 addresses. See the
-L option in vlmcsd(8) for more info about the syntax. If you
use -L or -P on the command line, all Listen keywords in the ini
file will be ignored. The Listen keyword cannot be used if vlm-
csd has been compiled to use Microsoft RPC (Windows and Cygwin
only) or simple sockets.
Examples:
Listen = 192.168.1.123:1688
Listen = 0.0.0.0:1234
Listen = [fe80::1721:12ff:fe81:d36b%eth0]:1688
Port Can only be used if vlmcsd has been compiled to use simple sock-
ets or on Windows and Cygwin if vlmcsd(8) has been compiled to
use Microsoft RPC. Otherwise you must use Listen instead. Causes
vlmcsd to listen on that port instead of 1688.
FreeBind
Can be TRUE or FALSE. If TRUE, you can use the Listen keyword
with IP addresses that are currently not defined on your system.
vlmcsd(8) will start listening on these IP addresses as soon as
they become available. This keyword is only available under
Linux and FreeBSD because no other OS currently supports that
feature. FreeBSD supports this only for IPv4 and requires the
PRIV_NETINET_BINDANY privilege which is normally assigned to
proccesses of the root user.
PublicIPProtectionLevel
Set the level of protection against KMS activations from public
IP addresses.
0 = No protection (default)
1 = Listen on private IP addresses only (plus those specified by
one or more Listen statements)
2 = Disconnect clients with public IP addresses without activat-
ing
3 = Combines 1 and 2
For details on public IP protection levels see vlmcsd(8) command
line option -o.
VPN Has to be in the form vpn-adapter-name[=ipv4-address][/cidr-
mask][:dhcp-lease-duration].
Enables a compatible VPN adapter to create additional local IPv4
addresses (like 127.0.0.1) that appear as remote IPv4 addresses
to the system. This allows product activation using a local
instance of vlmcsd. This feature is only available in Windows
and Cygwin builds of vlmcsd since it is not of any use on other
operating systems. Compatible VPN adapters are Tap-windows ver-
sion 8.2 or higher (from OpenVPN) and the TeamViewer VPN
adapter. There is a special vpn-adapter-name. A single period
(.) instructs vlmcsd to use the first available compatible VPN
adapter. The vpn-adapter-name is not case-sensitive. If the vpn-
adapter-name contains spaces (e.g. Ethernet 3), do not enclose
it in quotes.
The default ipv4-address is 10.10.10.9 and the default cidr-mask
is 30. If you are using the default values, your VPN adapter
uses an IPv4 address of 10.10.10.9 and you can set your activa-
tion client to use the easy to remember address 10.10.10.10
(e.g. slmgr /skms 10.10.10.10 or cscript ospp.vbs
/sethst:10.10.10.10).
The dhcp-lease-duration is a number optionally followed by s, m,
h, d or w to indicate seconds, minutes, hours, days or weeks.
The default dhcp-lease-duration is 1d (one day). It is normally
not required to change this value.
It is advised not to manually configure your OpenVPN TAP or
TeamViewer VPN adapter in "Network Connections". If you set the
IPv4 configuration manually anyway, the IPv4 address and the
subnet mask must match the VPN= directive. It is safe leave the
IPv4 configuration to automatic (DHCP). vlmcsd will wait up to
four seconds for the DHCP configuration to complete before bind-
ing to and listenin on any interfaces.
You should be aware that only one program can use a VPN adapter
at a time. If you use the TeamViewer VPN adapter for example,
you will not be able to use the VPN feature of TeamViewer as
long as vlmcsd is running. The same applies to OpenVPN TAP
adapters that are in use by other programs (for example OpenVPN,
QEMU, Ratiborus VM, aiccu, etc.). The best way to avoid con-
flicts is to install Tap-Windows from OpenVPN, cd to C:\Program
Files\TAP-Windows\bin and run addtap.bat to install an addi-
tional TAP adapter. Go to "Network Connections" and rename the
new adapter to "vlmcsd" and specify VPN=vlmcsd to use it.
