od(1) od(1)
NAME
od - octal dump
SYNOPSIS
od [-b] [-c] [-d] [-o] [-s] [-x] [file] [[+]offset[.][b]]
DESCRIPTION
od dumps file in one or more formats as selected by the
first argument. If the first argument is missing or an
illegal flag option is specified, -o is default. The
meanings of the format flag options are:
-b Interpret bytes in octal.
-c Interpret bytes in ASCII. Certain non-graphic
characters appear as C escapes: null=\0, backspace=\b,
form-feed=\f, newline=\n, return=\r, tab=\t; others
appear as 3-digit octal numbers.
-d Interpret words in unsigned decimal.
-o Interpret words in octal.
-s Interpret words in signed decimal.
-x Interpret words in hex.
The file argument specifies which file is to be dumped. If
no file argument is specified, the standard input is used.
The offset argument specifies the offset in the file where
dumping is to commence. This argument is normally
interpreted as octal bytes. If . is appended, the offset is
interpreted in decimal. If b is appended, the offset is
interpreted in blocks of 512 bytes. If the file argument is
omitted, the offset argument must be preceded by +.
Dumping continues until end-of-file. If a file contains
many lines of repeating characters, od represents the
repeating lines with an asterisk.
EXAMPLE
od -d file +2
produces an octal dump of file divided up into 32-bit words
expressed in decimal equivalents with the dump starting
point offset by 2 octal bytes.
FILES
/bin/od
SEE ALSO
Page 1 (last mod. 1/16/87)
od(1) od(1)
dump(1).
Page 2 (last mod. 1/16/87)