Article ID: 104423
Article Last Modified on 10/30/2006
M:\MAILDATA\MAI\MAD >debug 0000013d.tmp -d10b :0100 2C 01 7F 05 32 ,...2 :0110 20 02 02 00 7F 05 33 20-02 0A 00 7F 05 37 20 02 .....3 .....7 . :0120 0A 00 4C 25 01 02 22 5A-65 57 59 0E 50 74 68 6C ..L%.."ZeWY.Pthl :0130 54 18 65 4A 57 52 6E 48-29 CF C4 D6 DA C3 E0 C9 T.eJWRnH)....... :0140 D3 C8 F8 E7 FA ED DA A2-F3 4C 82 19 C9 05 02 14 .........L...... :0150 5A 65 57 59 0E 50 74 68-6C 54 18 65 38 71 29 7C ZeWY.PthlT.e8q)| :0160 B4 D5 B3 F8 02 14 5A 65-57 59 0E 50 74 68 6C 54 ......ZeWY.PthlT :0170 18 65 39 79 28 7D B5 D4-B2 F9 02 14 5A 65 57 59 .e9y(}......ZeWY :0180 0E 50 74 68 6C 54 18 65-39 79 29 .PthlT.e9y)If you reverse and concatenate together the first two bytes displayed, you will get the value the counter is currently set at in Hex. For example, reversing and concatenating 2C and 01 gives 012C which in decimal is 300.
Bytes Hex Decimal ----------------------------- 05 00 ==> 0005 ==> 5 FF 00 ==> 00FF ==> 255 00 01 ==> 0100 ==> 256 F4 01 ==> 01F4 ==> 500To reset the counter to a different number, reverse the process shown in the above table and then substitute your own byte values in place of the ones used in the following example. In the example, the counter is being reset to 255 (decimal).
-e10b
32B0:010B 2C.FF 01.00
-w
Writing 01BF7 bytes
-q
E,one,zero,B,enter,F,F,spacebar,zero,zero,enter,W,enter,Q,enter
Additional query words: 3.00 3.20
Keywords: KB104423