ExitLevel
Can be either 0 (the default) or 1. Controls under what circum-
stances vlmcsd will exit. Using the default of 0 vlmcsd stays
active as long as it can perform some useful operations. If vlm-
csd is run by any form of a watchdog, e.g. NT service manager
(Windows), systemd (Linux) or launchd (Mac OS / iOS), it may be
desirable to end vlmcsd and let the watchdog restart it. This is
especially true if some pre-requisites are not yet met but will
be some time later, e.g. network is not yet fully setup.
By using ExitLevel = 0 vlmcsd will
exit if none of the listening sockets specified with -L can
be used. It continues if at least one socket can be setup
for listening.
exit any TAP mirror thread (Windows version only) if there
is an error condition while reading or writing from or to
the VPN adapter but continue to work without utilizing a
VPN adapter.
By using ExitLevel = 1 vlmcsd will
exit if not all listening sockets specified with -L can be
used.
exit completely if there is a problem with a VPN adapter it
is using. This may happen for instance if the VPN adapter
has been disabled using "Control Panel - Network - Adapter
Settings" while vlmcsd is using it.
Please note that ExitLevel = 1 is kind of a workaround option.
While it may help under some circumstances, it is better to
solve the problem at its origin, e.g. properly implementing
dependencies in your startup script to ensure all network inter-
faces and the VPN adapter you will use are completely setup
before you start vlmcsd.
UseNDR64
Can be TRUE or FALSE. Specifies whether you want to use the
NDR64 transfer syntax. See options -n0 and -n1 in vlmcsd(8). The
default is TRUE.
UseBTFN
Can be TRUE or FALSE. Specifies whether you want to use bind
time feature negotiation in RPC. See options -b0 and -b1 in vlm-
csd(8). The default is TRUE.
RandomizationLevel
The argument must 0, 1 or 2. This specifies the ePID randomiza-
tion level. See options -r0, -r1 and -r2 in vlmcsd(8). The
default randomization level is 1. A RandomizationLevel of 2 is
not recommended and should be treated as a debugging level.
LCID Use a specific culture id (LCID) even if the ePID is randomized.
The argument must be a number between 1 and 32767. While any
number in that range is valid, you should use an offcial LCID. A
list of assigned LCIDs can be found at http://msdn.micro-
soft.com/en-us/goglobal/bb964664.aspx. On the command line you
control this setting with option -C.
HostBuild
Use a specific host build number in the ePID even if it is ran-
domized. The argument must be a number between 1 and 65535.
While you can use any number you should only use build numbers
that a released build numbers of Windows Servers, e.g. 17763 for
Windows Server 2019.
MaxWorkers
The argument specifies the maximum number of worker processes or
threads that will be used to serve activation requests concur-
rently. This is the same as specifying -m on the command line.
Minimum is 1. The maximum is platform specific and is at least
32767 but is likely to be greater on most systems. The default
is no limit.
ConnectionTimeout
Used to control when the vlmcsd disconnects idle TPC connec-
tions. The default is 30 seconds. This is the same setting as -t
on the command line.
DisconnectClientsImmediately
Set this to TRUE to disconnect a client after it got an activa-
tion response regardless whether a timeout has occured or not.
The default is FALSE. Setting this to TRUE is non-standard
behavior. Use only if you are experiencing DoS or DDoS attacks.
On the command line you control this behavior with options -d
and -k.
PidFile
Write a pid file. The argument is the full pathname of a pid
file. The pid file contains is single line containing the
process id of the vlmcsd process. It can be used to stop
(SIGTERM) or restart (SIGHUP) vlmcsd. This directive can be
overriden using -p on the command line.
LogFile
Write a log file. The argument is the full pathname of a log
file. On a unixoid OS and with Cygwin you can use the special
filename 'syslog' to log to the syslog facility. This is the
same as specifying -l on the command line.
KmsData
Use a KMS data file. The argument is the full pathname of a KMS
data file. By default vlmcsd only contains the minimum product
data that is required to perform all operations correctly. You
may use a more complete KMS data file that contains all detailed
product names. This is especially useful if you are logging KMS
requests. If you don't log, there is no need to load an external
KMS data file.
You may use KmsData = - to prevent the default KMS data file to
be loaded.
