2

I suppose that I have a decimal number, e.g., 97254 ---> 00017BE6 (hex value) using:

echo "" | awk '{printf("%08X", 97254)}'

Now, if I want to convert hex number (00017BE6, in this case) into 4 numbers of 2 digits (max 8 numbers in input) in little endian order and CSV format, i.e. (target):

E6,7B,01,00

using only Awk (a function ad-hoc and return value, for example), how to do?

With:

awk '{for (i=1;i<=7;i=i+2) array[i]=substr($1,i,2)} END{for(a in array) print array[a]}'

I have:

00
01
7B
E6

Using:

awk '{for (i=1;i<=7;i=i+2) array[i]=substr($1,i,2)} END{for(a in array) print array[a]}' ORS=","

I have:

00,01,7B,E6,

but how to remove last comma e convert it in little endian order?

How do I go about this?

Any ideas?

3
  • At the top you ask for E6,7B,01,00 as the desired output, which is consistent with the little endianness mentioned in the title; at the bottom you ask about removing the trailing , from 00,01,7B,E6, which implies big endianness - which do you want?
    – mklement0
    May 4, 2015 at 3:07
  • 1
    Please note that using for(a in array) will not enumerate the array indices in numerical order, because all arrays in awk are associative arrays, and enumeration happens unpredictably by the internal hash values of the indices (keys). For arrays with numerical keys, use for (i=1; i<=length(array); ++i).
    – mklement0
    May 4, 2015 at 6:51
  • 1
    Well, thank you for you advice. It had entirely slipped my mind!
    – mikilinux
    May 4, 2015 at 8:39

2 Answers 2

3
echo 00017BE6 | awk '{for (i=7;i>=1;i=i-2) printf "%s%s",substr($1,i,2),(i>1?",":"\n")}'
E6,7B,01,00

Using sprintf, we can start with the decimal number:

$ echo 97254 | awk '{hex=sprintf("%08X",$1); for (i=7;i>=1;i=i-2) printf "%s%s",substr(hex,i,2),(i>1?",":"\n");}'
E6,7B,01,00

How it works

  • for (i=7;i>=1;i=i-2)

    This starts a loop over index i in which we count down from 7 to 1.

  • printf "%s%s",substr($1,i,2),(i>1?",":"\n")

    This prints the desired substring followed by a comma or a newline. The construct i>1?",":"\n" is awk's form of a ternary statement. It returns , if i>1 or a newline otherwise.

3
  • I am not 100% sure, but sprintf should work on most awk. It work at least on my old busybox awk BusyBox v1.19.4
    – Jotne
    May 4, 2015 at 5:52
  • 2
    @Jotne Thanks for that. I just checked and sprintf is POSIX. I updated the answer to remove the equivocation.
    – John1024
    May 4, 2015 at 5:56
  • Thank you very much everyone for your suggestion.
    – mikilinux
    May 4, 2015 at 8:42
1

You've asked for an awk command, but consider this generic bash function, which uses printf, sed, and tac / tail -r internally, and works on both BSD (including OSX) and Linux systems:

# SYNOPSIS
#   toHexBytes num [numBytes [littleEndian]]
# DESCRIPTION
#   Prints the bytes that num is composed of in hex. format separated by commas.
#   NUM can be in decimal, hexadecimal, or octal format.
#   NUMBYTES specifies the minimum number of *bytes* to output - defaults to *4*.
#   Specify 0 to only output as many bytes as needed to represent NUM, '' to 
#   represent the default when also specifying LITTLEENDIAN.
#   By default, the bytes are printed in BIG-endian order; if LITTLEENDIAN is nonzero,
#   the bytes are printed in LITTLE-endian order.
# PLATFORM SUPPORT
#   BSD and Linux platforms
# EXAMPLES
#   toHexBytes 256      # -> '00,00,01,00'
#   toHexBytes 256 '' 1 # -> '00,01,00,00'
#   toHexBytes 0x100 0  # -> '01,00'
toHexBytes() {
  local numIn=$1 numBytes=${2:-4} littleEndian=${3:-0} numHex revCmd 
  # Convert to hex.
  printf -v numHex '%X' "$numIn"
  # Determine number of 0s that must be prepended.
  padCount=$(( numBytes * 2 - ${#numHex} ))
  (( padCount < 0 && ${#numHex} % 2 )) && padCount=1
  # Apply 0-padding, if needed.
  (( padCount )) && printf -v numHex "%0$(( padCount + ${#numHex} ))X" "0x$numHex" 
  if (( $littleEndian )); then # LITTLE-endianness
    # Determine command to use for reversing lines.
    [[ $(command -v tac) ]] && revCmd='tac' || revCmd='tail -r'
    # Insert a newline after every 2 digits, except for the last,
    # then reverse the resulting lines,
    # then read all resulting lines and replace all but the last newline
    # with ','.
    sed 's/../&\'$'\n''/g; s/\n$//' <<<"$numHex" | 
      $revCmd |
        sed -e ':a' -e '$!{N;ba' -e '}; s/\n/,/g'
  else # BIG-endianness
    # Insert ',' after every 2 digits, except for the last pair.
    sed 's/../&,/g; s/,$//' <<<"$numHex"
  fi
}

Applied to your example number:

$ toHexBytes 97254 4 1 # 4 bytes, LITTLE-endian
E6,7B,01,00

$ toHexBytes 97254 # 4 bytes, BIG-endian
00,01,7B,E6
0

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