man/cat1p/od.1p.txt

od(P) od(P)
 
 
 
 
 
NAME
       od - dump files in various formats
 
SYNOPSIS
       od [-v][-A address_base][-j skip][-N count][-t
       type_string]...
              [file...]
 
 
 
       od [-bcdosx][file] [[+]offset[.][b]]
 
 
DESCRIPTION
       The od utility shall write the contents of its input
       files to standard output in a user-specified format.
 
OPTIONS
       The od utility shall conform to the Base Definitions
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 12.2, Utility
       Syntax Guidelines, except that the order of presentation
       of the -t options and the -bcdosx options is signifi-
       cant.
 
       The following options shall be supported:
 
       -A address_base
 
              Specify the input offset base. See the EXTENDED
              DESCRIPTION section. The application shall
              ensure that the address_base option-argument is a
              character. The characters 'd' , 'o' , and 'x'
              specify that the offset base shall be written in
              decimal, octal, or hexadecimal, respectively. The
              character 'n' specifies that the offset shall not
              be written.
 
       -b Interpret bytes in octal. This shall be equiva-
              lent to -t o1.
 
       -c Interpret bytes as characters specified by the
              current setting of the LC_CTYPE category. Certain
              non-graphic characters appear as C escapes:
              "NUL=\0" , "BS=\b" , "FF=\f" , "NL=\n" , "CR=\r"
              , "HT=\t" ; others appear as 3-digit octal num-
              bers.
 
       -d Interpret words (two-byte units) in unsigned dec-
              imal. This shall be equivalent to -t u2.
 
       -j skip
              Jump over skip bytes from the beginning of the
              input. The od utility shall read or seek past the
              first skip bytes in the concatenated input files.
              If the combined input is not at least skip bytes
              long, the od utility shall write a diagnostic
              message to standard error and exit with a non-
              zero exit status.
 
       By default, the skip option-argument shall be inter-
       preted as a decimal number. With a leading 0x or 0X, the
       offset shall be interpreted as a hexadecimal number;
       otherwise, with a leading '0' , the offset shall be
       interpreted as an octal number. Appending the character
       'b' , 'k' , or 'm' to offset shall cause it to be inter-
       preted as a multiple of 512, 1024, or 1048576 bytes,
       respectively. If the skip number is hexadecimal, any
       appended 'b' shall be considered to be the final hexa-
       decimal digit.
 
       -N count
              Format no more than count bytes of input. By
              default, count shall be interpreted as a decimal
              number. With a leading 0x or 0X, count shall be
              interpreted as a hexadecimal number; otherwise,
              with a leading '0' , it shall be interpreted as
              an octal number. If count bytes of input (after
              successfully skipping, if -j skip is specified)
              are not available, it shall not be considered an
              error; the od utility shall format the input that
              is available.
 
       -o Interpret words (two-byte units) in octal. This
              shall be equivalent to -t o2.
 
       -s Interpret words (two-byte units) in signed deci-
              mal. This shall be equivalent to -t d2.
 
       -t type_string
 
              Specify one or more output types. See the
              EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section. The application
              shall ensure that the type_string option-argument
              is a string specifying the types to be used when
              writing the input data. The string shall consist
              of the type specification characters a , c , d ,
              f , o , u , and x , specifying named character,
              character, signed decimal, floating point, octal,
              unsigned decimal, and hexadecimal, respectively.
              The type specification characters d , f , o , u ,
              and x can be followed by an optional unsigned
              decimal integer that specifies the number of
              bytes to be transformed by each instance of the
              output type. The type specification character f
              can be followed by an optional F , D , or L indi-
              cating that the conversion should be applied to
              an item of type float, double, or long double,
              respectively. The type specification characters d
              , o , u , and x can be followed by an optional C
              , S , I , or L indicating that the conversion
              should be applied to an item of type char, short,
              int, or long, respectively. Multiple types can be
              concatenated within the same type_string and mul-
              tiple -t options can be specified. Output lines
              shall be written for each type specified in the
              order in which the type specification characters
              are specified.
 
       -v Write all input data. Without the -v option, any
              number of groups of output lines, which would be
              identical to the immediately preceding group of
              output lines (except for the byte offsets), shall
              be replaced with a line containing only an aster-
              isk ( '*' ).
 
