SCO

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SCO files contain GTA 4's game scripts. Its new format replaces old scm one.

File Format

A SCO file is layed out into 4 segments. First the header containing information about the SCO file. Then the code segment which contains the opcode's which govern how the script behaves. The next segment is the global variables container which contains enough space to hold the scripts global variables. The last is the public variables container, it is unclear what this segment actually does.

Header

There are 2 types of SCO files, an encrypted and unencrypted one. Each file however shares the same unencrypted header structure, and you can use this to determine which type of SCO file you are dealing with. The size of this header is 24 bytes.

4b - CHAR[4]/UINT32 - SCO Identifier
4b - UINT32 - Code Size
4b - UINT32 - Global Var Count
4b - UINT32 - Public Var Count
4b - UINT32 - Script Flags
4b - UINT32 - Signature

The SCO Identifier will be "SCR\r" (or 0xD524353) in an unencrypted version, and "scr"+0xE (or 0xE726373) in an encrypted version. To decrypt an encrypted version you must decrypt each segment (except the header) separately using GTA IV's AES Cryptography. The Code Size refers to the amount of bytes the code section takes up. The Global Var Count refers to the amount of global variables the SCO file contains. The segment for global variables starts at the end of Header + Code Size, and continues for 4x the global variable count (due to the global variables being stored in 4 byte's each). The Public Var Size refers to the amount of public variables the SCO file contains. The segment for public variables starts at the end of Header + Code Size + Global Var Count * 4, and continues for 4x the public variable count (due to the public variables being stored in 4 byte's each). The Script Flags are boolean bits which are currently unexplained. The Signature only differs in navgen_main, but could possibly set the script priority.

Code Segment

The Code Segment contains the opcodes which govern the scripts behaviour.

Opcodes

Opcodes can have varying sizes, but all opcodes are identified by their first byte. There are 79 opcodes which can occur and any opcode above 80 is a Push opcode which pushes it's own number - 96 onto the stack. For example, opcode 100 will push 4 onto the stack. Opcodes 76,77,78 deal with XLive protected buffers and are available on the PC platform only. Undefined opcodes (i.e. opcode 79), will cause a forceful abort of the script execution.

