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StuffIt Test Files

This repository contains a collection of minimal, legally redistributable StuffIt archives suitable for inclusion in test suites for programs that incorporate StuffIt extraction functionality.

See Also: RAR Test Files, DiskDoubler Test Files

Explain

Since there are no free tools I know of for creating StuffIt archives, and it's important to be able to integration-test systems that use lsar and unar from The Unarchiver's open-source command-line tools to process legacy archives, I decided to step up and create some legally redistributable StuffIt test files.

To ensure the correct file format versions, the procedure I follow is:

  • For Windows versions of StuffIt, each version was installed in its own fresh Wine prefix to ensure they couldn't see each other's DLLs.
  • For MacOS versions of StuffIt, I replaced the hard drive in my Power Mac G4 with an IDE-to-SD Card converter and used a fresh SD card with a clean MacOS 9.2 or MacOS X 10.1.3 install for each version, and I double-checked that there were no relevant Sherlock matches for "Aladdin", "Drop", "Expander", or "Stuff" before I installed StuffIt. (Photo was taking during the process of making earlier versions of the test files.)

Usage

  1. The test archives are in the build folder.
  2. The password for all password-protected test files is password.

"How Do I Know These Are Legal?"

First, the contents are the same test files I created from scratch and released into the public domain for my RAR test files repository, plus Netatalk representations of a PICT, Finder Picture, and SimpleText file created from them on my Power Mac G4 to ensure that the StuffIt files originating from a Macintosh contain test examples of resource forks.

The PICT and Finder Picture files were created using a copy of GraphicConverter 5.9.5 for Classic MacOS that has been registered using a license key now given away for free by the original developer.

As for the archives, while Smith Micro Software doesn't sell StuffIt anymore, I bought a bunch of copies, including registration keys, off eBay (including a New Old Stock one) and their license agreements are transferable so long as the seller doesn't keep any copies and Macintosh-originated test archives were created entirely on my Power Mac G4 to be absolutely sure that the HFS Creator/Type codes would be intact.

The Macintosh-originated archive have had testfile.txt converted to use Macintosh-style line endings.

NOTE: Currently, I believe my copy of Netatalk 3.x is configured to use POSIX Extended Attributes in addition to AppleDouble-style ._ files, which means some of the data present in the StuffIt archives created on the mac is missing from the sources folder. (At the very least, probably HFS Creator/Type codes.)

I'll try to resolve this later but, as the relevant files were created on the Macintosh, using the copies from the StuffIt archives should be a perfectly fine workaround for now.

Picture of all StuffIt discs in original batch

Picture of Power Mac G4

NOTE: Image of Power Mac G4 is a composite due to the wildly different exposure settings needed to capture both the screen contents and the hardware well. See the source_photos folder for originals.

The versions I have licenses for are:

  • StuffIt Deluxe 4.5 for 68k Macintosh
  • StuffIt Deluxe 6.5 for PPC Macintosh
  • StuffIt Deluxe 7.0 for PPC Macintosh
  • StuffIt 7.0 for Windows
  • StuffIt Deluxe 9.5 for Windows (not pictured in combined photo)
  • StuffIt Deluxe 2009 for Windows
  • StuffIt Deluxe 2011 for Windows and OSX (2010 for Windows, 2011 for OSX, Sealed/New Old Stock)

Sorry about the photo quality. I don't have a proper lighting setup or anything else which would allow me to take good photos of these things, and I felt that putting them on my scanner would make them look too much like stock photos I might have found lying around on the web.

NOTE: Boldface emphasis on all license excerpts is mine.

StuffIt Deluxe 4.5 for Macintosh

The license is included in the back of the print manual and is as follows:

Relevant License Terms:

  1. OTHER RESTRICTIONS. You may not rent or lease the SOFTWARE, but you may transfer the SOFTWARE and accompanying written materials on a permanent basis provided you retain no copies and the recipient agrees to the terms of this agreement. [...]

StuffIt Deluxe 6.5 for Macintosh

I got this as part of the same lot as 4.5 for Macintosh.

In the absence of terms making any mention of transferring the license, this passage of the license should mean that it's legal to buy and sell licenses for StuffIt Deluxe 6.5 for Macintosh as long as the seller uninstalls it before selling the install media and destroys any backup copies they've made.

The Software is owned by Aladdin Systems and is protected by United States copyright laws and international treaty provisions. Therefore, you must treat the Software like any other copyrighted material (e.g., a book or musical recording). Paying the license fee allows you the right to use one copy of the Software on a single computer. You may not network the Software or otherwise use it or make it available for use on more than one computer at the same time. You may not rent or lease the Software, nor may you modify, adapt, translate, reverse engineer, decompile, or disassemble the Software. If you violate any part of this agreement, your right to use this Software terminates automatically and you must then destroy all copies of the Software in your possession.

