QWK Mail Packet File Layout by Patrick Y. Lee Version 1.0 - February 23, 1992 First release. Version 1.1 - March 15, 1992 Minor fixes here and there to make everything just right. Version 1.2 - May 31, 1992 Added a few items to the DOOR.ID file that is being supported by Qmail DeLuxe� version 1.25. Version 1.3 - July 6, 1992 Added changes to the QWK format adopted by Qmail door. Specifically line 10 of CONTROL.DAT file and bytes 126-127 of MESSAGES.DAT file. Please refer to the appropriate section for the changes. This document is Copyright 1992 by Patrick Y. Lee. The QWK-format is Copyright 1987 by Sparkware. All program names mentioned in this document are either Copyright or Trade- mark of respective owner(s). The author provides this file as-is without warranty of any kind, either expressed or implied. You are using the information in this file at your own discretion. The author assumes no responsibilities for damages, either physically or financially, from the use of this information. This document may be freely distributed by any means (electronically, pa- per, etc.), provided that it is distributed in its entirety. Portions of this document may be reproduced without credit. Table of Contents 1. Introduction 1.1. Intent 1.2. History 1.3. Questions, corrections, etc. 2. Conventions & overview 2.1. The BBS ID 2.2. Packet compression 2.3. Packet transfer & protocols 2.4. Limitations 3. QWK files 3.1. Naming convention 3.2. Control file (CONTROL.DAT) 3.3. Welcome file 3.4. Goodbye file 3.5. News file 3.6. Qmail DeLuxe� menu file 3.7. New uploads listing (NEWFILES.DAT) 3.8. Bulletin file(s) (BLT-x.y) 3.9. Message file (MESSAGES.DAT) 3.10. Index files (*.NDX) 3.10.1. Conference indices 3.10.2. Personal index (PERSONAL.NDX) 3.11. Pointer file 3.12. SESSION.TXT 4. REP files 4.1. Naming convention 4.2. Message file (BBSID.MSG) 4.3. Door control messages 4.3.1. DOOR.ID file 4.3.2. Qmail 4.3.3. MarkMail 4.3.4. KMail 4.3.5. RoseMail 4.3.6. Complete Mail Door 4.4. Turning off the echo flag 4.5. Tag-lines 5. Net mail A. Credits & contributions B. Sample Turbo Pascal and C code C. Sample message D. Sample index file -=-=-=-=-=-=-<>-=-=-=-=-=-=- To search for a specific section, look for "[x.x]" using your editor or viewer. For example, to jump to the tag-lines portion of this file, search for "[4.5]" with your editor or text viewer. -=-=-=-=-=-=-<>-=-=-=-=-=-=- [1] Introduction [1.1] Intent This document is written to facilitate programmers who want to write QWK-format mail doors or readers. It is intended to be a comprehen- sive reference covering all areas of QWK-format mail processing. Detailed break down of each file is included, as are implementation information. In addition, door and reader specific information may be included, when such information are available to me. [1.2] History The QWK-format was invented by Mark "Sparky" Herring in 1987. It was based on Clark Development Corporation's PCBoard version 12.0 message base format. Off-line mail reading has become popular only in recent years. Prior to summer of 1990, there were only two QWK-format off- line mail reader programs. They were Qmail DeLuxe by Mark Herring and EZ-Reader by Eric Cockrell. Similarly for the doors, there were only two -- Qmail by Mark Herring and MarkMail by Mark Turner. They were both for PCBoard systems. A lot has changed in both off-line reader and mail door markets since summer 1990. Now, there are more than a dozen off-line mail readers for the PC. Readers for the Macintosh, Amiga, and Atari exist as well. There are over a half dozen doors for PCBoard, and QWK-format doors exist for virtually all of the popular BBS softwares. All of these happened in less than two years! More readers and doors are in development as I write this, keep up the excellent work. In addition to doors, some BBS softwares has QWK-format mail facility built in. Off-line mail reading is an integral part of BBS calling. Conference traffic and selection on all networks have grown dramatically in re- cent years that on-line reading is a thing of the past. Off-line mail reading offers an alternative to reading mail on-line -- It