50

Does anyone know how to get grep, or similar tool, to retrieve offsets of hex strings in a file?

I have a bunch of hexdumps (from GDB) that I need to check for strings and then run again and check if the value has changed.

I have tried hexdump and dd, but the problem is because it's a stream, I lose my offset for the files.

Someone must have had this problem and a workaround. What can I do?

To clarify:

  • I have a series of dumped memory regions from GDB (typically several hundred MB)
  • I am trying to narrow down a number by searching for all the places the number is stored, then doing it again and checking if the new value is stored at the same memory location.
  • I cannot get grep to do anything because I am looking for hex values so all the times I have tried (like a bazillion, roughly) it will not give me the correct output.
  • The hex dumps are just complete binary files, the paterns are within float values at larges so 8? bytes?
  • The patterns are not line-wrapping, as far as I am aware. I am aware of the what it changes to, and I can do the same process and compare the lists to see which match.

Perl COULD be a option, but at this point, I would assume my lack of knowledge with bash and its tools is the main culprit.

Desired output format

It's a little hard to explain the output I am getting since I really am not getting any output.

I am anticipating (and expecting) something along the lines of:

<offset>:<searched value>

Which is the pretty well standard output I would normally get with grep -URbFo <searchterm> . > <output>

What I tried:

A. Problem is, when I try to search for hex values, I get the problem of if just not searching for the hex values, so if I search for 00 I should get like a million hits, because thats always the blankspace, but instead its searching for 00 as text, so in hex, 3030. Any idea's?

B. I CAN force it through hexdump or something of the link but because its a stream it will not give me the offsets and filename that it found a match in.

C. Using grep -b option doesnt seem to work either, I did try all the flags that seemed useful to my situation, and nothing worked.

D. Using xxd -u /usr/bin/xxd as an example I get a output that would be useful, but I cannot use that for searching..

0004760: 73CC 6446 161E 266A 3140 5E79 4D37 FDC6  s.dF..&j1@^yM7..
0004770: BF04 0E34 A44E 5BE7 229F 9EEF 5F4F DFFA  ...4.N[."..._O..
0004780: FADE 0C01 0000 000C 0000 0000 0000 0000  ................

Nice output, just what I want to see, but it just doesn't work for me in this situation..

E. Here are some of the things I've tried since posting this:

xxd -u /usr/bin/xxd | grep 'DF'
00017b0: 4010 8D05 0DFF FF0A 0300 53E3 0610 A003  @.........S.....

root# grep -ibH "df" /usr/bin/xxd
Binary file /usr/bin/xxd matches
xxd -u /usr/bin/xxd | grep -H 'DF'
(standard input):00017b0: 4010 8D05 0DFF FF0A 0300 53E3 0610 A003  @.........S.....
8
  • 1
    I think we need a clearer walkthrough of what you are doing. Jun 12, 2011 at 3:17
  • is it a stream or is it a file? What have you tried, what output do you expect, what are you getting for output. Good Luck!
    – shellter
    Jun 12, 2011 at 3:18
  • 2
    What format do the hex dumps take? Do the patterns that you are looking for wrap around lines? Is there an offset at the start of each line? How long is the pattern you are looking for? When the pattern changes, do you know what it changes to? How big are the hex dumps? Did you consider using Perl? Jun 12, 2011 at 4:14
  • 1
    See the post stackoverflow.com/questions/1733458/… . This has helpful formatting and examples of hex data. Still to hard to tell what you're try to accomplish and what your problems. !\Questions in the form of 1. I have this input, 2. I want this output. 3. (but) I'm getting this output, 4. with this code .... {code here} .... have a much better chance of getting a reasonable response in a reasonable amount of time ;-) Good luck.
    – shellter
    Jun 12, 2011 at 4:22
  • Also, do you know about grep -b srchTarget file file ...? The -b means binary search. Reading the man page for GNU grep doesn't make me certain that it will help with your situation, but it's worth a try. ( GNU grep man page seems to say that -b is for DOS versus Unix line endings. I had assumed from other posts here on S.O. that it would also deal with NUL (\000) chars, like in a hex dump. I don't have a way to test this right now). Good luck.
    – shellter
    Jun 12, 2011 at 4:30

6 Answers 6

86

This seems to work for me:

LANG=C grep --only-matching --byte-offset --binary --text --perl-regexp "<\x-hex pattern>" <file>

short form:

LANG=C grep -obUaP "<\x-hex pattern>" <file>

Example:

LANG=C grep -obUaP "\x01\x02" /bin/grep

Output (cygwin binary):

153: <\x01\x02>
33210: <\x01\x02>
53453: <\x01\x02>

So you can grep this again to extract offsets. But don't forget to use binary mode again.

Note: LANG=C is needed to avoid utf8 encoding issues.