LogDateAndTime
Can be TRUE or FALSE. The default is TRUE. If set to FALSE, log-
ging output does not include date and time. This is useful if
you log to stdout(3) which is redirected to another logging
mechanism that already includes date and time in its output, for
instance systemd-journald(8). If you log to syslog(3), LogDate-
AndTime is ignored and date and time will never be included in
the output sent to syslog(3). Using the command line you control
this setting with options -T0 and -T1.
LogVerbose
Set this to either TRUE or FALSE. The default is FALSE. If set
to TRUE, more details of each activation will be logged. You use
-v and -q in the command line to control this setting. LogVer-
bose has an effect only if you specify a log file or redirect
logging to stdout(3).
WhitelistingLevel
Can be 0, 1, 2 or 3. The default is 0. Sets the whitelisting
level to determine which products vlmcsd activates or refuses.
0: activate all products with an unknown, retail or
beta/preview KMS ID.
1: activate products with a retail or beta/preview KMS ID
but refuse to activate products with an unknown KMS ID.
2: activate products with an unknown KMS ID but refuse
products with a retail or beta/preview KMS ID.
3: activate only products with a known volume license RTM
KMS ID and refuse all others.
The SKU ID is not checked. Like a genuine KMS server vlmcsd
activates a product that has a random or unknown SKU ID. If you
select 1 or 3, vlmcsd also checks the Application ID for cor-
rectness. If Microsoft introduces a new KMS ID for a new prod-
uct, you cannot activate it if you used 1 or 3 until a new ver-
sion of vlmcsd is available.
CheckClientTime
Can be TRUE or FALSE. The default is FALSE. If you set this to
TRUE vlmcsd(8) checks if the client time differs no more than
four hours from the system time. This is useful to prevent emu-
lator detection. A client that tries to detect an emulator could
simply send two subsequent request with two time stamps that
differ more than four hours from each other. If both requests
succeed, the server is an emulator. If you set this to TRUE on a
system with no reliable time source, activations will fail. It
is ok to set the correct system time after you started vlm-
csd(8).
MaintainClients
Can be TRUE or FALSE (the default). Disables (FALSE) or enables
(TRUE) maintaining a list of client machine IDs (CMIDs). TRUE is
useful to prevent emulator detection. By maintaing a CMID list,
vlmcsd(8) reports current active clients exactly like a genuine
KMS emulator. This includes bug compatibility to the extent that
you can permanently kill a genuine KMS emulator by sending an
"overcharge request" with a required client count of 376 or more
and then request activation for 671 clients. vlmcsd(8) can be
reset from this condition by restarting it. If FALSE is used,
vlmcsd(8) reports current active clients as good as possible. If
no client sends an "overcharge request", it is not possible to
detect vlmcsd(8) as an emulator with MaintainClients = FALSE.
Maintaining clients requires the allocation of a buffer that is
about 50 kB in size. On hardware with few memory resources use
it only if you really need it.
If you start vlmcsd(8) from an internet superserver, this set-
ting cannot be used. Since vlmcsd(8) exits after each activa-
tion, it cannot maintain any state in memory.
StartEmpty
This setting is ignored if you do not also specify Maintain-
Clients = TRUE. If you specify FALSE (the default), vlmcsd(8)
starts up as a fully "charged" KMS server. Clients activate
immediately. StartEmpty = TRUE lets you start up vlmcsd(8) with
an empty CMID list. Activation will start when the required min-
imum clients (25 for Windows Client OSses, 5 for Windows Server
OSses and Office) have registered with the KMS server. As long
as the minimum client count has not been reached, clients end up
in HRESULT 0xC004F038 "The count reported by your Key Management
Service (KMS) is insufficient. Please contact your system admin-
istrator". You may use vlmcs(1) or another KMS client emulator
to "charge" vlmcsd(8). Setting this parameter to TRUE does not
improve emulator detection prevention. It's primary purpose is
to help developers of KMS clients to test "charging" a KMS
server.