       -x Interpret words (two-byte units) in hexadecimal.
              This shall be equivalent to -t x2.
 
 
       Multiple types can be specified by using multiple
       -bcdostx options. Output lines are written for each
       type specified in the order in which the types are spec-
       ified.
 
OPERANDS
       The following operands shall be supported:
 
       file A pathname of a file to be read. If no file oper-
              ands are specified, the standard input shall be
              used.
 
       If there are no more than two operands, none of the -A,
       -j, -N, or -t options is specified, and either of the
       following is true: the first character of the last oper-
       and is a plus sign ( '+' ), or there are two operands
       and the first character of the last operand is numeric;
        the last operand shall be interpreted as an offset op-
       erand on XSI-conformant systems. Under these condi-
       tions, the results are unspecified on systems that are
       not XSI-conformant systems.
 
       [+]offset[.][b]
              The offset operand specifies the offset in the
              file where dumping is to commence. This operand
              is normally interpreted as octal bytes. If '.' is
              appended, the offset shall be interpreted in dec-
              imal. If 'b' is appended, the offset shall be
              interpreted in units of 512 bytes.
 
 
STDIN
       The standard input shall be used only if no file oper-
       ands are specified. See the INPUT FILES section.
 
INPUT FILES
       The input files can be any file type.
 
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The following environment variables shall affect the
       execution of od:
 
       LANG Provide a default value for the internationaliza-
              tion variables that are unset or null. (See the
              Base Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,
              Section 8.2, Internationalization Variables for
              the precedence of internationalization variables
              used to determine the values of locale cate-
              gories.)
 
       LC_ALL If set to a non-empty string value, override the
              values of all the other internationalization
              variables.
 
       LC_CTYPE
              Determine the locale for the interpretation of
              sequences of bytes of text data as characters
              (for example, single-byte as opposed to multi-
              byte characters in arguments and input files).
 
       LC_MESSAGES
              Determine the locale that should be used to
              affect the format and contents of diagnostic mes-
              sages written to standard error.
 
       LC_NUMERIC
 
              Determine the locale for selecting the radix
              character used when writing floating-point for-
              matted output.
 
       NLSPATH
              Determine the location of message catalogs for
              the processing of LC_MESSAGES .
 
 
ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       Default.
 
STDOUT
       See the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.
 
STDERR
       The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic
       messages.
 
OUTPUT FILES
       None.
 
EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
       The od utility shall copy sequentially each input file
       to standard output, transforming the input data accord-
       ing to the output types specified by the -t option or
       the -bcdosx options. If no output type is specified,
       the default output shall be as if -t oS had been speci-
       fied.
 
       The number of bytes transformed by the output type spec-
       ifier c may be variable depending on the LC_CTYPE cate-
       gory.
 
       The default number of bytes transformed by output type
       specifiers d , f , o , u , and x corresponds to the var-
       ious C-language types as follows. If the c99 compiler is
       present on the system, these specifiers shall correspond
       to the sizes used by default in that compiler. Other-
       wise, these sizes may vary among systems that conform to
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.
 
              For the type specifier characters d , o , u , and
              x , the default number of bytes shall correspond
              to the size of the underlying implementation's
              basic integer type. For these specifier charac-
              ters, the implementation shall support values of
              the optional number of bytes to be converted cor-
              responding to the number of bytes in the C-lan-
              guage types char, short, int, and long. These
              numbers can also be specified by an application
              as the characters 'C' , 'S' , 'I' , and 'L' ,
              respectively. The implementation shall also sup-
              port the values 1, 2, 4, and 8, even if it pro-
              vides no C-Language types of those sizes. The
              implementation shall support the decimal value
              corresponding to the C-language type long long.
              The byte order used when interpreting numeric
              values is implementation-defined, but shall cor-
              respond to the order in which a constant of the
              corresponding type is stored in memory on the
              system.
 
              For the type specifier character f , the default
              number of bytes shall correspond to the number of
              bytes in the underlying implementation's basic
              double precision floating-point data type. The
              implementation shall support values of the
              optional number of bytes to be converted corre-
              sponding to the number of bytes in the C-language
              types float, double, and long double. These num-
              bers can also be specified by an application as
              the characters 'F' , 'D' , and 'L' , respec-
              tively.
 
