Jump to content

98 FE + 98 SE + ME updates + patches + (hot)fixes


Recommended Posts

This is just a versioning conundrum caused by M$ habit of late of releasing parallel series of updates starting at different versions for different OSes. But it can be solved, in the case of PE executables like oleaut32.dll, by looking at the file compilation dates (aka PE Timestamps, which are MUCH more stable, becuse they're tucked away in the PE header, than common file dates, which reside in the directory entry an can change easily). To see the compilation dates in readable format one must use MiTeC EXE Explorer, or PEDUMP.EXE by Matt Pietrek, a somewhat more technical console app. For the latter, try <pedump filename.dll | find /i "timedatestamp"> and consider the first value listed (the others are usually zero, anyway, because it tries to get the PE Timestamps of the .dll dependencies and fails silently... yes, they are the result of a bug...).

Of course, if one knows from which packages or updates those files came, and their relative release dates, it should not be necessary to go for the PE Timestamps, but that is not always the case. But I don't think the existence of PE Timestamps is very widely known, and this is a good exemple to show their utility. Too bad only PE executables (sometimes referred to as Win 32 executables), among all possible types of executables present in the Windows OSes carry their compilation date inside. Then again, they are becoming more and more the standard for .exe, .dll, .ocx and .tlb, and that is good news!

In a nutshell, changing oleaut32.dll form v. 2.40.4522.0 to v. 2.40.4519.0, despite all the apearances, *is an upgrade*, not a downgrade! HTH

Thanks, I ignored that. Let us hope it is more reliable with MS files than with Exe Explorer itself, as I would not think it has been compiled the 19/06/1992.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Thanks, I ignored that. Let us hope it is more reliable with MS files than with Exe Explorer itself, as I would not think it has been compiled the 19/06/1992.

Great catch, eidenk! :thumbup The people at MiTeC, of course, may have done it as a deliberate prank...

It hadn't occurred to me to use it to look for its own PE Timestamp. It can be spoofed quite easily. The only reason I think that it's usually reliable is the fact that it is a very little known detail of the PE standard, automatically set by the linker. One has to know it's there to spoof it. ;) PEDUMP, for instance, really is from 29/08/2001, and I just found out a newer version of it (05/4/2004) in the downlodable companion file to this MSDN article, by Matt Pietrek: interestingly enough, when you run the 2001 version it says 1988 on the sign-on message, while the 2004 version says 2001. Matt Pietrek has updated that program many times, but did not update the text of the sign-on message consistenly every time... This new version still cannot find the dates of the dependencies but has improved, for, at least, it abstains from translating 00000000 as Wed Dec 31 22:00:00 1969...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

What a haul this month MDGx !!! :thumbup

Any further info on:

CNTROL98:

http://www.mdgx.com/web.htm#9SU

* Unofficial Windows 98/98 SP1/98 SE Control Panel Applets Lockups CONTROL.EXE 4.10.1999 Fix [63 KB]:

http://www.mdgx.com/files/CNTROL98.EXE

cheers.

EDIT:

re: the MS Paint add-on and Graphic Filters Pack ... i'm including them both as an optional update in the next v of AP, and i may as well package them together as a stand-alone MSPAINT update ... wanna beat me to it ? :sneaky::ph34r:

edit: ie the fixed version of MSpaint.exe and also the Graphic Filters Pack.

Edited by soporific
Link to comment
Share on other sites

RICHED9X [RTF]:

http://www.mdgx.com/add.htm#RTF

Updated to USP10.DLL 1.422.3790.3959 from Win2003 SP2:

* Unofficial Windows 98/98 SP1/98 SE/ME Rich Text (RTF) Edit Controls RICHED20.DLL 5.40.11.2220, RICHED32.DLL 5.0.1461.82 + USP10.DLL 1.422.3790.3959 Security Vulnerability Fix:

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/...n/ms07-013.mspx

Direct download [912 KB]:

http://www.mdgx.com/files/RICHED9X.EXE

I see the inf has the infamous ,,,4 parameter for the included files. Incidentally I have (better said, had) USP10.dll v1.0471.4030.0 installed prior to this upgrade and I had noticed no visible issues. After the upgrade I forcibly got the lower-versioned file.

Question: is this version matching required? Otherwise, why is the ,,,4 parameter used for all files in the package?

Also, as reported some time ago in some other thread around, this version of riched20.dll has issues with bad words underlining in Miranda IM's spellchecker (based on Hunspell), reason why I had been using riched20.dll v5.30.23.1221. Is there still no better version that'd be worth using instead of this one?

Nevertheless, thank you very much for all your hard work! :thumbup

Link to comment
Share on other sites

KB891711:

http://www.mdgx.com/web.htm#W98

* Unofficial Windows 98/98 SP1 Animated Cursor (.ANI) + Icon Handling USER32.DLL + USER.EXE 4.10.2003 Security Vulnerability Fix:

http://www.mdgx.com/files/q891711.php

Direct download [419 KB]:

http://www.mdgx.com/files/KB891711.EXE

This Fix replaces ALL PREVIOUS Microsoft MS07-017 (Q925902):

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/...n/ms07-017.mspx

MS05-002 (Q891711):

http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/...n/ms05-002.mspx

+ unofficial (U891711) Animated Cursor (.ANI) + Icon Handling Security Vulnerabilities Fixes, which are now OBSOLETE!

Q891711 + U891711 MSFN forum:

http://www.msfn.org/board/?showtopic=58780

STRONGLY RECOMMENDED: KB891711 provides the BEST Fix!

