Reputation: 3905
How can I create a binary file with consequent binary values in Bash?
Like:
hexdump testfile
0000000 0100 0302 0504 0706 0908 0b0a 0d0c 0f0e
0000010 1110 1312 1514 1716 1918 1b1a 1d1c 1f1e
0000020 2120 2322 2524 2726 2928 2b2a 2d2c 2f2e
0000030 ....
In C, I do:
fd = open("testfile", O_RDWR | O_CREAT);
for (i=0; i< CONTENT_SIZE; i++)
{
testBufOut[i] = i;
}
num_bytes_written = write(fd, testBufOut, CONTENT_SIZE);
close (fd);
This is what I wanted:
#! /bin/bash
i=0
while [ $i -lt 256 ]; do
h=$(printf "%.2X\n" $i)
echo "$h"| xxd -r -p
i=$((i-1))
done
Upvotes: 20
Views: 68281
Reputation: 3830
In Unix, and Unix-like systems, the developers forgot about this ability built into previous and competing systems (by way of a monitor program in ROM).
There is no way in this family of systems to create a binary file from keyboard input, without first transferring a program to do so.
It is because at the time (mid 1970s), this path diverged from the competing paths, user-accessible (interpreter), and user-usable (built in).
Thus, a compiler is a dependency necessary to create a binary on these systems, even though very few bytes of code is required in ROM to allow a user to enter a binary file, including an executable one, on any computer.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 15328
If you don't mind to not use an existing command and want to describe you data in a text file, you can use binmake. That is a C++ program that you can compile and use like following:
First get and compile binmake (the binary will be in bin/
):
git clone https://github.com/dadadel/binmake
cd binmake
make
Create your text file file.txt
:
big-endian
00010203
04050607
# Separated bytes not concerned by endianness
08 09 0a 0b 0c 0d 0e 0f
Generate your binary file file.bin
:
./binmake file.txt file.bin
hexdump file.bin
0000000 0100 0302 0504 0706 0908 0b0a 0d0c 0f0e
0000008
Note: you can also use it with standard input and standard output.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 199
Use the below command,
i=0; while [ $i -lt 256 ]; do echo -en '\x'$(printf "%0x" $i)'' >> binary.dat; i=$((i+1)); done
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2193
There's only one byte you cannot pass as an argument in a Bash command line: 0
For any other value, you can just redirect it. It's safe.
echo -n $'\x01' > binary.dat
echo -n $'\x02' >> binary.dat
...
For the value 0, there's another way to output it to a file
dd if=/dev/zero of=binary.dat bs=1c count=1
To append it to file, use
dd if=/dev/zero oflag=append conv=notrunc of=binary.dat bs=1c count=1
Upvotes: 23
Reputation: 80811
Take a look at xxd:
xxd: creates a hex dump of a given file or standard input. It can also convert a hex dump back to its original binary form.
Upvotes: 12