Mac OS X stores some files with resource forks. I need to create a file with a resource fork. The trouble is, I need to create this file on the command line. Is anyone aware of how you can create a file with a resource fork on the command line in Mac OS X?
4 Answers
You can directly access the resource fork of a file using path/to/file/..namedfork/rsrc.

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First, OS X doesn't really use resource forks... it supports named forks and HFS+ supports the resource forks, but that's mostly for backwards compatibility with OS 9 and old-style Carbon stuff... however, there are command line tools installed with the Developer Tools (so you'll have to install these... if you don't have them, you can get them from developer.apple.com).
See the man pages for the following tools:
ResMerger Rez RezDet RezWack
The man pages are installed with the developer tools, so
man Rez
in the terminal will work. The man pages are also available online:

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As an alternative, you can make a copy of an existing file, fork and all, using ditto:
ditto -rsrc srcFile dstFile

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If you're trying to add a rich text resource fork (for example, to display software license when mounting a .dmg), check out Rainer Brockerhoff's free AddLicense source code.

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