       The type specifier character a specifies that bytes
       shall be interpreted as named characters from the Inter-
       national Reference Version (IRV) of the ISO/IEC 646:1991
       standard. Only the least significant seven bits of each
       byte shall be used for this type specification. Bytes
       with the values listed in the following table shall be
       written using the corresponding names for those charac-
       ters.
       Table: Named Characters in od
Value Name Value Name Value Name Value Name
\000 nul \001 soh \002 stx \003 etx
\004 eot \005 enq \006 ack \007 bel
\010 bs \011 ht \012 lf or nl \013 vt
\014 ff \015 cr \016 so \017 si
\020 dle \021 dc1 \022 dc2 \023 dc3
\024 dc4 \025 nak \026 syn \027 etb
\030 can \031 em \032 sub \033 esc
\034 fs \035 gs \036 rs \037 us
\040 sp \177 del
 
       Note: The "\012" value may be written either as lf or
              nl.
 
 
       The type specifier character c specifies that bytes
       shall be interpreted as characters specified by the cur-
       rent setting of the LC_CTYPE locale category. Characters
       listed in the table in the Base Definitions volume of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Chapter 5, File Format Notation (
       '\\' , '\a' , '\b' , '\f' , '\n' , '\r' , '\t' , '\v' )
       shall be written as the corresponding escape sequences,
       except that backslash shall be written as a single back-
       slash and a NUL shall be written as '\0' . Other non-
       printable characters shall be written as one three-digit
       octal number for each byte in the character. If the size
       of a byte on the system is greater than nine bits, the
       format used for non-printable characters is implementa-
       tion-defined. Printable multi-byte characters shall be
       written in the area corresponding to the first byte of
       the character; the two-character sequence "**" shall be
       written in the area corresponding to each remaining byte
       in the character, as an indication that the character is
       continued. When either the -j skip or -N count option is
       specified along with the c type specifier, and this
       results in an attempt to start or finish in the middle
       of a multi-byte character, the result is implementation-
       defined.
 
       The input data shall be manipulated in blocks, where a
       block is defined as a multiple of the least common mul-
       tiple of the number of bytes transformed by the speci-
       fied output types. If the least common multiple is
       greater than 16, the results are unspecified. Each
       input block shall be written as transformed by each out-
       put type, one per written line, in the order that the
       output types were specified. If the input block size is
       larger than the number of bytes transformed by the out-
       put type, the output type shall sequentially transform
       the parts of the input block, and the output from each
       of the transformations shall be separated by one or more
       <blank>s.
 
       If, as a result of the specification of the -N option or
       end-of-file being reached on the last input file, input
       data only partially satisfies an output type, the input
       shall be extended sufficiently with null bytes to write
       the last byte of the input.
 
       Unless -A n is specified, the first output line produced
       for each input block shall be preceded by the input off-
       set, cumulative across input files, of the next byte to
       be written. The format of the input offset is unspeci-
       fied; however, it shall not contain any <blank>s, shall
       start at the first character of the output line, and
       shall be followed by one or more <blank>s. In addition,
       the offset of the byte following the last byte written
       shall be written after all the input data has been pro-
       cessed, but shall not be followed by any <blank>s.
 
       If no -A option is specified, the input offset base is
       unspecified.
 
EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values shall be returned:
 
        0 All input files were processed successfully.
 
       >0 An error occurred.
 
 
CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
       Default.
 
       The following sections are informative.
 
APPLICATION USAGE
       XSI-conformant applications are warned not to use file-
       names starting with '+' or a first operand starting with
       a numeric character so that the old functionality can be
       maintained by implementations, unless they specify one
       of the -A, -j, or -N options. To guarantee that one of
       these filenames is always interpreted as a filename, an
       application could always specify the address base format
       with the -A option.
 