offers speed that cannot be achieved with on-line mail reading. The reason why QWK-format readers and doors seem to have gained popu- larity is probably dued to its openness. The format is readily avail- able to any programmer who wishes to write a program that utilize it. Proprietary is a thing of the past, it does not work! Openness is here to stay and QWK-format is a part of it. [1.3] Questions, corrections, etc. Most of the message networks today have a conference/echo devoted to discussion of off-line readers and mail doors. The ones I know are on FidoNet, ILink, Intelec, and RIME. If you have questions after read- ing anything in here, feel free to drop by any of the above conference /echo and I am sure other QWK authors will try to help. I can be reached in the Off-line conferences on RIME, ILink, and In- telec, as well as the Common conference on RIME. Mail can be routed to node RUNNINGB. I can be reached on the Internet at "p.lee@green.cooper.edu". Any corrections, extensions, comments, and criticisms are welcomed. [2] Conventions & overview All offsets referenced in this document will be relative to 1. I am not a computer, I start counting at one, not zero! Words which are enclosed in quotes should be entered as-is. The quota- tions are not part of the string unless noted. You may have noticed I use the phrase "mail program" or "mail facili- ty" instead of mail doors. This is because some BBS softwares offer the option of creating QWK-format mail packets right from the BBS. With those, there is no need for an external mail door. [2.1] The BBS ID The BBS ID (denoted as BBSID) is a 1-8 characters word that identifies a particular BBS. This identifier should be obtained from line 5 of the CONTROL.DAT file (see section 3.2.1). [2.2] Packet compression Most mail packets are compressed when created by the mail door in order to save download time and disk space. However, many off-line reader programs allow the user to unarchive a mail packet outside of the reader program, so the reader will not have to unarchive it. Upon exit, the reader will not call the archiver to save it. It is up to the user to archive the replies. This is useful if the user has limit- ed memory and cannot shell out to DOS to run the unarchive program. For readers based on non-PC equipment, the user may be using less common compression program that does not have command line equivalent. [2.3] Packet transfer & protocols There is no set rule on what transfer protocol should be used. Howev- er, it would be nice for the mail program on the BBS to provide the Sysop with options as to what to offer. This should be a configura- tion option for the user. [2.4] Specifications & limitations There aren't many known limits in the QWK specification. However, various networks seem to impose artificial limits. On many of the PC- based networks, 99-lines appears to be the upper limit for some soft- wares. However, most of the readers can handle more than that. Read- er authors reading this may want to offer the option to split replies into n lines each (the actual length should be user definable so when the network software permits, the user can increase this number). [3] QWK files [3.1] Naming convention Generally, the name of the mail packet is BBSID.QWK. However, this does not have to be the case. When the user downloads more than one mail packet at one time, either the mail program or the transfer proto- col program will rename the second and subsequent mail packets to other names. They will either change the file extension or add a number to the end of the filename. In either case, you should not rely on the name of the QWK file as the BBSID. The BBSID, as men- tioned before, should be obtained from line 5 of the CONTROL.DAT file. In addition, mail packets do not have to end with QWK extension ei- ther. The user may choose to name them with other file extensions. [3.2] Control file (CONTROL.DAT) The CONTROL.DAT file is a simple ASCII file. Each line is terminated with a carriage return and line feed combination. All lines should start on the first column. Line # 1 My BBS BBS name 2 New York, NY BBS city and state 3 212-555-1212 BBS phone number 4 John Doe, Sysop BBS Sysop name 5 20052,MYBBS Mail door registration #, BBSID 6 01-01-1991,23:59:59 Mail packet creation time 7 JANE DOE User name (upper case) 8 Name of menu for Qmail, blank if none 9 0 ? Seem to be always zero 10 999 Total number of messages in packet 11 121 Total number of conference minus 1 12 0 1st conf. number 13 Main Board 1st conf. name (13 characters or less) 14 1 2nd conf. number 15 General 2nd conf. name .. 