table of contents
PIXD(1) | General Commands Manual | PIXD(1) |
NAME¶
pixd
— colourful
binary file visualizer
SYNOPSIS¶
pixd |
[-r range]
[-w width]
[file ...] |
DESCRIPTION¶
pixd
visualizes binary data by mapping
each octet to a colour according to a palette, displaying the octet at a
given number of columns per line. pixd
will process
the files specified as arguments, or standard input if none are
provided.
Note that pixd
uses 24-bit colour SGR
sequences and the U+2580 UPPER HALF BLOCK glyph for rendering. This means
that your terminal emulator needs to support both Unicode and 24-bit colour
sequences.
The default palette maps the high nibble into a hue,
and the low nibble into a brightness value. The hues used are
black
(0x00
),
red-orange
(0x01..0x1F
),
yellow
(0x20..0x3F
),
green
(0x40..0x7F
),
cyan-blue
(0x80..0xBF
),
purple-pink
(0xC0..0xFE
), and
white
(0xFF
).
OPTIONS¶
If no file operands are specified, standard input is read instead. Available options are listed below.
-r
range- Range of octets to print from each file. Specified as either
start-end
or
start+count,
where
start
and
end/count
are positive integers specified in either decimal, hexadecimal or octal
(C-style notation).
When the former syntax is used, both ends of the range are optional and default to the start or end of the file when omitted.
-w
width- Number of octets per line, separated into groups (see
-g
). Set to64
by default.
ENVIRONMENT¶
PIXD_COLORS
can be used to override the
colour palette. If set, it should consist of 256 whitespace-separated hex
colours; each colour has to be exactly 6 hexadecimal digits representing a
24-bit colour (e.g.
FFFF00
for yellow).
EXAMPLES¶
Here are some examples of useful uses of hexd's features.
- pixd -r0x1000+0x200 foo.bin
- Display the 512-byte range in 'foo.bin' starting at offset 0x1000. Useful when files contain other embedded files/formats at a certain location (e.g. archive files).
- pixd -r-0x400 *.bin
- Show the first 1024 bytes of each of the *.bin files, with a heading above each file (if more than one). This is useful for example to compare headers of several samples of an unknown format.
- curl -s http://example.com | pixd | less -R
pixd
works as a filter, too. For paging, less(1)'s-R
flag is useful.
SEE ALSO¶
AUTHORS¶
Written by Jonas ‘FireFly’ Höglund.
May 25, 2017 | Linux 6.13.6-1-default |