EXAMPLES
       If a file containing 128 bytes with decimal values zero
       to 127, in increasing order, is supplied as standard
       input to the command:
 
 
              od -A d -t a
 
       on an implementation using an input block size of 16
       bytes, the standard output, independent of the current
       locale setting, would be similar to:
 
 
              0000000 nul soh stx etx eot enq ack bel bs ht nl vt ff cr so si
              0000016 dle dc1 dc2 dc3 dc4 nak syn etb can em sub esc fs gs rs us
              0000032 sp ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . /
              0000048 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ?
              0000064 @ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O
              0000080 P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _
              0000096 ` a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o
              0000112 p q r s t u v w x y z { | } ~ del
              0000128
 
       Note that this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 allows nl
       or lf to be used as the name for the ISO/IEC 646:1991
       standard IRV character with decimal value 10. The IRV
       names this character lf (line feed), but traditional
       implementations have referred to this character as new-
       line ( nl) and the POSIX locale character set symbolic
       name for the corresponding character is a <newline>.
 
       The command:
 
 
              od -A o -t o2x2x -N 18
 
       on a system with 32-bit words and an implementation
       using an input block size of 16 bytes could write 18
       bytes in approximately the following format:
 
 
              0000000 032056 031440 041123 042040 052516 044530 020043 031464
                        342e 3320 4253 4420 554e 4958 2023 3334
                           342e3320 42534420 554e4958 20233334
              0000020 032472
                        353a
                           353a0000
              0000022
 
       The command:
 
 
              od -A d -t f -t o4 -t x4 -N 24 -j 0x15
 
       on a system with 64-bit doubles (for example,
       IEEE Std 754-1985 double precision floating-point for-
       mat) would skip 21 bytes of input data and then write 24
       bytes in approximately the following format:
 
 
              0000000 1.00000000000000e+00 1.57350000000000e+01
                      07774000000 00000000000 10013674121 35341217270
                         3ff00000 00000000 402f3851 eb851eb8
              0000016 1.40668230000000e+02
                      10030312542 04370303230
                         40619562 23e18698
              0000024
 
RATIONALE
       The od utility went through several names in early pro-
       posals, including hd, xd, and most recently hexdump.
       There were several objections to all of these based on
       the following reasons:
 
              The hd and xd names conflicted with historical
              utilities that behaved differently.
 
              The hexdump description was much more complex
              than needed for a simple dump utility.
 
              The od utility has been available on all histori-
              cal implementations and there was no need to cre-
              ate a new name for a utility so similar to the
              historical od utility.
 
       The original reasons for not standardizing historical od
       were also fairly widespread. Those reasons are given
       below along with rationale explaining why the standard
       developers believe that this version does not suffer
       from the indicated problem:
 
              The BSD and System V versions of od have
              diverged, and the intersection of features pro-
              vided by both does not meet the needs of the user
              community. In fact, the System V version only
              provides a mechanism for dumping octal bytes and
              shorts, signed and unsigned decimal shorts, hexa-
              decimal shorts, and ASCII characters. BSD added
              the ability to dump floats, doubles, named ASCII
              characters, and octal, signed decimal, unsigned
              decimal, and hexadecimal longs. The version pre-
              sented here provides more normalized forms for
              dumping bytes, shorts, ints, and longs in octal,
              signed decimal, unsigned decimal, and hexadeci-
              mal; float, double, and long double; and named
              ASCII as well as current locale characters.
 
              It would not be possible to come up with a
              compatible superset of the BSD and System V flags
              that met the requirements of the standard devel-
              opers. The historical default od output is the
              specified default output of this utility. None of
              the option letters chosen for this version of od
              conflict with any of the options to historical
              versions of od.
 
              On systems with different sizes for short, int,
              and long, there was no way to ask for dumps of
              ints, even in the BSD version. Because of the way
              options are named, the name space could not be
              extended to solve these problems. This is why the
              -t option was added (with type specifiers more
              closely matched to the printf() formats used in
              the rest of this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001)
              and the optional field sizes were added to the d
              , f , o , u , and x type specifiers. It is also
              one of the reasons why the historical practice
              was not mandated as a required obsolescent form
              of od. (Although the old versions of od are not
              listed as an obsolescent form, implementations
              are urged to continue to recognize the older
              forms for several more years.) The a , c , f , o
              , and x types match the meaning of the corre-
              sponding format characters in the historical
              implementations of od except for the default
              sizes of the fields converted. The d format is
              signed in this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 to
              match the printf() notation. (Historical versions
              of od used d as a synonym for u in this version.
              The System V implementation uses s for signed
              decimal; BSD uses i for signed decimal and s for
              null-terminated strings.) Other than d and u ,
              all of the type specifiers match format charac-
              ters in the historical BSD version of od.
 