3 etc. onward until it hits max. conf. .. 123 Last conf. number .. Amiga_I Last conf. name .. HELLO Welcome screen file .. NEWS BBS news file .. SCRIPT0 Log off screen Some mail doors, such as MarkMail, will send additional information about the user from here on. 0 ? 25 Screen length on the BBS JANE DOE User name in uppercase Jane User first name in mixed case NEW YORK, NY User city information 718 555-1212 User data phone number 718 555-1212 User home phone number 108 Security level 00-00-00 Expiration date 01-01-91 Last log on date 23:59 Last log on time 999 Log on count 0 Current conference number on the BBS 0 Total KB downloaded 999 Download count 0 Total KB uploaded 999 Upload count 999 Minutes per day 999 Minutes remaining today 999 Minutes used this call 32767 Max. download KB per day 32767 Remaining KB today 0 KB downloaded today 23:59 Current time on BBS 01-01-91 Current date on BBS My BBS BBS network tag-line 0 ? Some mail doors will offer the option of sending an abbreviated con- ference list. That means the list will contain only conferences the user has selected. This is done because some mail readers cannot handle more than n conferences at this time. Users using those read- ers will need this option if the BBS they call have too many confer- ences. [3.3] Welcome file This file usually contains the log on screen from the BBS. The exact filename is specified in the CONTROL.DAT file, after the conference list. This file may be in any format the Sysop chooses it be -- usu- ally either in plain ASCII or with ANSI screen control code. Some Sysops (notably PCBoard Sysops) may use BBS-specific color change code in this file as well. Current mail programs seem to handle the trans- lations between BBS-specific code to ANSI based screen control codes. Even if the CONTROL.DAT file contains the filename of this file, it may not actually exist in the mail packet. Sometimes, users will manually delete this file before entering the mail reader. Some off- line readers offer the option to not display this welcome screen; some will display this file regardless. Some doors, similarly, will offer option to the user to not send this file. [3.4] Goodbye file Similar to the welcome file above, the filename to the goodbye file is in the CONTROL.DAT file. This is the file the BBS displays when the user logs off the board. It is optional, as always, to send this file or to display it. [3.5] News file Many mail doors offer the option to send the news file from the BBS. Most will only send this when it has been updated. Like the welcome and goodbye files, the filename to the news file is found in the CON- TROL.DAT file. It can be in any format the Sysop chooses, but usually in either ASCII or ANSI. Like the welcome screen, current mail facil- ities seem to handle translation between BBS-specific control codes to ANSI screen control codes. [3.6] Qmail DeLuxe� menu file This file is of use only for Qmail DeLuxe� mail reader by Sparkware. The filename is found on line 8 of the CONTROL.DAT file. [3.7] New uploads listing (NEWFILES.DAT) Most mail programs on the BBS will offer the option to scan new files uploaded to the BBS. The result is found in a file named NEWFILES.DAT. The mail program, if implementing this, should update the last file scan field in the user's profile, if there is such a field, as well as other information required by the BBS. The mail program should, of course, scan new files only in those areas the user is allowed access. [3.8] Bulletin files (BLT-x.y) Most mail programs will also offer the option to include updated bulle- tin files found on the BBS in the mail packet. The bulletins are named BLT-x.y, where x is