ID Name Description Length
0 nop No operation 1 byte
1 iadd Adds the top 2 items on the stack 1 byte
2 isub Subtracts the top 2 items on the stack 1 byte
3 imul Multiplies the top 2 items on the stack 1 byte
4 idiv Divides the top 2 items on the stack 1 byte
5 imod Mods the top 2 items on the stack 1 byte
6 iszero Checks the first item on the stack to see if it equals 0 1 byte
7 ineg Reverses the sign on the item on the top of the stack 1 byte
8 icmpeq Compares the top 2 integers on the stack to see if they are equal 1 byte
9 icmpne Compares the top 2 integers on the stack to see if they are not equal 1 byte
10 icmpgt Compares the top 2 integers on the stack to see if the first one is greater than the second one 1 byte
11 icmpge Compares the top 2 integers on the stack to see if the first one is greater than or equal to the second one 1 byte
12 icmplt Compares the top 2 integers on the stack to see if the first one is less than the second one 1 byte
13 icmple Compares the top 2 integers on the stack to see if the first one is less than or equal to the second one 1 byte
14 fadd Adds the top 2 floats on the stack 1 byte
15 fsub Subtracts the top 2 floats on the stack 1 byte
16 fmul Multiplies the top 2 floats on the stack 1 byte
17 fdiv Divides the top 2 floats on the stack 1 byte
18 fmod Mods the top 2 floats on the stack 1 byte
19 fneg Reverses the sign on the first float on the stack 1 byte
20 fcmpeq Compares the top 2 floats on the stack to see if they are equal 1 byte
21 fcmpne Compares the top 2 floats on the stack to see if they are not equal 1 byte
22 fcmpgt Compares the top 2 floats on the stack to see if the first one is greater than the second one 1 byte
23 fcmpge Compares the top 2 floats on the stack to see if the first one is greater than or equal to the second one 1 byte
24 fcmplt Compares the top 2 floats on the stack to see if the first one is less than the second one 1 byte
25 fcmple Compares the top 2 floats on the stack to see if the first one is less than or equal to the second one 1 byte
26 vadd Adds the top 2 Vectors[1] on the stack 1 byte
27 vsub Subtracts the top 2 Vectors[1] on the stack 1 byte
28 vmul Multiplies the top 2 Vectors[1] on the stack 1 byte
29 vdiv Divides the top 2 Vectors[1] on the stack 1 byte
30 vneg Reverses the sign on the first vector[1] on the stack 1 byte
31 iand Performs an And operation to the first 2 integers on the stack 1 byte
32 ior Performs an Or operation to the first 2 integers on the stack 1 byte
33 ixor Performs a Xor operation to the first 2 integers on the stack 1 byte
34 jmp Jumps to a section of code, using the next 4 bytes after the opcode as a placement 5 bytes
35 jmpf Jumps to a section of code if the top of the stack is 0, using the next 4 bytes after the opcode as a placement 5 bytes
36 jmpt Jumps to a section of code if the top of the stack is 1, using the next 4 bytes after the opcode as a placement 5 bytes
37 itof Converts the top integer on the stack to a float, and puts that float on the stack 1 byte
38 ftoi Converts the top float on the stack to an integer, and puts that integer on the stack 1 byte
39 ftov Converts the top float into a Vector[1] containing 3 instances of the same float, and pushes the pointer to that Vector[1] onto the top of the stack 1 byte
40 ipush2 Pushes a short onto the stack, the short is defined in the next 2 bytes after the opcode 3 bytes
41 ipush Pushes an int onto the stack, the integer is defined in the next 4 bytes after the opcode 5 bytes
42 fpush Pushes a float onto the stack, the float is defined in the next 4 bytes after the opcode. Performs exactly the same as Push 5 bytes
43 dup Duplicates the first item on the stack, and pushes it back onto the stack 1 byte
44 pop Pops the top item off the stack 1 byte
45 native Calls a native function. The number of arguments for the native to take is defined in the next byte after the opcode. The number of return values is defined in the byte after that (it is always 1 or 0). The next 4 bytes are the hash of the native's name. 7 bytes
46 call Calls a function within the script, and puts the return address on top of the stack. The location of the function is defined in the next 4 bytes after the opcode 5 bytes
47 enter Indicates the beginning of an internal function. The byte after the opcode indicates the amount of arguments the function takes off the stack, and the next 2 bytes after that indicate the number of variables the function will have to generate on the stack. 4 bytes
48 ret Indicates the end of an internal function. The byte after the opcode indicates the amount of arguments that will have to be popped off the stack, and the next byte after that indicates the stack number of the return address 3 bytes
49 pget Pops a pointer off the stack and pushes the value stored in that pointer back onto the stack 1 byte
50 pset Pops 2 items off the stack and stores the second item at the location of the first item (the first item being a pointer) 1 byte
51 ppeekset Pops the first item off the stack and peeks at the second item on the stack, then stores the first item at the location pointed to by the second item on the stack 1 byte