              The sizes of the C-language types char, short,
              int, long, float, double, and long double are
              used even though it is recognized that there may
              be zero or more than one compiler for the C lan-
              guage on an implementation and that they may use
              different sizes for some of these types. (For
              example, one compiler might use 2 bytes shorts, 2
              bytes ints, and 4 bytes longs, while another com-
              piler (or an option to the same compiler) uses 2
              bytes shorts, 4 bytes ints, and 4 bytes longs.)
              Nonetheless, there has to be a basic size known
              by the implementation for these types, corre-
              sponding to the values reported by invocations of
              the getconf utility when called with system_var
              operands {UCHAR_MAX}, {USHORT_MAX}, {UINT_MAX},
              and {ULONG_MAX} for the types char, short, int,
              and long, respectively. There are similar con-
              stants required by the ISO C standard, but not
              required by the System Interfaces volume of
              IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 or this volume of
              IEEE Std 1003.1-2001. They are {FLT_MANT_DIG},
              {DBL_MANT_DIG}, and {LDBL_MANT_DIG} for the types
              float, double, and long double, respectively. If
              the optional c99 utility is provided by the
              implementation and used as specified by this vol-
              ume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, these are the sizes
              that would be provided. If an option is used that
              specifies different sizes for these types, there
              is no guarantee that the od utility is able to
              interpret binary data output by such a program
              correctly.
 
              This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires that
              the numeric values of these lengths be recognized
              by the od utility and that symbolic forms also be
              recognized. Thus, a conforming application can
              always look at an array of unsigned long data
              elements using od -t uL.
 
              The method of specifying the format for the
              address field based on specifying a starting off-
              set in a file unnecessarily tied the two
              together. The -A option now specifies the address
              base and the -S option specifies a starting off-
              set.
 
              It would be difficult to break the dependence on
              U.S. ASCII to achieve an internationalized util-
              ity. It does not seem to be any harder for od to
              dump characters in the current locale than it is
              for the ed or sed l commands. The c type speci-
              fier does this without difficulty and is com-
              pletely compatible with the historical implemen-
              tations of the c format character when the cur-
              rent locale uses a superset of the
              ISO/IEC 646:1991 standard as a codeset. The a
              type specifier (from the BSD a format character)
              was left as a portable means to dump ASCII (or
              more correctly ISO/IEC 646:1991 standard (IRV))
              so that headers produced by pax could be deci-
              phered even on systems that do not use the
              ISO/IEC 646:1991 standard as a subset of their
              base codeset.
 
       The use of "**" as an indication of continuation of a
       multi-byte character in c specifier output was chosen
       based on seeing an implementation that uses this method.
       The continuation bytes have to be marked in a way that
       is not ambiguous with another single-byte or multi-byte
       character.
 
       An early proposal used -S and -n, respectively, for the
       -j and -N options eventually selected. These were
       changed to avoid conflicts with historical implementa-
       tions.
 
       The original standard specified -t o2 as the default
       when no output type was given. This was changed to -t oS
       (the length of a short) to accommodate a supercomputer
       implementation that historically used 64 bits as its
       default (and that defined shorts as 64 bits). This
       change should not affect conforming applications. The
       requirement to support lengths of 1, 2, and 4 was added
       at the same time to address an historical implementation
       that had no two-byte data types in its C compiler.
 
       The use of a basic integer data type is intended to
       allow the implementation to choose a word size commonly
       used by applications on that architecture.
 
FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       All option and operand interfaces marked as extensions
       may be withdrawn in a future version.
 
SEE ALSO
       c99 , sed
 
COPYRIGHT
       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in
       electronic form from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition,
       Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operat-
       ing System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Speci-
       fications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by the
       Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc
       and The Open Group. In the event of any discrepancy
       between this version and the original IEEE and The Open
       Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group
       Standard is the referee document. The original Standard
       can be obtained online at http://www.open-
       group.org/unix/online.html .
 
 
 
POSIX 2003 od(P)