ActivationInterval
This is the same as specifying -A on the command line. See vlm-
csd(8) for details. The default is 2 hours. Example: Activation-
Interval = 1h
RenewalInterval
This is the same as specifying -R on the command line. See vlm-
csd(8) for details. The default is 7 days. Example: RenewalIn-
terval = 3d. Please note that the KMS client decides itself when
to renew activation. Even though vlmcsd sends the renewal inter-
val you specify, it is no more than some kind of recommendation
to the client. Older KMS clients did follow the recommendation
from a KMS server or emulator. Newer clients do not.
User Run vlmcsd as another, preferrably less privileged, user. The
argument can be a user name or a numeric user id. You must have
the required privileges (capabilities on Linux) to change the
security context of a process without providing any credentials
(a password in most cases). On most unixoid OSses 'root' is the
only user who has these privileges in the default configuration.
This setting is not available in the native Windows version of
vlmcsd. See -u in vlmcsd(8). This setting cannot be changed on
the fly by sending SIGHUP to vlmcsd.
Group Run vlmcsd as another, preferrably less privileged, group. The
argument can be a group name or a numeric group id. You must
have the required privileges (capabilities on Linux) to change
the security context of a process without providing any creden-
tials (a password in most cases). On most unixoid OSses 'root'
is the only user who has these privileges in the default config-
uration. This setting is not available in the native Windows
version of vlmcsd. See -g in vlmcsd(8). This setting cannot be
changed on the fly by sending SIGHUP to vlmcsd.
<csvlk-name>
The argument has the form ePID [ / HwId ]. Always use ePID and
HwId for activations with <csvlk-name>. If specified, Randomiza-
tionLevel for the <csvlk-name> will be ignored. With the default
vlmcsd.kmd database you can use the following <csvlk-name>s:
Windows, Office2010, Office2013, Office2016, Office2019 and
WinChinaGov. While vlmcsd is compatible with older databases,
you must use at least database version 1.6 for this feature to
work.
VALID EPIDS
The ePID is currently a comment only. You can specify any string up to
63 bytes. In Windows 7 Microsoft has blacklisted few ( < 10 ) ePIDs
that were used in KMSv5 versions of the "Ratiborus Virtual Machine".
Microsoft has given up on blacklisting when KMS emulators appeared in
the wild.
Even if you can use "Activated by cool hacker guys" as an ePID, you may
wish to use ePIDs that cannot be detected as non-MS ePIDs. If you don't
know how these "valid" ePIDs look like exactly, do not use GUIDS in
vlmcsd.ini. vlmcsd provides internal mechanisms to generate valid
ePIDs.
If you use non-ASCII characters in your ePID (you shouldn't do anyway),
these must be in UTF-8 format. This is especially important when you
run vlmcsd on Windows or cygwin because UTF-8 is not the default encod-
ing for most editors.
If you are specifying an optional HWID it follows the same syntax as in
the -H option in vlmcsd(8) ecxept that you must not enclose a HWID in
quotes even if it contains spaces.
FILES
vlmcsd.ini(5)
AUTHOR
vlmcsd(8) was written by crony12, Hotbird64 and vityan666. With contri-
butions from DougQaid.
CREDITS
Thanks to abbodi1406, CODYQX4, deagles, eIcn, mikmik38, nosferati87,
qad, Ratiborus, ...
SEE ALSO
vlmcsd(8), vlmcsd(7), vlmcs(1), vlmcsdmulti(1)
Hotbird64 October 2018 VLMCSD.INI(5)

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@ -1,76 +0,0 @@
VLMCSDMULTI(1) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSDMULTI(1)
NAME
vlmcsdmulti - a multi-call binary containing vlmcs(1) and vlmcsd(8)
SYNOPSIS
vlmcsdmulti vlmcs [ options ] [ hostname|ip-address[:port] ] [ options
] | vlmcsd [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
vlmcsdmulti is a multi-call binary that contains vlmcs(1) and vlmcsd(8)
in a single binary. Since both programs share a lot of code and data,
the combined binary is significantly smaller than the sum of both
files.
vlmcsdmulti should not be called directly. Instead you may want to cre-
ate symbolic links named vlmcs and vlmcsd which point to vlmcsdmulti.
