Sortix volatile manual
This manual documents Sortix volatile, a development build that has not been officially released. You can instead view this document in the latest official manual.
STRINGS(1) | GNU Development Tools | STRINGS(1) |
NAME
strings - print the sequences of printable characters in filesSYNOPSIS
strings [ -afovV] [-min-len][-n min-len] [--bytes=min-len]
[-t radix] [--radix=radix]
[-e encoding] [--encoding=encoding]
[-U method] [--unicode=method]
[-] [--all] [--print-file-name]
[-T bfdname] [--target=bfdname]
[-w] [--include-all-whitespace]
[-s] [--output-separator sep_string]
[--help] [--version] file...
DESCRIPTION
For each file given, GNU strings prints the printable character sequences that are at least 4 characters long (or the number given with the options below) and are followed by an unprintable character.OPTIONS
- -a
- --all
- -
-
Scan the whole file, regardless of what sections it contains or whether those sections are loaded or initialized. Normally this is the default behaviour, but strings can be configured so that the -d is the default instead.
- -d
- --data
- Only print strings from initialized, loaded data sections in the file. This may reduce the amount of garbage in the output, but it also exposes the strings program to any security flaws that may be present in the BFD library used to scan and load sections. Strings can be configured so that this option is the default behaviour. In such cases the -a option can be used to avoid using the BFD library and instead just print all of the strings found in the file.
- -f
- --print-file-name
- Print the name of the file before each string.
- --help
- Print a summary of the program usage on the standard output and exit.
- -min-len
- -n min-len
- --bytes=min-len
- Print sequences of displayable characters that are at least min-len characters long. If not specified a default minimum length of 4 is used. The distinction between displayable and non-displayable characters depends upon the setting of the -e and -U options. Sequences are always terminated at control characters such as new-line and carriage-return, but not the tab character.
- -o
- Like -t o. Some other versions of strings have -o act like -t d instead. Since we can not be compatible with both ways, we simply chose one.
- -t radix
- --radix=radix
- Print the offset within the file before each string. The single character argument specifies the radix of the offset--- o for octal, x for hexadecimal, or d for decimal.
- -e encoding
- --encoding=encoding
- Select the character encoding of the strings that are to be found. Possible values for encoding are: s = single-7-bit-byte characters (default), S = single-8-bit-byte characters, b = 16-bit bigendian, l = 16-bit littleendian, B = 32-bit bigendian, L = 32-bit littleendian. Useful for finding wide character strings. ( l and b apply to, for example, Unicode UTF-16/UCS-2 encodings).
- -U [d|i|l|e|x|h]
- --unicode=[default|invalid|locale|escape|hex|highlight]
-
Controls the display of UTF-8 encoded multibyte characters in strings. The default ( --unicode=default) is to give them no special treatment, and instead rely upon the setting of the --encoding option. The other values for this option automatically enable --encoding=S.
- -T bfdname
- --target=bfdname
- Specify an object code format other than your system's default format.
- -v
- -V
- --version
- Print the program version number on the standard output and exit.
- -w
- --include-all-whitespace
- By default tab and space characters are included in the strings that are displayed, but other whitespace characters, such a newlines and carriage returns, are not. The -w option changes this so that all whitespace characters are considered to be part of a string.
- -s
- --output-separator
- By default, output strings are delimited by a new-line. This option allows you to supply any string to be used as the output record separator. Useful with --include-all-whitespace where strings may contain new-lines internally.
- @file
-
Read command-line options from file. The options read are inserted in place of the original @ file option. If file does not exist, or cannot be read, then the option will be treated literally, and not removed.
SEE ALSO
ar(1), nm(1), objdump(1), ranlib(1), readelf(1) and the Info entries for binutils.COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1991-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc.2024-11-23 | binutils-2.43.1 |