I may consider dropping the user.exe/user32.dll v4.10.2003 files from the next release of the unofficial Win98 FE SP since it can cause problems with Tihiy's RP pack. And I'll restore the kb891711.exe & q8917111.dll files as well.

I see the inf has the infamous ,,,4 parameter for the included files. Incidentally I have (better said, had) USP10.dll v1.0471.4030.0 installed prior to this upgrade and I had noticed no visible issues. After the upgrade I forcibly got the lower-versioned file.

Where the heck did you get v1.0471.4030.0 of the usp10.dll file, Drugwash? That's what I'm more worried about.

Edited by erpdude8
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Also, as reported some time ago in some other thread around, this version of riched20.dll has issues with bad words underlining in Miranda IM's spellchecker (based on Hunspell), reason why I had been using riched20.dll v5.30.23.1221. Is there still no better version that'd be worth using instead of this one?

Version 5.40.11.2220 of riched20.dll is featured in the Office XP post-SP3 MS07-013 security update.

Version 5.30.23.1221 of riched20.dll is prone to security flaws mentioned in security bulletin MS07-013. Replace it with version 5.30.23.1227 which I have for my Office 2000 suite.

Newer Root Certificates update (revised August 23, 2007); file size 281kb:

http://www.msfn.org/board/ipb_seo.php?url=...%2Frootsupd.exe

Edited by erpdude8
Link to comment
Share on other sites

To be honest, I can't remember where I got that usp10.dll version from. I don't quite keep an evidence on sources; all I'm interested in is the final result.

Here's the full info on it:

C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\usp10.dll
on Microsoft Windows 98 SE version 4.10

File Version Information :
Version language : English (United States)
CompanyName : Microsoft Corporation
FileDescription : Uniscribe Unicode script processor
FileVersion : 1.0471.4030.0 (main.030626-1414)
InternalName : Uniscribe
LegalCopyright : © Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
OriginalFilename : Uniscribe
ProductName : Microsoft(R) Uniscribe Unicode script processor
ProductVersion : 1.0471.4030.0
Last Modif. Date : 06/27/2003 08:18:32
Last Access Date : 10/06/2007 00:00:00
FileSize : 413184 bytes ( 403.500 KB, 0.394 MB )
FileVersionInfoSize : 940 bytes
File type : Dynamic Link Library (0x2)
Target OS : Win32 API (Windows NT) (0x40004)
File/Product version : 1.471.4030.0 / 1.471.4030.0
Language : English (United States) (0x409)
Character Set : 1200 (ANSI - Unicode (BMP of ISO 10646)) (0x4B0)
Build Information :
Debug Version : no
Patched Version : no
Prerelease Version : no
Private Version : no
Special Build : no

I'm positive I don't have riched20.dll 5.30.23.1227 around, otherwise I would've already had it installed. Frankly, I'd rather use one of the 5.50 versions - because of the link color fix - but those seem to have some issues of their own. This has been discussed at large some time ago.

Edited by Drugwash
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I see the inf has the infamous ,,,4 parameter for the included files. Incidentally I have (better said, had) USP10.dll v1.0471.4030.0 installed prior to this upgrade and I had noticed no visible issues. After the upgrade I forcibly got the lower-versioned file.

Question: is this version matching required? Otherwise, why is the ,,,4 parameter used for all files in the package?

Hi, Drugwash!

Since everybody here clearly understands .INFs better than I do, :blushing: I'll just take this opportunity to ask, before I die of unsated curiousity: :) what do the ,,4 and ,,,4 flags mean, please? Thanks in advance and best wishes!

Edited by dencorso
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ah, I'm not a specialist either - just catching some things on the fly. :whistle:

As far as I understand, that parameter is used to force installation even over an existing higher build number of a file.

It should be used - at least theoretically - only when certain files strictly depend on other certain versions and mismatching would lead to unpredictable results.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[...]As far as I understand, that parameter is used to force installation even over an existing higher build number of a file.[...]

Thanks, Drugwash. :thumbup You rock!

Added text 9th October 2007 - 04:25 AM:

Thanks for the links in you post below this one, soporific! :thumbup They sure help a lot. You do rock too!

Edited by dencorso
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Since everybody here clearly understands .INFs better than I do, :blushing: I'll just take this opportunity to ask, before I die of unsated curiousity: :) what do the ,,4 and ,,,4 flags mean, please? Thanks in advance and best wishes!
here's a link that explains all:

http://soporific.dsleague.com/downloads/copyfile.htm

i got it from the INF guide that MDGx keeps a copy of at this location:

http://www.mdgx.com/INF_web/INF_WEB.ZIP

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:realmad:K891711 (or Q891711) IS EXTREMELY DANGEROUS: DO NOT USE IT :realmad:

For the second time (same problem as with the previous version 2 months ago) my computer was unable to restart and I had to reinstall windows.

It said "unable to load user.exe" then shut down in 1/10th of a second. Clack! (You know, the sound when the PC power is turned off). I didn't have the possibility to restart it! ===> Boot Floppy time!

MDCx: Please remove it from your list!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dunno what your problem is, but I just installed it (twice: installed, uninstalled while trying to fix some unrelated problem and reinstalled) recently and I had/have absolutely no such issues. Well, there may be problems with resources dropping quite fast, but that's something else and could be caused by any other factors as well, such as gdi.exe/gdi32.dll (updated to 4.90.3003).

Please check any possible resident/BIOS anti-virus or other applications that may block operations on system files. Or maybe some strange boot-up configuraton...

You may ask MDGx to create a debug version that'd create a log of the operations performed during install, so you could find where (and possibly why) it breaks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...