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VitaDB - A Database for PS Vita content

Description

This is a database of Vita content, that includes pretty much of all the games, applications, DLCs, updates, etc. that are currently publicly known, and that is provided in the easy-to-work-with and universally supported SQLite format, as well as a Windows/Linux/MacOS .NET Core 2.0 application that demonstrates how the database can be manipulated.

Target Audience

This project is intended for developers or web site creators, who may be interested in building applications that revolve around the provision of Vita content. Like a library (.dll, .so) it is not meant to be used directly by end-users.

Purpose

The availability of this database can, we hope, help with many new possibilities.

One would be the recreation of one's legally owned content in a manner that is both a lot more convenient and much much faster than what can be achieved through Sony's very limited content management application as well as its annoyingly non-user friendly and sloooooow proprietary memory card format.

Another would be with the cataloguing and updating of public Vita content, using PSDLE data, through a web service.

Yet another possibility would be cataloguing applications that can either run on the Vita itself or from a PC with access to the Vita memory card.

All in all, we hope that this database can become the de-facto, up-to-date repository for any application that needs to process Vita content.

About NoNpDrm and zRIF content

You will NOT find any zRIFs (licenses) in the data provided in this project because its goal is to keep track of official PS Vita content only.

Still, for people who might want to back up their own content licenses using NoNpDrm, the database does provides a placeholder for zRIFs, and the application also demonstrates how zRIF data can be imported. But that's about it.

Usage

You must have sorted out to run .NET Core 2.0 applications on your machine. If you don't know how, please google it.

Usage: VitaDB [OPTIONS]

Options:
  -m, --maintenance          perform database maintenance
  -i, --input=VALUE          name of the input file or URL
  -o, --output=VALUE         name of the output file
  -c, --csv                  import/export CSV (Content type is deduced from filename)
  -n, --nps                  import data from NoPayStation online spreadsheet
      --chihiro              refresh db from Chihiro
      --psn                  refresh db from PSN
      --region               internal region check
  -d, --dump                 dump database to SQL (requires sqlite3.exe)
  -p, --purge                purge/create a new PKG cache dictionary
  -u, --url=VALUE            update DB from PSN Store/Pkg URL(s)
      --version              display version and exit
  -v                         increase verbosity
  -z, --zrif                 import/export zRIFs
  -w, --wait-for-key         wait for keypress before exiting
  -h, --help                 show this message and exit

Examples:

dotnet VitaDB.dll -n
dotnet VitaDB.dll -c -o apps.csv
dotnet VitaDB.dll -c -o dlc.csv
dotnet VitaDB.dll -u url_list.txt
dotnet VitaDB.dll --psn
dotnet VitaDB.dll -m

Once the database has been created/updated, you can use an SQLite local browser, such as the multiplatform one from http://sqlitebrowser.org/, to view the data.

You can also edit the content of the .ini file according to your requirements.

Database structure

Apps

  • TITLE_ID The 9 alphanumeric character identifier of a title. Note that the first 4 characters also identify the region (you can see the region table in the ini file). Because TITLE_ID is always contained in CONTENT_ID, this column is redundant, but provided for convenience.
  • NAME The official name of the game, as per the Sony servers (including any typos and ® or ™, but trimmed of leading or trailing white spaces and LFs)
  • ALT_NAME A user defined alternate name. This can be used, for instance, for the English translation of a Japanese title.
  • CONTENT_ID THE identifier of a published App/Game/Addon/Theme/Avatar. This is what Sony uses to uniquely identify content, so we do too. As such, this is the table's primary key. As mentioned earlier, CONTENT_ID always contains the TITLE_ID.
  • PARENT_ID The CONTENT_ID of any parent application. For instance, PARENT_ID can be used with an App/Game to link to the CONTENT_ID of a bundle (e.g a PS3 or PS4 multiplatform purchase) or, for DLCs, to the CONTENT_ID of the App the DLC applies to.
  • CATEGORY An integer representing the application category. See the Categories table below.
  • PKG_ID The optional ID of a PKG entry from the Pkgs table. This is basically used to access the official URL where one can download content from the Sony servers.
  • ZRIF A PLACEHOLDER field for zRIFs. This is provided as a placeholder so that applications that use this DB can use this field to store your legally owned licenses, in your personal copy of the DB.
  • COMMENTS A placeholder for comments.
  • FLAGS A set of binary flags, that are used to set specific fields to read-only, so that they don't get altered when importing data, or to indicate if an application is a free. See the Flags table below for details.

