wwt commands
argtest
features
Phoenix Sid Extractor V1.3 Beta-95 ✅
Wiimms WBFS Tool (WBFS manager) : It can create, check, repair, verify and clone WBFS files and partitions. It can list, add, extract, remove, rename and recover ISO images as part of a WBFS.
1. Syntax
wwt [option]... command [option|parameter|@file]...
2. Features of wwt
-
wwt can work with WBFS drives and partitions and with WBFS files.
When creating plain WBFS files the tools try to create sparse files
to reduce disk usage.
Most commands accept multiple working WBFS to add, modify or extract
more than one WBFS with one command.
-
The working WBFS are defined by the options -part, --auto
and --all.
The option @--auto scanns all drives for valid WBFS partitionss.
-
»wwt FORMAT« will format a WBFS partition or file.
Together with option --recover it try to recover an already
existing WBFS.
-
»wwt LIST« list the discs of one ore more WBFS as a text table.
Options like --long, --mixed, --unique, --no-header,
--sections and more control the formating.
Try the abbreviations »wwt LS«, »wwt LL«, »wwt LLL« or »wwt LM«.
-
»wwt ADD« will add Wii discs in any file formats to one or more
working WBFS. The options --update, --newer, --sync
--ignore and many more controls the operation.
Cloning of WBFS is done with this command too.
»wwt ADD« can also read from extracted file system to compose a disc on the fly
(like »wit COPY«).
This functionality is also called »Partition builder«
or »Disc builder«.
Phoenix Sid Extractor V1.3 BETA-95
While adding a disc you can patch ID, disc title, IOS and region.
Objects for patching are disc header, ticket, tmd and boot.bin.
If necessary the partitions will be fake signed (trucha sign) automatically.
Phoenix Sid Extractor V1
-
»wwt UPDATE« is a shortcut for »wwt ADD --update«
and »wwt SYNC« for »wwt ADD --sync«.
-
»wwt EXTRACT« will extract Wii discs and copy them to files in any
file formats. If more then one working WBFS is set,
each ISO image is searched in all working WBFS until found.
-
»wwt REMOVE« will remove Wii discs from all working WBFS.
-
»wwt VERIFY« verifies all ISO images of all working WBFS to
find bad dumps. This is done by calculating the SHA1 checksums
and comparing them with the stored checksums.
-
The commands »wwt ANALYSE«, »wwt CHECK«, »wwt REPAIR« and »wwt RECOVER«
can be used for analyzing, checking and repairing WBFS.
-
»wwt CHECK« check the WBFS for different kinds of allocation errors.
This check ist very fast (less than 1 second).
All commands, which will modify the WBFS, do a silent check and report,
if harmless errors found, or stop execution, if harmful errors found.
-
»wwt DUMP« will print the data structures and information
of WBFS partitionss and files. This is good for analysis.
-
wwt (and also wit) supports time stamps for discs
in WBFS containers like other file systems.
-
For all commands working with Wii ISO images the options
--include, --include-path, --exclude and --exclude-path
setup up filters to decide which ISO images are used for the operation.
-
The options --quiet and --verbose control the verbosity.
Both option can be set multiple times to decrease or increase the verbosity.
Read »
Features« for features of the whole toolset.
Phoenix Sid Extractor V1.3 Beta-95 ✅
Phoenix Sid Extractor V1.3 BETA-95: The Liminal Artifact of Forced Sonic Resurrection
I. Nomenclature & The Mythos of the Version String
The title alone is a cipher. Phoenix—the undying, the cyclically sacrificial, the bird that immolates itself to be reborn. Sid—likely a reference to the MOS Technology 6581/8580 SID (Sound Interface Device) chip, the heart of the Commodore 64, whose analog imperfections became the DNA of an entire musical subculture. Extractor—a violent, almost surgical term. Not an emulator. Not a player. An extractor.
Feedback and Support: If you have specific questions or need help, reaching out to the developer or community can provide clarity.
- Low-Level Hardware Access: The tool bypasses the OS kernel to read directly from the CMOS and EEPROM sectors where the Phoenix BIOS stored hidden serial strings.
- Challenge-Response Calculation: When provided with a boot-time "Challenge Code" (a 12-digit hex string common on Phoenix BIOS v4.05.xx), the Extractor computes the correct "Response Key."
- DOS Mode Compatibility: Built specifically to run from a MS-DOS 6.22 or Windows 95 DOS Box boot floppy, it requires less than 64KB of conventional memory to run.
- SID Hashing: It extracts and displays the 7-byte SID hash, which can be cross-referenced with legacy rainbow tables.
- Installation: Straightforward installer on Windows. Portable mode often supported.
- Learning curve: Low for casual users; intermediate for producers who want precise voice routing.
- Workflow: Good for one-off extractions and quick renders; batch workflows work but require manual verification for edge-case SID files.
- Stability: Generally stable for common files but BETA-95 still shows sporadic freezes when rendering large batches or certain malformed SID dumps.
- Documentation: Sparse — includes a short user manual and changelog; advanced options not comprehensively documented.
Purpose: The name suggests it might be involved in extracting SID (Session ID) files or data, possibly for forensic analysis or recovery purposes. It could be related to extracting data from various sources or formats.
: Extracted data is typically exported into common formats like
Phoenix Sid Extractor V1.3 BETA-95: The Liminal Artifact of Forced Sonic Resurrection
I. Nomenclature & The Mythos of the Version String
The title alone is a cipher. Phoenix—the undying, the cyclically sacrificial, the bird that immolates itself to be reborn. Sid—likely a reference to the MOS Technology 6581/8580 SID (Sound Interface Device) chip, the heart of the Commodore 64, whose analog imperfections became the DNA of an entire musical subculture. Extractor—a violent, almost surgical term. Not an emulator. Not a player. An extractor.
Feedback and Support: If you have specific questions or need help, reaching out to the developer or community can provide clarity.
- Low-Level Hardware Access: The tool bypasses the OS kernel to read directly from the CMOS and EEPROM sectors where the Phoenix BIOS stored hidden serial strings.
- Challenge-Response Calculation: When provided with a boot-time "Challenge Code" (a 12-digit hex string common on Phoenix BIOS v4.05.xx), the Extractor computes the correct "Response Key."
- DOS Mode Compatibility: Built specifically to run from a MS-DOS 6.22 or Windows 95 DOS Box boot floppy, it requires less than 64KB of conventional memory to run.
- SID Hashing: It extracts and displays the 7-byte SID hash, which can be cross-referenced with legacy rainbow tables.
- Installation: Straightforward installer on Windows. Portable mode often supported.
- Learning curve: Low for casual users; intermediate for producers who want precise voice routing.
- Workflow: Good for one-off extractions and quick renders; batch workflows work but require manual verification for edge-case SID files.
- Stability: Generally stable for common files but BETA-95 still shows sporadic freezes when rendering large batches or certain malformed SID dumps.
- Documentation: Sparse — includes a short user manual and changelog; advanced options not comprehensively documented.
Purpose: The name suggests it might be involved in extracting SID (Session ID) files or data, possibly for forensic analysis or recovery purposes. It could be related to extracting data from various sources or formats.
: Extracted data is typically exported into common formats like