NOTE: The included license key for StuffIt Deluxe 6.5 for Macintosh does not work for the copy of StuffIt Deluxe 7.5 for Windows that's also on the disk. This is explicitly made clear in the "Read Me First" file on the disc.

StuffIt Deluxe 7.0 for Macintosh

I got this as part of the same lot as 4.5 for Macintosh.

In the absence of terms making any mention of transferring the license, this passage of the license should mean that it's legal to buy and sell licenses for StuffIt Deluxe 7.0 for Macintosh as long as the seller uninstalls it before selling the install media and destroys any backup copies they've made.

The Software is owned by Aladdin Systems and is protected by United States copyright laws and international treaty provisions. Therefore, you must treat the Software like any other copyrighted material (e.g., a book or musical recording). Paying the license fee allows you the right to use one copy of the Software on a single computer. You may not network the Software or otherwise use it or make it available for use on more than one computer at the same time. You may not rent or lease the Software, nor may you modify, adapt, translate, reverse engineer, decompile, or disassemble the Software. If you violate any part of this agreement, your right to use this Software terminates automatically and you must then destroy all copies of the Software in your possession.

NOTE: The included license key for StuffIt Deluxe 7.0 for Macintosh does not work for the copy of StuffIt Deluxe 7.5 for Windows that's also on the disk.

StuffIt 7.0 for Windows

Relevant License Terms:

[...] BY USING THE SOFTWARE (REGARDLESS IF YOU HAVE REGISTERED THE SOFTWARE OR NOT), YOU ARE AGREEING TO BE BOUND BY THE TERMS OF THIS AGREEMENT [...]

The Software is owned by Aladdin Systems and is protected by United States copyright laws and international treaty provisions. Therefore, you must treat the Software like any other copyrighted material (e. g., a book or musical recording). Paying the license fee allows you the right to use one copy of the Software on a single computer. You may not network the Software or otherwise use it or make it available for use on more than one computer at the same time. You may not rent or lease the Software, nor may you modify, adapt, translate, reverse engineer, decompile, or disassemble the Software. If you violate any part of this agreement, your right to use this Software terminates automatically and you must then destroy all copies of the Software in your possession.

[...]

SPECIAL NOTE: MulitVolume self-extracting ZIP archives with extensions .z00, .z01,..., are registered and under copyright to Aladdin Systems. Distribution of programs for revenue made with StuffIt SFX ZIP archives using this software requires a license from Aladdin Systems. Inc.


If you do not have a serial number, StuffIt will install in "Demo" mode.

In the absence of additional terms to the contrary, "like any other copyrighted material (e. g., a book or musical recording)" should mean that it's legal to buy and sell licenses for StuffIt 7.0 for Windows as long as the seller uninstalls it before selling the install media and destroys any backup copies they've made.

Also, you're not allowed to distribute StuffIt 7.0 Zip self-extractors for profit without a license and I'm unsure whether registering your StuffIt 7.0 is the license being referred to. This should be irrelevant since this repository is for SIT/SITX self-extractors, not Zip ones.

StuffIt Deluxe 9.5 for Windows

This was purchased later and, as such, is not included in the combined photo.

Relevant License Terms:

You may, however, transfer your rights under this License provided you transfer the related documentation, this License and a copy of the Software to a party who agrees to accept the terms of this License and destroy any other copies of the Software in your possession.

StuffIt Deluxe 2009 for Windows

Relevant License Terms:

Except as permitted by applicable law and this EULA, you will not use, copy, modify, distribute, or create derivative works from the Software or Documentation or transfer the Software or Documentation, and you will not (and will not permit any third party to) decompile, reverse engineer, disassemble, rent, lease, or loan the Software. You may, however, transfer your rights under this EULA provided you transfer the related Documentation, this EULA and a copy of the Software to a party who agrees to accept the terms of this EULA and provided you destroy all copies of the Software (or portions thereof) remaining in your possession. In addition, you may transfer your rights under this EULA solely in accordance with any written instructions that the Company provides in connection with the Software.

StuffIt Deluxe 2010 for Windows

I received this copy as sealed New Old Stock.

Invoice for Stuffit Deluxe 2011 CD

(Sorry for the quality. Upgrading my OS broke my scanner and I haven't had time to track down a solution, so I just had to take a photo.)

There is no StuffIt Deluxe 2011 for Windows, so this Stuffit Deluxe 2011 hybrid CD contains Stuffit Deluxe 2010 for Windows users.

While I bought this as New Old Stock, the clause in the license which would allow me to have purchased it used is still present:

Except as permitted by applicable law and this EULA, you will not use, copy, modify, distribute, or create derivative works from the Software or Documentation or transfer the Software or Documentation, and you will not (and will not permit any third party to) decompile, reverse engineer, disassemble, rent, lease, or loan the Software. You may, however, transfer your rights under this EULA provided you transfer the related Documentation, this EULA and a copy of the Software to a party who agrees to accept the terms of this EULA and provided you destroy all copies of the Software (or portions thereof) remaining in your possession. In addition, you may transfer your rights under this EULA solely in accordance with any written instructions that the Company provides in connection with the Software.

