I want to build a bash program that can read a file, like a *.bin and print all its hexadecimal numbers, as 'hex' editors do. Where I can start?
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http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/10826/shell-how-to-read-the-bytes-of-a-binary-file-and-print-as-hexadecimal – Ciro Santilli OurBigBook.com Sep 04 '15 at 08:22
4 Answers
Use the od command,
od -t x1 filename

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Is `od` a Linux program or a bash function? Sorry, I'm a really beginner. – Nathan Campos Jan 05 '10 at 02:39
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2@Nathan Campos: you can find out using `which od`, if you get the name of a program then it's an external program (for `od`, it probably is). – Greg Hewgill Jan 05 '10 at 02:46
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4pretty standard in unixes, been around since the dawn of time. – President James K. Polk Jan 05 '10 at 03:00
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@GregHewgill Thats wrong. Look at this from my Ubuntu machine. ~ $ type [ [ is a shell builtin ~ $ which [ /usr/bin/[ – GKFX Jan 09 '15 at 17:48
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1@NathanCampos more importantly, it is POSIX: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/od.html :-) – Ciro Santilli OurBigBook.com Sep 04 '15 at 08:20
Edit: Added "bytestream" functionality. If the script name contains the word "stream" (e.g. it's a symlink such as ln -s bash-hexdump bash-hexdump-stream
and run as ./bash-hexdump-stream
), it will output a continuous stream of hex characters representing the contents of the file. Otherwise its output will look like hexdump -C
.
It takes a bunch of trickery since Bash isn't really good at binary:
#!/bin/bash
# bash-hexdump
# by Dennis Williamson - 2010-01-04
# in response to http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2003803/show-hexadecimal-numbers-of-a-file
# usage: bash-hexdump file
if [[ -z "$1" ]]
then
exec 3<&0 # read stdin
[[ -p /dev/stdin ]] || tty="yes" # no pipe
else
exec 3<"$1" # read file
fi
# if the script name contains "stream" then output will be continuous hex digits
# like hexdump -ve '1/1 "%.2x"'
[[ $0 =~ stream ]] && nostream=false || nostream=true
saveIFS="$IFS"
IFS="" # disables interpretation of \t, \n and space
saveLANG="$LANG"
LANG=C # allows characters > 0x7F
bytecount=0
valcount=0
$nostream && printf "%08x " $bytecount
while read -s -u 3 -d '' -r -n 1 char # -d '' allows newlines, -r allows \
do
((bytecount++))
printf -v val "%02x" "'$char" # see below for the ' trick
[[ "$tty" == "yes" && "$val" == "04" ]] && break # exit on ^D
echo -n "$val"
$nostream && echo -n " "
((valcount++))
if [[ "$val" < 20 || "$val" > 7e ]]
then
string+="." # show unprintable characters as a dot
else
string+=$char
fi
if $nostream && (( bytecount % 8 == 0 )) # add a space down the middle
then
echo -n " "
fi
if (( bytecount % 16 == 0 )) # print 16 values per line
then
$nostream && echo "|$string|"
string=''
valcount=0
$nostream && printf "%08x " $bytecount
fi
done
if [[ "$string" != "" ]] # if the last line wasn't full, pad it out
then
length=${#string}
if (( length > 7 ))
then
((length--))
fi
(( length += (16 - valcount) * 3 + 4))
$nostream && printf "%${length}s\n" "|$string|"
$nostream && printf "%08x " $bytecount
fi
$nostream && echo
LANG="$saveLANG";
IFS="$saveIFS"
The apostrophe trick is documented here. The relevant part says:
If the leading character is a single-quote or double-quote, the value shall be the numeric value in the underlying codeset of the character following the single-quote or double-quote.
Here is some output from the script showing the first few lines of my /bin/bash
plus a few more:
00000000 7f 45 4c 46 01 01 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |.ELF............| 00000010 02 00 03 00 01 00 00 00 e0 1e 06 08 34 00 00 00 |............4...| 00000020 c4 57 0d 00 00 00 00 00 34 00 20 00 09 00 28 00 |.W......4. ...(.| 00000030 1d 00 1c 00 06 00 00 00 34 00 00 00 34 80 04 08 |........4...4...| . . . 00000150 01 00 00 00 2f 6c 69 62 2f 6c 64 2d 6c 69 6e 75 |..../lib/ld-linu| 00000160 78 2e 73 6f 2e 32 00 00 04 00 00 00 10 00 00 00 |x.so.2..........| 00000170 01 00 00 00 47 4e 55 00 00 00 00 00 02 00 00 00 |....GNU.........|

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1By the way, the output format of this script is the same as `hexdump -C` or `hd`. – Dennis Williamson Jan 05 '10 at 05:08
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2Nice to see someone doing unusual and even binary things with bash. Very interesting piece of code ! – ajaaskel Nov 15 '14 at 21:29
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@nkvnkv: Read the question: "I want to build a bash program..." Also, notice that my answer was accepted by the OP and read the comments attached to my answer. Thanks for the downvote. – Dennis Williamson Apr 22 '16 at 23:28
you can also use hexdump if you have it
hexdump -x /usr/bin/binaryfile

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