You then use these links to call the respective program. You may how-
ever call vlmcsdmulti followed by a complete command line of either
vlmcs(1) or vlmcsd(8).
Creating symbolic links in unixoid operating systems
cd to the directory containing vlmcsdmulti and type
ln -s vlmcsdmulti vlmcsd
ln -s vlmcsdmulti vlmcs
You may use a destination directory, e.g.
ln -s vlmcsdmulti /usr/local/sbin/vlmcsd
ln -s vlmcsdmulti /usr/local/bin/vlmcs
Ensure that vlmcsdmulti has execute permissions. You can do that by
typing "chmod 755 vlmcsdmulti". See chmod(1) for details.
Creating symbolic links in Windows (Vista and higher only)
cd to the directory containing vlmcsdmulti and type
mklink vlmcsd.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe
mklink vlmcs.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe
You may use a destination directory, e.g.
mklink C:\tools\vlmcsd.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe
mklink C:\tools\vlmcs.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe
Memory considerations
While you definitely save disk space by using vlmcsdmulti you will need
more RAM when you run vlmcsdmulti as a daemon (KMS server) instead of
vlmcsd. You should consider running vlmcsdmulti via an internet super-
server like inetd(8) or xinetd(8).
BUGS
vlmcsdmulti has the same bugs as vlmcs(1) and vlmcsd(8).
AUTHOR
Written by Hotbird64
CREDITS
Thanks to CODYQX4, crony12, deagles, DougQaid, eIcn, mikmik38, nos-
ferati87, qad, vityan666, ...
SEE ALSO
vlmcs(1), vlmcsd(8), vlmcsd(7)
Hotbird64 February 2015 VLMCSDMULTI(1)

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<!-- Creator : groff version 1.22.3 -->
<!-- CreationDate: Sat Oct 20 09:49:39 2018 -->
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
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<head>
<meta name="generator" content="groff -Thtml, see www.gnu.org">
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<title>VLMCSDMULTI</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1 align="center">VLMCSDMULTI</h1>
<a href="#NAME">NAME</a><br>
<a href="#SYNOPSIS">SYNOPSIS</a><br>
<a href="#DESCRIPTION">DESCRIPTION</a><br>
<a href="#BUGS">BUGS</a><br>
<a href="#AUTHOR">AUTHOR</a><br>
<a href="#CREDITS">CREDITS</a><br>
<a href="#SEE ALSO">SEE ALSO</a><br>
<hr>
<h2>NAME
<a name="NAME"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">vlmcsdmulti - a
multi-call binary containing <b>vlmcs</b>(1) and
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8)</p>
<h2>SYNOPSIS
<a name="SYNOPSIS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsdmulti</b>
vlmcs [ <i>options</i> ] [
<i>hostname</i>|<i>ip-address</i>[:<i>port</i>] ] [
<i>options</i> ] | vlmcsd [ <i>options</i> ]</p>
<h2>DESCRIPTION
<a name="DESCRIPTION"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsdmulti</b>
is a multi-call binary that contains <b>vlmcs</b>(1) and
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8) in a single binary. Since both programs
share a lot of code and data, the combined binary is
significantly smaller than the sum of both files.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsdmulti</b>
should not be called directly. Instead you may want to
create symbolic links named vlmcs and vlmcsd which point to
<b>vlmcsdmulti</b>. You then use these links to call the
respective program. You may however call <b>vlmcsdmulti</b>
followed by a complete command line of either
<b>vlmcs</b>(1) or <b>vlmcsd</b>(8).</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Creating
symbolic links in unixoid operating systems</b> <br>
cd to the directory containing <b>vlmcsdmulti</b> and
type</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">ln -s
vlmcsdmulti vlmcsd <br>
ln -s vlmcsdmulti vlmcs</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">You may use a
destination directory, e.g.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">ln -s
vlmcsdmulti /usr/local/sbin/vlmcsd <br>
ln -s vlmcsdmulti /usr/local/bin/vlmcs</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Ensure that
<b>vlmcsdmulti</b> has execute permissions. You can do that
by typing &quot;chmod 755 vlmcsdmulti&quot;. See
<b>chmod</b>(1) for details.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Creating
