OD(1) | General Commands Manual | OD(1) |
od |
[-aBbcDdeFfHhIiLlOovXx] [-A base] [-j skip] [-N length] [-t type_string] [[+]offset [.][Bb]] file ... |
d
', ‘o
', ‘x
' or ‘n
', which specify decimal, octal, hexadecimal addresses or no address, respectively.512
, 1024
, or 1048576
, respectively.a selects US-ASCII output, with control characters replaced with their names instead of as C escape sequences. See also the _u conversion provided by hexdump(1).
c selects a standard character based conversion. See also the _c conversion provided by hexdump(1).
f selects the floating point output format. This type character can be optionally followed by the characters 4 or F to specify four byte floating point output, or 8 or L to specify eight byte floating point output. The default output format is eight byte floats. See also the e conversion provided by hexdump(1).
d, o, u, or x select decimal, octal, unsigned decimal, or hex output respectively. These types can optionally be followed by C to specify char-sized output, S to specify short-sized output, I to specify int-sized output, L to specify long-sized output, 1 to specify one-byte output, 2 to specify two-byte output, 4 to specify four-byte output, or 8 to specify eight-byte output. The default output format is in four-byte quantities. See also the d, o, u, and x conversions provided by hexdump(1).
For each input file, od sequentially copies the input to standard output, transforming the data according to the options given. If no options are specified, the default display is equivalent to specifying the -o option.
od exits 0 on success and >0 if an error occurred.
This man page was written in February 2001 by Andrew Brown, shortly after he augmented the deprecated od syntax to include things he felt had been missing for a long time.
February 9, 2010 | NetBSD 6.1 |