"My virus scanner reports malware in these files"

Check them on VirusTotal. Lazy antivirus software has a tendency to assume self-extracting archives or UPX-packed executables are inherently malicious, and StuffIt self-extractors tick both boxes, so I'd be very surprised if it wasn't a false positive.

As of the time these files were created...

  1. testfile.stuffit7_dlx.mac9.exe, testfile.stuffit7.win.exe and testfile.stuffit7.win.password.exe get five false positives each (which don't agree with each other) out of 67 scanners checked. This is pretty typical among self-extracting archives I've tested, regardless of format or SFX stub.

  2. testfile.stuffit_deluxe_2009.win.backcompat.exe gets four false positives. Basically the same ones as before.

  3. testfile.stuffit_deluxe_2009.win.install.exe gets 13 detections out of 67, which is unusual, but still reasonable.

    (Especially when seven of them are the exact same Gen:Trojan.Heur.RP.DmHfbSj@Wfoi heuristic signature which probably just means "I don't know how to scan inside a SitX file but I know that StuffIt 2009 'non-MSI Install' self-extractor stub was used by at least one trojan in the past".)

  4. testfile.stuffit_deluxe_2010.win.backcompat.exe gets 10 heuristic detections out of 67 and the ones that say more than "generic" can't agree on what kind of badware it's supposed to be. Again, all no-name scanners.

  5. testfile.stuffit_deluxe_2010.win.install.exe gets 11 heuristic detections out of 65. Again, from the no-name peanut gallery with no apparent agreement on what's supposed to be bad about it, so I'm guessing they're just panicking at the sight of a UPX-packed self-extractor stub.

...etc. etc. etc.

Given that five or six heuristic false positives for a non-UPX-packed self-extractor stub is pretty typical in my experience, that each version of StuffIt was installed fresh (for the Windows ones, each into its own brand new Wine prefix) from official, read-only install media, and that there were at least five scanners that said nothing was wrong for every scanner that complained, I'm not worried.

(Especially given that the scanners in question can't agree on whether the self-extractor stub from a fresh install of StuffIt from an official retail CD-ROM onto a fresh install of MacOS onto a blank hard drive from an official Apple install CD-ROM, and stuck onto an archive containing no executable files, is adware, a trojan, or a worm.)

Future Plans

  • Look into writing some AppleScript to provide an automated way to re/generate the Mac-originated ones, similar to the Makefile for my RAR test files.
  • Come up with a way to script the StuffIt GUIs inside Wine so I can have a scripted way to re/generate the Windows-originated ones similar to the Makefile for my RAR test files. (LDTP/Cobra?)
  • Regenerate files from versions which support Faster vs. Better compression to provide both variants.
  • Try out the copies of StuffIt 5.0 and 5.5 that I acquired... likely with the help of the 5.0.2, 5.1, and/or 5.5.1 update patches I found since I don't think the base versions are compatible with Mac OS 9.2.
  • Generate .sitx test files with files in the rest of the formats supported by SitX's proprietary recompression option. (Lossless JPEG, JPEG 2000, BMP, GIF, TIFF, PSD, PICT, PXM, MP3, ZIP, and PDF)
  • Try to get my Macintosh copies of StuffIt working inside Executor or Executor 2000) as a means to reduce the number of proprietary components needed to reproduce my results.
  • Once I have scripting solutions, ensure I've got test files for every combination of things like encryption vs. no encryption, backwards compatibility vs. no backwards compatibility, etc.
  • Once I have a mac that can run a version of Mac OS older than 9.2 (or the special version of 9.1 that Norton Systemworks for Mac boots into), and, thus, can run StuffIt Deluxe 5.0 without it crashing instantly, make some StuffIt Deluxe 5.0 test files.
  • Given that Wikipedia says new StuffIt releases had a bad habit of introducing backwards-incompatible format changes, keep an eye out for eBay listings for earlier registered versions, such as registered non-Deluxe releases of StuffIt, StuffIt for Macintosh versions 1.5.1 or lower and versions prior to 3.x, and Windows versions prior to 7.0.

License

By design, the files within the archives have been created from scratch and are minimally novel in the hope that they will be ineligible for copyright.

While I don't hold copyright to the self-extractor stubs present in the self-extracting test archives, they may be redistributed freely.

I hereby release anything in these archives that I do hold copyright to into the public domain using the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication.

CC0
To the extent possible under law, Stephan Sokolow has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to StuffIt Test Files. This work is published from: Canada.

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Minimal SIT and SITX files made using registered StuffIt installs, suitable for integration testing.

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