the conference/echo the bulletin came from, and y the bulletin's actual number. The mail program will have to take care of updating the last read date on the bulletins in the user record. [3.9] Message file (MESSAGES.DAT) The MESSAGES.DAT file is the most important. This is where all of the messages are contained in. The QWK file format is based on PCBoard 12.0 message base format from Clark Development Corporation (maker of PCBoard BBS software). The file has a logical record length of 128-bytes. The first record of MESSAGES.DAT always contain a copyright notice saying "Produced by Qmail...Copyright (c) 1987 by Sparkware. All Rights Reserved". The rest of the record is space filled. Actual messages consist of a 128- bytes header, plus one or more 128-bytes block with the message text. Actual messages start in record 2. The header block is layed out as follows: Offset Length Description ------ ------ ---------------------------------------------------- 1 1 Message status flag (unsigned character) ' ' = public, unread '-' = public, read '+' = private, unread '*' = private, read '~' = comment to Sysop, unread '`' = comment to Sysop, read '%' = password protected, unread '^' = password protected, read '!' = group password, unread '#' = group password, read '$' = group password to all 2 7 Message number (in ASCII) 9 8 Date (mm-dd-yy, in ASCII) 17 5 Time (24 hour hh:mm, in ASCII) 22 25 To (uppercase, left justified) 47 25 From (uppercase, left justified) 72 25 Subject of message (mixed case) 97 12 Password (space filled) 109 8 Reference message number (in ASCII) 117 6 Number of 128-bytes blocks in message (including the header, in ASCII; the lowest value should be 2, header plus one block message; this number may not be left flushed within the field) 123 1 Flag (ASCII 225 means message is active; ASCII 226 means this message is to be killed) 124 2 Conference number (unsigned word) 126 2 Logical message number in the current packet; i.e. this number will be 1 for the first message, 2 for the second, and so on. (unsigned word) 128 1 Indicates whether the message has a network tag-line or not. A value of '*' indicates that a network tag- line is present; a value of ' ' (space) indicates there isn't one. Messages sent to readers (non-net- status) generally leave this as a space. Only network softwares need this information. Fields such as To, From, Subject, Message #, Reference #, and the like are space padded if they are shorter than the field's length. The message text starts in the next record. You can find out how many blocks make up one message by looking at the value of "Number of 128 byte blocks". Instead of carriage return and line feed combination, each line in the message end with an ASCII 227 (pi character) symbol. There are reports that some (buggy) readers have problems with messag- es which do not end the last line in the message with an ASCII 227. If a message does not completely occupy the 128-bytes block, the re- mainder of the block is padded with space or null. Note that there seems to exist old doors which will use one byte to represent the conference number and pad the other one with an ASCII 32 character. The program reading this information will have to deter- mine whether the ASCII 32 in byte 125 of the header is a filler or part of the unsigned word. One method is to look in the CONTROL.DAT file to determine the highest conference number. Even though most mail programs will generate MESSAGES.DAT files that appear in conference order, this is not always the case. Tomcat! (mail door for Wildcat! BBS) generates MESSAGES.DAT that is not in conference order. This is due to how Wildcat! itself stores mail on the BBS. Note that some mail doors offer the option of sending a mail packet even though there may be no messages to send -- thus an empty MESSAGES.DAT file. This was tested with Qmail 4.0 door and it sent a MESSAGES.DAT file that contains a few empty 128-bytes blocks. Other mail doors seem to be able to produce QWK files without the MESSAG- ES.DAT file at all! Apparently, there was no standard established in this procedure. [3.10] Index files (*.NDX) [3.10.1] Conference