symbolic links in Windows (Vista and higher only)</b> <br>
cd to the directory containing <b>vlmcsdmulti</b> and
type</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">mklink
vlmcsd.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe <br>
mklink vlmcs.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">You may use a
destination directory, e.g.</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">mklink
C:\tools\vlmcsd.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe <br>
mklink C:\tools\vlmcs.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe</p>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>Memory
considerations</b> <br>
While you definitely save disk space by using
<b>vlmcsdmulti</b> you will need more RAM when you run
<b>vlmcsdmulti</b> as a daemon (KMS server) instead of
vlmcsd. You should consider running <b>vlmcsdmulti</b> via
an internet superserver like <b>inetd</b>(8) or
<b>xinetd</b>(8).</p>
<h2>BUGS
<a name="BUGS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcsdmulti</b>
has the same bugs as <b>vlmcs</b>(1) and
<b>vlmcsd</b>(8).</p>
<h2>AUTHOR
<a name="AUTHOR"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Written by
Hotbird64</p>
<h2>CREDITS
<a name="CREDITS"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em">Thanks to
CODYQX4, crony12, deagles, DougQaid, eIcn, mikmik38,
nosferati87, qad, vityan666, ...</p>
<h2>SEE ALSO
<a name="SEE ALSO"></a>
</h2>
<p style="margin-left:11%; margin-top: 1em"><b>vlmcs</b>(1)<b>,
vlmcsd</b>(8)<b>, vlmcsd</b>(7)</p>
<hr>
</body>
</html>

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VLMCSDMULTI(1) KMS Activation Manual VLMCSDMULTI(1)
NAME
vlmcsdmulti - a multi-call binary containing vlmcs(1) and vlmcsd(8)
SYNOPSIS
vlmcsdmulti vlmcs [ options ] [ hostname|ip-address[:port] ] [ options
] | vlmcsd [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
vlmcsdmulti is a multi-call binary that contains vlmcs(1) and vlmcsd(8)
in a single binary. Since both programs share a lot of code and data,
the combined binary is significantly smaller than the sum of both
files.
vlmcsdmulti should not be called directly. Instead you may want to cre-
ate symbolic links named vlmcs and vlmcsd which point to vlmcsdmulti.
You then use these links to call the respective program. You may how-
ever call vlmcsdmulti followed by a complete command line of either
vlmcs(1) or vlmcsd(8).
Creating symbolic links in unixoid operating systems
cd to the directory containing vlmcsdmulti and type
ln -s vlmcsdmulti vlmcsd
ln -s vlmcsdmulti vlmcs
You may use a destination directory, e.g.
ln -s vlmcsdmulti /usr/local/sbin/vlmcsd
ln -s vlmcsdmulti /usr/local/bin/vlmcs
Ensure that vlmcsdmulti has execute permissions. You can do that by
typing "chmod 755 vlmcsdmulti". See chmod(1) for details.
Creating symbolic links in Windows (Vista and higher only)
cd to the directory containing vlmcsdmulti and type
mklink vlmcsd.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe
mklink vlmcs.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe
You may use a destination directory, e.g.
mklink C:\tools\vlmcsd.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe
mklink C:\tools\vlmcs.exe vlmcsdmulti.exe
Memory considerations
While you definitely save disk space by using vlmcsdmulti you will need
more RAM when you run vlmcsdmulti as a daemon (KMS server) instead of
vlmcsd. You should consider running vlmcsdmulti via an internet super-
server like inetd(8) or xinetd(8).
BUGS
vlmcsdmulti has the same bugs as vlmcs(1) and vlmcsd(8).
AUTHOR
Written by Hotbird64
CREDITS
Thanks to CODYQX4, crony12, deagles, DougQaid, eIcn, mikmik38, nos-
ferati87, qad, vityan666, ...
SEE ALSO
vlmcs(1), vlmcsd(8), vlmcsd(7)
Hotbird64 February 2015 VLMCSDMULTI(1)

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These are always the same in the GNU C library. */
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#define __need_mbstate_t
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struct
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struct __gconv_info __cd;
struct __gconv_step_data __data;
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} _G_iconv_t;
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