I would like to view the contents of a file in the current directory, but in binary from the command line. How can I achieve this?
13 Answers
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1This has the advantage over "hexdump" that it also shows the ASCII form on the side, making it easier to identify the location I want to look at. Mar 5, 2018 at 12:46
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1And to dump the output to an ASCII text file for perusing & searching:
xxd file > hex_dump_of_file.txt
Jan 31, 2019 at 0:32 -
a supplment: xxd is not only for linux shell. I think it comes with vim. I had vim installed on windows, and I just found I can use xxd in windows too.– TiinaSep 20, 2019 at 7:40
hexdump -C yourfile.bin
unless you want to edit it of course. Most linux distros have hexdump
by default (but obviously not all).
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1I like this idea, but like the other suggestions it only outputs hex. Obviously this is much more compact than binary, but I am dealing with very small files so binary is preferred. Is hex the only way I will be able to view the file?– adam_0Nov 19, 2009 at 18:21
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1Well how small is the file? Anything over a couple of bytes and you will start to lose your mind using binary anyway. Hex makes much more sense for most things. If you are uncomfortable with hex just locate the bytes in which you are interested and convert them using a hex calculator.– DuckNov 19, 2009 at 18:38
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3I need to make sure that my file is compressing correctly and I don't know what it should look like in hex (the size of each unit is 7 bits), so I would have to crunch the numbers by hand.– adam_0Nov 19, 2009 at 18:38
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do you have any methods to see text from binary file? I can get HEX code, but how should i decode it to normal human text? Aug 22, 2014 at 13:54
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hexdump -C
does not show binary output. This doesn't answer the question.– DanielSep 28, 2018 at 18:22
vi your_filename
hit esc
Type :%!xxd
to view the hex strings, the n :%!xxd -r
to return to normal editing.
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I've found
:%!xxd
adding unwanted characters i.e. new line to my file? Dec 6, 2016 at 3:51
sudo apt-get install bless
Bless is GUI tool which can view, edit, seach and a lot more. Its very light weight.
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If you want to open binary files (in CentOS 7):
strings <binary_filename>
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IMO this is the simplest most elegant of all the answers. I wish I could upvote it more than once.– OlumideMar 20, 2019 at 12:22
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The best answer hands down. This converts the Binary file into a JSON file. Not all heros wear capes,that is true Apr 14, 2020 at 14:59
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4It doesn't convert it into JSON file. It only finds the printable strings in an object and show you. It doesn't convert the binary file into text or any format at all. Sep 30, 2020 at 9:44
$ echo -n 'Hello world!' | hd
00000000 48 65 6c 6c 6f 20 77 6f 72 6c 64 21 |Hello world!|
0000000c
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@JAR.JAR.beans Yes indeed. I use it because it is easier to remember. Oct 18, 2016 at 14:19
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To get the output all in a single line in Hexadecimal:
xxd -p yourfile.bin | tr -d '\n'
You can open emacs (in terminal mode, using emacs -nw
for instance), and then use Hexl mode: M-x hexl-mode
.
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Editing-Binary-Files.html
to convert a file to its binary codes(hexadecimal representation) we say:
xxd filename #
e.g:
xxd hello.c #
to see all the contents and codes in a binary file , we could use commands like readelf
and objdump
, hexdump
,... .
for example if we want to see all the convert all the contents of a binary file(executable, shared libraries, object files) we say:
hexdump binaryfilename
e.g.
hexdump /bin/bash
but readelf is the best utility for analyzing elf(executable and linking format) files. so if we say:
readelf -a /bin/bash
all the contents in the binary file bash would be shown to us, also we could provide different flags for readelf to see all the sections and headers of an elf file separately, for example if we want to see only the elf header we say:
readelf -h /bin/bash
for reading all the segments of the file:
readelf -l /bin/bash
for reading all the sections of the file:
readelf -S /bin/sh
but again as summary , for reading a normal file like "hello.c" and a binary file like bash in path /bin/bash in linux we say:
xxd hello.c
readelf -a /bin/bash
You can use hexdump binary file
sudo apt-get install hexdump
hexdump -C yourfile.bin
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1This is just a duplicate of stackoverflow.com/a/1765339/12573645 Mar 5, 2020 at 8:47