indices The index files contain a list of pointers pointing to the beginning of messages in the MESSAGES.DAT file. The pointer is in terms of the 128-bytes block logical record that the MESSAGES.DAT file is in. Each conference has its own xxx.NDX file, where xxx is the conference num- ber left padded with zeroes. Some mail programs offer the user the option to not generate index files. So the mail readers need to cre- ate the index files if they are missing. EZ-Reader 1.xx versions will convert the NDX files from Microsoft MKS format into IEEE long integer format. The bad part about this is that the user may store those index files back into the QWK file. When another reader reads the index files, it will be very confused! Special note for BBSes with more than 999 conferences: Index files for conferences with four digit conference numbers is named xxxx.NDX, where xxxx is the conference number (left padded with zeroes). The filenames for three digit conferences are still named xxx.NDX on these boards. I would assume filenames for conferences in the five digit range is xxxxx.NDX, but I have not seen a BBS with 10,000 or more conferences yet! Each NDX file uses a five bytes logical record length and is formatted to: Offset Length Description ------ ------ ------------------------------------------------------ 1 4 Record number pointing to corresponding message in MESSAGES.DAT. This number is in the Microsoft MKS$ BASIC format. 5 1 Conference number of the message. This byte should not be used because it duplicates both the filename of the index file and the conference # in the header. It is also one byte long, which is insufficient to handle conferences over 255. Please refer to appendix B for routines to deal with MKS numbers. [3.10.2] Personal index (PERSONAL.NDX) There is a special index file named PERSONAL.NDX. This file contains pointers to messages which are addressed to the user, i.e. personal messages. Some mail door and utility programs also allow the selec- tion of other messages to be flagged as personal messages. [3.11] Pointer file Pointer file is generally included so that the user can reset the last read pointers on the mail program, in case there is a crash on the BBS or some other mishaps. There should be little reason for the reader program to access the pointer file. The pointer files I have seen are: Qmail BBSID.PTR MarkMail BBSID.PNT KMail BBSID.PNT SFMailQwk BBSID.SFP Additions to this list are welcomed. [3.12] SESSION.TXT This file, if included, will contain the message scanning screen the user sees from the door. [4] REP files [4.1] Naming convention The reply file is named BBSID.MSG, where BBSID is the ID code for the BBS found on line 5 of the CONTROL.DAT file. Once this file has been created, the mail reader can archive it up into a file with REP exten- sion. [4.2] Message file (BBSID.MSG) Replies use the same format as the MESSAGES.DAT file, except that message number field will contain the conference number instead. In other words, the conference number will be placed in the two bytes (binary) starting at offset 124, as well as the message number field (ASCII) at offset 2. The first 128-bytes record of the file is the header. Instead of the copyright notice, it contains the BBSID of the BBS. This 1-8 charac- ter BBSID must start at the very first byte and must match what the BBS has. The rest of the record is space padded. The replies start at record 2. Each reply message will have a 128-bytes header, plus one or more for the message text; followed by another header, and so on. The mail program must check to make sure the BBSID in the first block of the BBSID.MSG file matches what the BBS has! [4.3] Door control messages These messages allow the user to change their setup on the BBS by simply entering a message. The goal is to allow the user to be able to control most areas of the BBS via the mail door. Different mail doors have different capabilities. Most all of them offer the ability to add and drop a conference, as well as reset the last read pointers in a conference. [4.3.1] DOOR.ID file The DOOR.ID file was first introduced by Greg Hewgill