52 explode Pops 2 items off the stack, the first and second items being the beginning of the memory of the array and the end of the memory of the array. It then divides the difference of these 2 locations by 4 to get the number of items in the array, after which is pushes these items one by one onto the stack in 4 byte segments 1 byte
53 implode Pops the first item off the stack to get the address of the array to write to, and then pops the stack off onto that array 1 byte
54 flvar0 Pushes the pointer to the first function local variable onto the stack. 1 byte
55 flvar1 Pushes the pointer to the second function local variable onto the stack. 1 byte
56 flvar2 Pushes the pointer to the third function local variable onto the stack. 1 byte
57 flvar3 Pushes the pointer to the fourth function local variable onto the stack. 1 byte
58 flvar4 Pushes the pointer to the fifth function local variable onto the stack. 1 byte
59 flvar5 Pushes the pointer to the sixth function local variable onto the stack. 1 byte
60 flvar6 Pushes the pointer to the seventh function local variable onto the stack. 1 byte
61 flvar7 Pushes the pointer to the eigth function local variable onto the stack. 1 byte
62 flvar Pushes the pointer to a function local variable onto the stack where the index is above or equal to 8 1 byte
63 global Pops the index of the global variable off the stack, and pushes a pointer to the script global variable onto the stack 1 byte
64 public Pops the index of the public variable off the stack, and pushes a pointer to the public variable onto the stack 1 byte
65 array Pops the array location, element size and index off the stack, the pushes a pointer to the index of that array onto the stack 1 byte
66 switch Pops the item to compare off the stack, and then jumps to location corresponding to that item. After the opcode byte it contains a byte defining the number of possible entries, and after that the number of possible entries times 8 are taken up with repeating instances of 4 bytes of the index identifier, and 4 bytes of the location to jump to if that index is correct (Byte after opcode * 8) + 2
67 spush Pushes a string onto the stack. The byte after the opcode signals the string length, and for the amount of string length after that byte contains each character of the string (Byte after opcode)+2
68 null Pushes a pointer to an empty memory container onto the stack 1 byte
69 scpy Pops 2 pointers off the stack, and copies the second item to the first item 1 byte
70 itos Pops an integer off the stack and pushes an array to a string representation of that integer onto the stack 1 byte
71 sadd Pops 2 pointers off the stack, and appends the second item to the first item 1 byte
72 saddi Pops 2 items off the stack, and performs a IntToStr on the second item (the integer), then appends that string representation to the first item 1 byte
73 catch Sets up a safe area that has the ability to catch errors 1 byte
74 throw Indicates an area that handles a script error relative to the catch opcode 1 byte
75 memcpy Pops 3 items off the stack. Copies the third item's memory into the first item's memory with repeating defined by the second item. It then appends a null terminator to the first item's memory 1 byte
76 getxprotect Pops a memory location off the stack and pushes its XLive unprotected value onto the stack (PC Only) 1 byte
77 setxprotect Pops a memory location off the stack, pops another value off the stack. Protects the second value using XLive and stores the value in the memory location. (PC Only) 1 byte
78 refxprotect Pops a memory location off the stack, pops another value off the stack to determine protection flags, and finally pops another value which indicates the number of items to operate on. If the 1st bit of the flags is set, the number of items at the memory location will be XLive unprotected. If the 2nd bit is set, they will be XLive protected instead. (PC Only) 1 byte
79 exit Terminates the script under an error condition 1 byte
80 -> 255 ipush1 Pushes an integer onto the stack. The integer is defined by the opcode number - 96. For example opcode 95 would push -1 onto the stack, and opcode 97 would push 1 1 byte

^ The Vectors on the stack are pointers to the memory containing the full vector. A Vector is characterised by this structure:

4b - FLOAT32 - X
4b - FLOAT32 - Y
4b - FLOAT32 - Z

Global Variables

This contains the Global Variables in the script. Each global variable is 4 bytes long, and can contain static information in the script file itself.

Public Variables

It is uncertain what this section actually does.

High Level Representation

To turn the assembly of a SCO file into a high level representation some factors have to be considered. Arrays and structures can be defined, so it is reasonable to assume there is some kind of typecasting, even if it is only between the following types; int, float, string or a predefined structure. It is interesting to note that opcodes exist to typecast integers and concatenate them directly to strings, this suggests the SCO language has a java like way of handling strings (using + and += for concatenation). The SCO file does not seem to have native support for the notion of classes, however this is not to say they could not be implemented within SCO itself similar to how they are done at a low level in C++.

Tools

See also

External link