Pkgs

  • ID An auto incremented integer ID to uniquely identify each pkg link. This is done so that we don't have to use the very long URLs as primary keys.
  • URL A unique PKG URl. The URLs can indiscriminately be for games, apps, DLC, themes, patches, etc.
  • SIZE The size of the PKG as read from the servers. You should use a 64-bit integer to map this, as it can be more than 4 GB.
  • SHA1 The hex representation of the Pkg SHA1 (last 20 bytes from end-0x20). For convenience, this is being stored as a string (that needs to be converted) rather than a byte array.
  • CATEGORY A short sequence of letters describing the pkg category. This data mostly comes from the SFO.
  • APP_VER The application version, represented as the decimal number major *100 + minor (e.g. 100 for v1.0)
  • SYS_VER The minimum required system version, represented as the decimal number major *100 + minor (e.g. 355 for v3.55)
  • C_DATE The date when the application was created, in YYYYMMDD format. This data comes from the SFO.
  • V_DATE The date when the PKG was last retrieved, in YYYYMMDD format.
  • COMMENTS A placeholder for comments.

Updates

  • CONTENT_ID The application this update applies to.
  • VERSION The application version, represented as the decimal number major *100 + minor (e.g. 210 for v2.10)
  • TYPE The type of update. See the Types table below.
  • PKG_ID The ID of a update PKG entry in the Pkgs table. This is the primary key.

Categories

This table contains the values used for CATEGORY used by the Apps table.

The values are organized so that Games/Apps should have a value that is < 100, DLC < 200, Themes < 300, etc. This is done so that searching for Games/Apps, DLC and so on, in the Apps table, can be carried out very easily.

Flags

This table contains the values used for FLAGS in the Apps table. Each value is a power of 2 that, if found in the FLAGS column, indicates whether a specific Flag is active or not. The _RO values are for flags indicating whether a column should be read-only, whereas FREE_APP indicates applications that don't need a license to run.

Types

This is used by the Updates table to denote the type of update. There are currently only 3 types: cumulative, incremental and hybrid, which are pretty much a direct mapping of the types reported by the Sony update XML data.

FAQ

Why store the SHA-1?

Besides being useful to check for pkg corruption, this can also be done to detect any silent changes that Sony may apply to PKG data. For instance, it is not difficult to imagine that, should Sony decide they've had enough of Henkaku/Enso 3.60 users who download pkg data off their servers, they could relatively easily modify all or a choice set of pkg they serve with an eboot to force a silent system upgrade to 3.61+. By storing a copy of the PKG SHA-1, along with the date when that SHA-1 was retrieved, it becomes possible to detect this kind of "silent upgrade" scenario.

Why is CONTENT_ID used as primary key, rather than TITLE_ID?

That's because you can have both a DEMO and FULL game served from same TITLE_ID, with different PKG urls and CONTENT_ID. For instance:

  • 漢字 点つなぎセット (DEMO) = JP9000-PCSC00038_00-PP2JP00000000001
  • 漢字 点つなぎセット (FULL) = JP9000-PCSC00038_00-KANJITEN00000001

What's the purpose of PkgCache.json?

PkgCache.json is a locally cached version of a PKG URL to CONTENT_ID dictionary. This avoids having to perform a time consuming round trip to the Sony PKG servers every time we want to validate the CONTENT_ID of a PKG, which is a very frequent operation. The JSON data is simply the serialized version of internal dictionary we use.

One may consider that this duplicates data that is already present in the database, but it's really the other way around: this is external data that is needed to validate the consistency of the database, and that we duplicate locally to avoid having to query the PKG servers.

Note that you can use the -p option if you want to recreate your own PkgCache.json instead of reusing the one from the gtihub project.

Why isn't the SHA-1 column set to be UNIQUE?

Because Sony has found nothing better than provide the exact same content (a 10 GB... patch?!?) for Phantasy Star Online under 2 different URLs:

  • http://gs.ww.np.dl.playstation.net/ppkg/np/PCSG00141/PCSG00141_T175/7e215919b18a27eb/JP0177-PCSG00141_00-PHANTASYSTARONL2-A0500-V0100-b501028c7b01305693f0b5768dadf2ef71c553b6-PE.pkg
  • http://gs.ww.np.dl.playstation.net/ppkg/np/PCSG00141/PCSG00141_T176/4f153d40849e6856/JP0177-PCSG00141_00-PHANTASYSTARONL2-A0500-V0100-313ed2cf66018279e89ba59c44db9a7de1e4b287-PE.pkg

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