with Tomcat! mail door and SLMR mail reader. Since then, many other authors have picked up this idea and use the format. This file provides the neces- sary identifiers a reader needs to send add, drop, etc. messages to the mail door. It tells the reader who to address the message to and what can be put in the subject line. DOOR = This is the name of the door that creat- ed the QWK packet, i.e. = Tomcat. VERSION = This is the version number of the door that created the packet, i.e. = 2.9. SYSTEM = This is the underlying BBS system type and version, i.e. = Wildcat 2.55. CONTROLNAME = This is the name to which the reader should send control messages, eg. = TOMCAT. CONTROLTYPE = This can be one of ADD, DROP, REQUEST, or others. ADD and DROP are pretty obvious (they work as in MarkMail), and REQUEST is for use with BBS systems that support file attachments. Try out SLMR with CONTROLTYPE = REQUEST and use the Q function. (This seems to be a Wildcat! BBS feature.) RECEIPT This flag indicates that the door/BBS is capable of return receipts when a mes- sage is received. If the first three letters of the subject are RRR, then the door should strip the RRR and set the 'return-receipt-requested' flag on the corresponding message. MIXEDCASE = YES If this line is found then the reader will let you use upper and lower case names and subjects. This is first found in Qmail DeLuxe� 1.25 version. Most other QWK readers permit the use of mixed case subject lines but force the names to upper case only. FIDOTAG = YES If this line is found then the reader will automatically use FidoNet compliant tag-lines. None of the lines are actually required and they may appear in any order. Of course, you would need a CONTROLNAME if you have any CONTROLTYPE lines. [4.3.2] Qmail Send a message addressed to "QMAIL" with a subject of "CONFIG". Then, enter any of the commands listed below inside the text of your mes- sage. Remember to use one command per line. ADD Add a conference into the Qmail Door scanning list. "YOURS" can also be added to the com- mand if the user wishes to receive messages only addressed them. i.e. "ADD 1 YOURS" DROP Drop a conference from the Qmail Door scan- ning list. RESET Resets a conference to a particular value. The user can use "HIGH-xxx" to set the confer- ence to the highest message in the base. CITY Changes the "city" field in the user's PCBoard entry. PASSWORD Changes the user's login password. BPHONE Business/data phone number HPHONE Home/voice phone number PCBEXPERT Turns the PCBoard expert mode ON or OFF. PCBPROT PCBoard file transfer protocol (A-Z). PAGELEN Set page length inside PCBoard. PCBCOMMENT Set user maintained comment. AUTOSTART Qmail Door autostart command. PROTOCOL Qmail Door file transfer protocol (A-Z). EXPERT Turns the Qmail Door expert mode ON or OFF. MAXSIZE Maximum size of the user's .QWK packet (in bytes) MAXNUMBER Maximum number of messages per conference. [4.3.3] MarkMail Send a message addressed to "MARKMAIL" with the subject line saying: ADD [value] in the conference you want to add DROP in the conference you want to drop YOUR [value] in the conference you want only your mail sent YA [value] in the conference you want only your mail + mail addressed to "ALL" FILES ON or OFF in any conference to tell MarkMail whether to scan for new files or not. BLTS ON or OFF to turn on and off, respectively, of receiving bulletins. OWN ON or OFF to turn on and off, respectively, of receiving messages you sent DELUXE ON or OFF to turn on and off, respectively, of receiving DeLuxe menu LIMIT to set the maximum size of MESSAGES.DAT file can be, it cannot exceed what the Sysop has set up An optional number can be added onto the commands "ADD", "YOUR", and "YA". If this number is positive, then it will be treated as an abso- lute message number. MarkMail will set your last read pointer to that number. If it is negative, MarkMail will set your last read pointer to the highest minus that number. For example: "ADD -50" will add the conference and set the last read pointer to the highest in the confer- ence minus 50. [4.3.4] KMail Send a private message addressed to "KMAIL" in the