11
  • 5
    Caveat: Darwin's (OS X's) and hence presumably also BSD's grep does not have the --perl-regexp option.
    – Calaf
    Jan 12, 2015 at 16:45
  • 17
    Got it; UTF8 messes this up. This works: LANG=C grep -obUaP "\x53\xEF" system.raw.img.tmp
    – bmaupin
    May 25, 2015 at 17:29
  • 1
    Mr.bmaupin. Worked for me. Thanks!
    – Japanish
    Jun 18, 2015 at 16:25
  • 5
    Unfortunately I can't use this to search hex strings that have \x0A in them. I had to write my own hex search tool. Jun 28, 2017 at 17:40
  • 2
    NOTE: this does not work reliably!!! I'm searching .o files plus the resulting files. Only some .o files show up but the the resulting file. So there are still some issues. \x04\xe7\x88\x2f\x00\x2f\x2a does not work, but \xe7\x88\x2f\x00\x2f\x2a finds more results, despite the \x04 is present.
    – bebbo
    Jan 23, 2022 at 11:10
25

There's also a pretty handy tool called binwalk, written in python, which provides for binary pattern matching (and quite a lot more besides). Here's how you would search for a binary string, which outputs the offset in decimal and hex (from the docs):

$ binwalk -R "\x00\x01\x02\x03\x04" firmware.bin
DECIMAL     HEX         DESCRIPTION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
377654      0x5C336     Raw string signature
15

We tried several things before arriving at an acceptable solution:

xxd -u /usr/bin/xxd | grep 'DF'
00017b0: 4010 8D05 0DFF FF0A 0300 53E3 0610 A003  @.........S.....


root# grep -ibH "df" /usr/bin/xxd
Binary file /usr/bin/xxd matches
xxd -u /usr/bin/xxd | grep -H 'DF'
(standard input):00017b0: 4010 8D05 0DFF FF0A 0300 53E3 0610 A003  @.........S.....

Then found we could get usable results with

xxd -u /usr/bin/xxd > /tmp/xxd.hex ; grep -H 'DF' /tmp/xxd

Note that using a simple search target like 'DF' will incorrectly match characters that span across byte boundaries, i.e.

xxd -u /usr/bin/xxd | grep 'DF'
00017b0: 4010 8D05 0DFF FF0A 0300 53E3 0610 A003  @.........S.....
--------------------^^

So we use an ORed regexp to search for ' DF' OR 'DF ' (the searchTarget preceded or followed by a space char).

The final result seems to be

xxd -u -ps -c 10000000000 DumpFile > DumpFile.hex
egrep ' DF|DF ' Dumpfile.hex

0001020: 0089 0424 8D95 D8F5 FFFF 89F0 E8DF F6FF  ...$............
-----------------------------------------^^
0001220: 0C24 E871 0B00 0083 F8FF 89C3 0F84 DF03  .$.q............
--------------------------------------------^^
2
  • 2
    What I actually ended up using for xxd was: xxd -ps -u -c 100000000000000000000 input.file > output.file in order to get rid of the excess information and give me raw hex. This gave me a way to use grep to search the hex itself, but when it returns a offset, remember to divide the offset by 2 to get the actual offset. Thank you so much for your help! Oh, and I cant vote up yet..
    – user650649
    Jun 14, 2011 at 1:25
  • 3
    xxd has -g option which will help you prevent matching across two bytes. I.e. use xxd -g1 instead of xxd.
    – Ruslan
    Jan 27, 2017 at 14:09
11

grep has a -P switch allowing to use perl regexp syntax the perl regex allows to look at bytes, using \x.. syntax.

so you can look for a given hex string in a file with: grep -aP "\xdf"

but the outpt won't be very useful; indeed better do a regexp on the hexdump output;

The grep -P can be useful however to just find files matrching a given binary pattern. Or to do a binary query of a pattern that actually happens in text (see for example How to regexp CJK ideographs (in utf-8) )

9

I just used this:

grep -c $'\x0c' filename

To search for and count a page control character in the file..

So to include an offset in the output:

grep -b -o $'\x0c' filename | less

I am just piping the result to less because the character I am greping for does not print well and the less displays the results cleanly. Output example:

21:^L
23:^L
2005:^L
2
  • Just to point out this doesn't seem to work in OSX, and maybe not in FreeBSD either, but it does it just replacing the simple quotes by double ones like in: grep -c $"\x0c" filename Sep 28, 2015 at 19:08
  • you may pipe the result through hexdump, this will deal with non printable chars
    – JPT
    Dec 6, 2016 at 19:50
6

If you want search for printable strings, you can use:

strings -ao filename | grep string

strings will output all printable strings from a binary with offsets, and grep will search within.

If you want search for any binary string, here is your friend:

1
  • I looked at bgrep, its not printable stings im looking for.. a lot of the time I am trying to find think that are unprintable and its certainly possible to end up with values in hex that end up being backspaces etc. I will try the bgrep and see if it works for me.
    – user650649
    Jun 12, 2011 at 18:20

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