—# -*- mode: Perl -*-
##########################################################################
#
# HexDump.pm - Hexadecial Dumper
#
# Copyright (c) 1998, 1999, Fabien Tassin <fta@oleane.net>
##########################################################################
# ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY WITH THIS PACKAGE. USE IT AT YOUR OWN RISKS.
##########################################################################
package
Data::HexDump;
$Data::HexDump::VERSION
=
'0.04'
;
use
5.006;
use
strict;
use
warnings;
use
Carp;
use
FileHandle;
our
@EXPORT
=
qw( HexDump )
;
sub
new {
my
$this
=
shift
;
my
$class
=
ref
(
$this
) ||
$this
;
my
$self
= {};
bless
$self
,
$class
;
$self
->{
'readsize'
} = 128;
return
$self
;
}
sub
DESTROY {
my
$self
=
shift
;
$self
->{
'fh'
}->
close
if
defined
$self
->{
'file'
};
}
sub
file {
my
$self
=
shift
;
my
$file
=
shift
;
$self
->{
'file'
} =
$file
if
defined
$file
;
$self
->{
'file'
};
}
sub
fh {
my
$self
=
shift
;
my
$fh
=
shift
;
$self
->{
'fh'
} =
$fh
if
defined
$fh
;
$self
->{
'fh'
};
}
sub
data {
my
$self
=
shift
;
my
$data
=
shift
;
$self
->{
'data'
} =
$data
if
defined
$data
;
$self
->{
'data'
};
}
sub
block_size {
my
$self
=
shift
;
my
$bs
=
shift
;
$self
->{
'blocksize'
} =
$bs
if
defined
$bs
;
$self
->{
'blocksize'
};
}
sub
dump
{
my
$self
=
shift
;
my
$out
;
my
$l
;
$self
->{
'i'
} = 0
unless
defined
$self
->{
'i'
};
$self
->{
'j'
} = 0
unless
defined
$self
->{
'j'
};
my
$i
=
$self
->{
'i'
};
my
$j
=
$self
->{
'j'
};
unless
(
$i
||
$j
) {
$out
=
" "
;
$l
=
""
;
for
(
my
$i
= 0;
$i
< 16;
$i
++) {
$out
.=
sprintf
"%02X"
,
$i
;
$out
.=
" "
if
$i
< 15;
$out
.=
"- "
if
$i
== 7;
$l
.=
sprintf
"%X"
,
$i
;
}
$i
=
$j
= 0;
$out
.=
" $l\n\n"
;
}
return
undef
if
$self
->{
'eod'
};
$out
.=
sprintf
"%08X "
,
$j
* 16;
$l
=
""
;
my
$val
;
while
((
$val
=
$self
->get) ne
''
) {
while
(
length
$val
&&
defined
(
my
$v
=
substr
$val
, 0, 1,
''
)) {
$out
.=
sprintf
"%02X"
,
ord
$v
;
$out
.=
" "
if
$i
< 15;
$out
.=
"- "
if
$i
== 7 &&
(
length
$val
|| !(
$self
->{
'eod'
} ||
length
$val
));
$i
++;
$l
.=
ord
(
$v
) >= 0x20 &&
ord
(
$v
) <= 0x7E ?
$v
:
"."
;
if
(
$i
== 16) {
$i
= 0;
$j
++;
$out
.=
" "
.
$l
;
$l
=
""
;
$out
.=
"\n"
;
if
(
defined
$self
->{
'blocksize'
} &&
$self
->{
'blocksize'
} &&
(
$j
-
$self
->{
'j'
}) >
$self
->{
'blocksize'
} / 16) {
$self
->{
'i'
} =
$i
;
$self
->{
'j'
} =
$j
;
$self
->{
'val'
} =
$val
;
return
$out
;
}
$out
.=
sprintf
"%08X "
,
$j
* 16
if
length
$val
|| !
length
$val
&&
!
$self
->{
'eod'
};
}
}
}
if
(
$i
|| (!
$i
&& !