conference that you want to add, drop, or reset. The commands are "ADD", "DROP", and "RESET #", respectively. The "#" is the message number you want your last read pointer in the conference be set to. [4.3.5] RoseMail The RoseMail door allows configuration information be placed in either the subject line or message text. The message must be addressed to "ROSEMAIL". For only one command, it can be placed in the subject line. For more than one changes, the subject line must say "CONFIG" and each change be placed in the message text. Every line should be left justified. Valid commands are: Command Example ������������������������������������������������� ������������������ ADD [] [] ADD 2 -3 Y DROP DROP 2 RESET RESET 12 5000 PCBEXPERT - PCBoard expert mode PCBEXPERT ON EXPERT - RoseMail expert mode EXPERT OFF PCBPROT - PCBoard protocol PCBPROT Z PROT - RoseMail protocol PROT G PAGELEN - Page length PAGELEN 20 MAXSIZE - Max packet size in Kb MAXSIZE 100 MAXNUMBER MAXNUMBER 100 JUMPSTART JUMPSTART D;Y;Q MAXPACKET MAXPACKET 500 AUTOSTART - same as jumpstart AUTOSTART OFF OPT <##> - set door option OPT 2 OFF [4.3.6] Complete Mail Door Send message to "CMPMAIL", the commands are "ADD" and "DROP". This message must be sent in the conference that you want to add or drop. [4.4] Turning off the echo flag In order to send a non-echoed message (not send out to other BBSes), a user can enter "NE:" in front of the subject line. The mail program will strip this "NE:" and turn off the echo flag. This feature may not be offered in all mail doors. [4.5] Tag-lines The most common format for a reader tag-line is: --- � My reader v1.00 � The rest of the tag-line. The three dashes is called a tear-line. The tag-line is appended to the end of the message and is usually one line only. It is preferred that tag-lines conform to this format so that networking softwares such as QNet and RNet will not add another tearline to the message when they process it. Softwares on FidoNet does not like mail readers adding a tear-line of their own, so if your mail reader offers a FidoNet mode, you will need to get rid of the tear-line. Another item which differs between the FidoNet and PC-based networks is that FidoNet does not like extended ASCII characters. So your reader may want to strip high ASCII if the user has FidoNet mode on. Acceptable tag-line style, I believe, is just this: * My Reader v1.00 * The rest of the tag-line. [5] Net mail I do not have complete information of net-mail implementation using QWK-format. Someone please fill me in the details. -=-=-=-=-=-=-<>-=-=-=-=-=-=- [A] Credits and Contributions Mark "Sparky" Herring, who originated the QWK-format. Tim Farley, who started this documentation back in the summer of 1990. The general outline here is the work of Tim. I filled in the blanks. Jeffery Foy, who gave us the format for Microsoft single binary versus IEEE format. Greg Hewgill, who (if I remember correctly) wrote the Turbo Pascal routines (included in here) to convert between MKS and TP LongInt. Dennis McCunney, who is the host of the Off-line conference on RIME, is very knowledgeable in off-line reading concept and programs. His goal is to have one reader that can read mail packet from any source. All those who have been around the Off-line conferences on ILink (the oldest of the three I participate), RIME, and Intelec, who have provid- ed great help over the past two years. The bulk of the information presented here are from messages in those conferences. These people include, but are no limited to, the followings: Dane Beko, Joseph Carnage, Marcos Della, Joey Lizzi, Mark May, and Jim Smith. [B] Sample Turbo Pascal and C code Here are a few routines in Turbo Pascal and C to convert Microsoft BASIC MKS format to usable IEEE long integer. These are collected over the networks and there is no guarantee that they will work for you! Turbo Pascal (Greg Hewgill ?): type bsingle = array [0..3] of byte; { converts TP real to Microsoft 4 bytes single } procedure real_to_msb (preal : real; var b : bsingle); var r : array [0 .. 