

Building CXX object CMakeFiles/precomp.dir/ home/test/precomp-cpp/contrib/liblzma/rangecoder/range_encoder.h:153:2: warning: implicit declaration of function ‘assert’ home/test/precomp-cpp/contrib/liblzma/rangecoder/range_encoder.h: In function ‘rc_encode’: In file included from /home/test/precomp-cpp/contrib/liblzma/rangecoder/price_table.c:3:0: Building C object CMakeFiles/precomp.dir/contrib/liblzma/rangecoder/price_table.c.o Building C object CMakeFiles/precomp.dir/contrib/giflib/gif_err.c.o Building C object CMakeFiles/precomp.dir/contrib/giflib/gifalloc.c.o Build files have been written to: /home/test/precomp-cpp/build Check if compiler accepts -pthread - yes Check for working CXX compiler: /usr/bin/c++ - works Check for working CXX compiler: /usr/bin/c++ Check for working C compiler: /usr/bin/cc - works Check for working C compiler: /usr/bin/cc The CXX compiler identification is GNU 7.5.0 The C compiler identification is GNU 7.5.0 For that, it would be really useful the extraction feature. I'll try and make a little time to try it on precomp-ed files. I haven't had much luck with the 'file' utility on linux and TrID, but TrIDScan seems promising enough. Some other tools do that automatically too, that's why i suggested to try and analyse the type of each stream and assign a fitting extension or maybe concatenate them on a big file. FreeArc tried to do that based on a manually curated list of file extensions, and it wasn't bad. What I believe is even better to improve compression is grouping *types* of files together and using different algorithms on each. # make a quick histogram to have a rough idea about the entropy of each file, etc # sort first based on extension and size, and maybe TrID guessed type # find first any duplicate files (same size, same hash), * If you still want to reorder the file list, maybe you could try some tricks to speed it up. * There's also deduplication programs, which can cancel out any big similarities real fast * Unless we're working with a very small dictionary, modern lz compressors can find similarities across vast distances I also started 'reorder.pm' that tries to group similar files.That's a good idea there! If you'll allow me, here are a few comments about it: i wanted to do it for all other formats too but other people have same idea.
#BRUTEFORCE SAVEDATA RECOMPRESS SAVES PATCH#
Step 4 - The latest patch file will be downloaded from this repo to C:\Program Files\Bruteforce Save Data\CheatsĮnjoy.I have started 'reiso.pm' and 're_arc.pm' that works that way. Step 3 - After decrypting the Save Data, click Cheats.

#BRUTEFORCE SAVEDATA RECOMPRESS SAVES DOWNLOAD#
Step 2 - If the installer is not using the latest database, you can download patch files individually via BSD. Step 1 - Download Aldo's latest Bruteforce Save Data.
