- Ps3 serial number cg161114417 Pc#
- Ps3 serial number cg161114417 ps3#
- Ps3 serial number cg161114417 psp#
This entry can also be used several times inside the table to mark a "break point" for some specials "subentries" (or subfolders)
The end of the table is marked with the entry 0xAABBCCDDEE0000. + 0x10 of the static header = absolute offsetĮntry ID or 16 bits checksum ? (candidates are BSD16 and CRC16) Offset(h) 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0FĠ000FFF0 4D 26 00 7A 4D 26 00 62 00 04 00 00 00 00 00 00 M&.zM&.b.Īfter that the data table starts at offset 0x10000 entries are concatenated, the big areas filled with zeroes (that looks like gaps) are actually delimited by the data entries, so by reading all the entries consecutivelly it can be mapped all the data tableįlags, or parent-child hierarchy info, or timestamps ?. There is a 0x10 length area at offset 0xFFF0 that seems to be a bit special, is copyed here as example, some values in it seems to be generic, note the value 0x4D26 is repeated two times, actually, it looks like two groups of two values each: 0x4D26007A and 0x4D260062
it can be an error of the process that updates the file, or maybe are the rests of groups of entries that was erased or disabled instead of /setting), seems to be related with the users that has been created/erased before. The entry 0xAABBCCDDEE0000 can be used inside the table to overwrite and old entry, the rests of the old entry are visibles after the seventh byte ( etting.This entry can also appear several times inside the table to mark a "break point" for some specials "subentries" (or subfolders) The last entry is marked with 0xAABBCCDDEE0000.
Ps3 serial number cg161114417 ps3#
unk_header_2 could be the xregistry.sys fileformat revision, if this is true it means there must be a previous version of it, used in some old retail firmwares, or maybe even older in pre-retail firmware or prototype PS3 models, the changes in between v1 and v2 could affect all entries in the file (such missing fields for security purposes in v1 that was added in v2) and as a consequence the whole file format structure could be different. this values should be something generic that affects all the settings inside the file The header is 0x10 length and seems to contain static valuesīC AD AD BC 00 00 00 90 00 00 00 02 BC AD AD BCīinary flags ? (144 in decimal. The key is the setting itself (as a more abstract concept), and the value is the data stored by the key Setvalue error happened /setting/categoryVersion. The entries in the tables are officially codenamed key and value as can be seen in this LV1 strings:. Whole file size is 0x40000, seems to be divided in 4 areas of 0x10000 bytes each and only the first two are used Ps3 serial number cg161114417 Pc#
by formatting the hdd in PC the xRegistry.sys is lost forever xRegistry.sys is stored in VFLASH (a fake virtual flash stored in HDD).
To kill the contents of xRegistry.sys eficiently the method depends of the flash type:. One of the settings that are kept is the (annoying) user counter that never decreases, and some "trash" data from other previous erased users The option 5: Restore PS3 System (from Recovery Menu) doesnt cleans xRegistry.sys completly, some settings from the "old" xRegistry.sys are added in the "new" xRegistry.sys. When a HDD backup is restored some settings from the "source" xRegistry.sys (included in the HDD backup files) are not copyed in the xRegistry.sys of the "target" PS3, like the HDD model and serial Some settings of xRegistry.sys (the ones that appears in XMB column) can be restored to their default values by rebooting the PS3 in Recovery Menu and using the option 2: Restore Default Settings Backup and Restore from a HDD backup This processes changes the values inside xRegistry.sys, but also can involve a whole rebuild of xRegistry.sys when new entries are added (like when going from 1.00 firmware to 4.66 firmware)īackup located at /dev_flash2/etc/backup/xRegistry.sys For this reason when new info from another xRegistry.sys needs to be added to the local xRegistry.sys the system does a selective "merging" of their values The PS3 system always tries to keep a record of everything that was made before (like the number of users that was created by storing their number in a cumulative counter that never decreases). Ps3 serial number cg161114417 psp#
Somes settings are sent to registered devices such a PSP (PSP/flash1/registry/). It holds settings such as PSN account details (user settings), devices attached to the Playstation (registered peripherals), the HDD model and serial number (console settings), etc. XRegistry.sys is the PS3 system registry, used to store settings, located in path /dev_flash2/etc/xRegistry.sys. 2.3 Backup and Restore from a HDD backup.2 Rebuild, regenerate, restore processes.