5] of byte absolute preal; begin b [3] := r [0]; move (r [3], b [0], 3); end; { procedure real_to_msb } { converts Microsoft 4 bytes single to TP real } function msb_to_real (b : bsingle) : real; var preal : real; r : array [0..5] of byte absolute preal; begin r [0] := b [3]; r [1] := 0; r [2] := 0; move (b [0], r [3], 3); msb_to_real := preal; end; { procedure msb_to_real } Another Turbo Pascal routine to convert Microsoft single to TP LongInt (Marcos Della): index := ((mssingle and not $ff000000) or $00800000) shr (24 - ((mssingle shr 24) and $7f)) - 1; C (identify yourself if you originated this routine): /* converts 4 bytes Microsoft MKS format to long integer */ unsigned long mbf_to_int (m1, m2, m3, exp) unsigned int m1, m2, m3, exp; { return (((m1 + ((unsigned long) m2 << 8) + ((unsigned long) m3 << 16)) | 0x800000L) >> (24 - (exp - 0x80))); } Microsoft binary (by Jeffery Foy): 31 - 24 23 22 - 0 <-- bit position +-----------------+----------+ | exponent | sign | mantissa | +----------+------+----------+ IEEE (C/Pascal/etc.): 31 30 - 23 22 - 0 <-- bit position +----------------------------+ | sign | exponent | mantissa | +------+----------+----------+ In both cases, the sign is one bit, the exponent is 8 bits, and the mantissa is 23 bits. You can write your own, optimized, routine to convert between the two formats using the above bit layout. [C] Sample message Here is a sample message in hex and ASCII format: 019780 20 34 32 33 32 20 20 20 30 32 2D 31 35 2D 39 32 4232 02-15-92 019790 31 33 3A 34 35 52 49 43 48 41 52 44 20 42 4C 41 13:45RICHARD BLA 0197A0 43 4B 42 55 52 4E 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 53 54 CKBURN ST 0197B0 45 56 45 20 43 4F 4C 45 54 54 49 20 20 20 20 20 EVE COLETTI 0197C0 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 51 45 44 49 54 20 48 41 43 QEDIT HAC 0197D0 4B 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 K 0197E0 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 34 30 33 36 4036 0197F0 20 20 20 20 37 20 20 20 20 20 E1 0A 01 00 00 20 7 � 019800 2A 20 49 6E 20 61 20 6D 65 73 73 61 67 65 20 64 * In a message d 019810 61 74 65 64 20 30 32 2D 30 39 2D 39 32 20 74 6F ated 02-09-92 to 019820 20 53 74 65 76 65 20 43 6F 6C 65 74 74 69 2C 20 Steve Coletti, 019830 52 69 63 68 61 72 64 20 42 6C 61 63 6B 62 75 72 Richard Blackbur 019840 6E 20 73 61 69 64 3A E3 E3 52 42 3E 53 43 20 AF n said:��RB>SC � 019850 20 65 64 69 74 6F 72 20 69 6E 20 74 68 65 20 28 editor in the ( 019860 6D 61 69 6E 66 72 61 6D 65 29 20 56 4D 2F 43 4D mainframe) VM/CM 019870 53 20 70 72 6F 64 75 63 74 20 6C 69 6E 65 20 69 S product line i [ etc. ] 019A00 6E 6F 74 20 61 20 44 6F 63 74 6F 72 2C 20 62 75 not a Doctor, bu 019A10 74 20 49 20 70 6C 61 79 20 6F 6E 65 20 61 74 20 t I play one at 019A20 74 68 65 20 48 6F 73 70 69 74 61 6C 2E E3 20 20 the Hospital.� 019A30 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 019A40 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 019A50 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 019A60 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 019A70 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 019A80 E3 50 43 52 65 6C 61 79 3A 4D 4F 4F 4E 44 4F 47 �PCRelay:MOONDOG 019A90 20 2D 3E 20 23 33 35 20 52 65 6C 61 79 4E 65 74 -> #35 RelayNet 019AA0 20 28 74 6D 29 E3 34 2E 31 30 20 20 20 20 20 20 (tm)�4.10 019AB0 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 48 55 42 4D 4F 4F 4E HUBMOON 019AC0 2D 4D 6F 6F 6E 44 6F 67 20 42 42 53 2C 20 42 72 -MoonDog BBS, Br 019AD0 6F 6F 6B 6C 79 6E 2C 4E 59 20 37 31 38 20 36 39 ooklyn,NY 718 69 019AE0 32 2D 32 34 39 38 E3 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 2-2498� 019AF0 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 [D] Sample index file Here is a sample index file in hex format: 000000 00 00 28 87 19 00 00 30 87 19 00 00 38 87 19 00 000010 00 7E 87 19 00 00 07 88 19 00 00 0B 88 19 00 00 000020 0F 88 19 00 00 14 88 19 00 00 19 88 19 00 00 1E 000030 88 19 00 00 22 88 19 00 00 27 88 19 00 00 2C 88 000040 19 00 00 31 88 19 00 00 3B 88 19 00 00 40 88 19 000050 00 00 46 88 19 00 00 49 88 19 00 00 4D 88 19 00 000060 00 52 88 19 00 00 55 88 19 00 00 59 88 19 00 00 000070 60 88 19 00 00 66 88 19 00 00 70 88 19