$j
)) {
$out
.=
" "
x (3 * (17 -
$i
) - 2 * (
$i
> 8));
$out
.=
"$l\n"
;
}
$self
->{
'i'
} =
$i
;
$self
->{
'j'
} =
$j
;
$self
->{
'val'
} =
$val
;
return
$out
;
}
# get data from different sources (scalar, filehandle, file..)
sub
get {
my
$self
=
shift
;
my
$buf
;
my
$length
=
$self
->{
'readsize'
};
undef
$self
->{
'val'
}
if
defined
$self
->{
'val'
} && !
length
$self
->{
'val'
};
if
(
defined
$self
->{
'val'
}) {
$buf
=
$self
->{
'val'
};
undef
$self
->{
'val'
};
}
elsif
(
defined
$self
->{
'data'
}) {
$self
->{
'data_offs'
} = 0
unless
defined
$self
->{
'data_offs'
};
my
$offset
=
$self
->{
'data_offs'
};
$buf
=
substr
$self
->{
'data'
},
$offset
,
$length
;
$self
->{
'data_offs'
} +=
length
$buf
;
$self
->{
'eod'
} = 1
if
$self
->{
'data_offs'
} ==
length
$self
->{
'data'
};
}
elsif
(
defined
$self
->{
'fh'
}) {
read
$self
->{
'fh'
},
$buf
,
$length
;
$self
->{
'eod'
} =
eof
$self
->{
'fh'
};
}
elsif
(
defined
$self
->{
'file'
}) {
$self
->{
'fh'
} = FileHandle->new(
$self
->{
'file'
});
read
$self
->{
'fh'
},
$buf
,
$length
;
$self
->{
'eod'
} =
eof
$self
->{
'fh'
};
}
else
{
"Not yet implemented\n"
;
}
$buf
;
}
sub
HexDump ($) {
my
$val
=
shift
;
my
$f
= Data::HexDump->new();
$f
->data(
$val
);
$f
->
dump
;
}
1;
=head1 NAME
Data::HexDump - Hexadecial Dumper
=head1 SYNOPSIS
Functional interface:
use Data::HexDump;
print HexDump($data_string);
OO interface:
use Data::HexDump;
my $dumper = Data::HexDump->new();
print while $_ = $dumper->dump;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This module will generate a hexadecimal dump of a data string or file.
You can either use the exported function,
as shown in the SYNOPSIS above,
or the OO interface, described below.
The second example from the SYNOPSIS generated this output:
00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 - 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F 0123456789ABCDEF
00000000 23 21 2F 75 73 72 2F 62 - 69 6E 2F 70 65 72 6C 0A #!/usr/bin/perl.
00000010 75 73 65 20 73 74 72 69 - 63 74 3B 0A 75 73 65 20 use strict;.use
00000020 77 61 72 6E 69 6E 67 73 - 3B 0A 0A 70 72 69 6E 74 warnings;..print
00000030 20 22 48 65 6C 6C 6F 2C - 20 77 6F 72 6C 64 5C 6E "Hello, world\n
00000040 22 3B 0A ";.
The result is returned in a string.
Each line of the result consists of the offset in the
source in the leftmost column of each line,
followed by one or more columns of data from the source in hexadecimal.
The rightmost column of each line shows the printable characters
(all others are shown as single dots).
=head2 Functional Interface
This module exports a single function, C<HexDump>,
which takes a scalar value and returns a string which
contains the hexdump of the passed data.
=head2 OO Interface
You first construct a C<Data::HexDump> object,
then tell it where to get the data from,
and then generate the hex dump:
my $dh = Data::HexDump->new();
$dh->data($scalar); # dump the data in this scalar
$dh->fh($fh); # read this filehandle
$dh->file($filename); # read this file and dump contents
print while $_ = $dh->dump;
The different potential sources for data are considered
in the order given above,
so if you pass to the C<data> method,
then any subsequent calls to C<fh()> or C<file()>
will have no effect.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<Data::Hexify>, by Johan Vromans, is another simple option,
similar to this module. Last release in 2004.
L<Data::Hexdumper> (by David Cantrell, DCANTRELL)
is another hex dumper,
with more features than this module.
L<App::colourhexdump> (by Kent Fredric, RIP)
provides a script which gives colourised output
with character class highlighting.
L<Data::HexDump::Range> provides more functions, colour output,
and the ability to skip uninteresting parts of the input data.
L<Data::HexDump::XXD> provides hex dumps like xxd.
It doesn't say what xxd is, or provide a link,
and there's no example output.
But if you know and like xxd, this might be the one for you!
L<Devel::Hexdump> provides some configuration options,
but there are other more featured modules,
and this one doesn't have example output in the doc.
L<Data::Peek> is a collection of functions for displaying data,
including C<DHexDump> which generates a simple hex dump
from a string.
L<String::HexConvert> will convert ASCII strings to hex and reverse.
=head1 AUTHOR
Fabien Tassin E<lt>fta@oleane.netE<gt>
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1998-1999 Fabien Tassin. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut