package hxd

  1. Overview
  2. Docs
Hexdump in OCaml

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

hxd-v0.2.0.tbz
sha256=3438fc2308d2d2161ba5c9463e7b4510683f361c4e7f0818e889315400ceced3
sha512=6df3e07c202792f0c029eabf4f48b1036feb61bcd26262741d2b1a8f22d457d60d0c05782b7fcf4ec39acc8fe077c6f4661a77a7497758dd6944691ad468e37a

README.md.html

hxd - HeX Dump in OCaml

hxd is a little program to output a hexdump of a // or a binary file. The main difference with xxd is to color outputs to be more fancy to read. Then, it provides a way to generate a Caml code which is a dump of inputs. This project was mostly done to be able to integrate dump of some sources (like ngrep) to an OCaml code - like dump of a smart flow (git protocol) to be able to write easily regression tests with small examples.

For a long time, I worked on several formats and protocols and it always a pain to read dump of something which is only machine-comprehensible. As a MirageOS project, core library is agnostic to the system.

hxd provides several ways to dump a source:

  • lib/ is the core library which needs only bigarray

  • lib_lwt/ is a library which can be used in a LWT context

  • lib_lwt_unix/ uses Lwt_io.channel

  • lib_string/ needs only OCaml and bigarray and provides a pretty-printer function

  • lib_unix/ uses unix module

Examples

With:

$ hxd.xxd --color=always dump

Or a Caml output with $ hxd.caml --with-comments dump:

[
; "\x78\x01\x4b\xca\xc9\x4f\x52\x30\x35\x60\xd0\x48\xad\x48\x4d\x2e" (* x.K..OR05`.H.HM. *)
; "\x2d\x49\x4c\xca\x49\xe5\x52\xd0\xc8\x4b\xcc\x4d\x55\x48\x2b\xad" (* -IL.I.R..K.MUH+. *)
; "\xaa\xd2\x04\x72\x72\x32\x93\x8a\x12\x8b\x32\x53\x8b\x15\x32\x2a" (* ...rr2....2S..2. *)
; "\x52\x14\x92\x8b\xf2\xcb\x93\x12\x8b\x34\x35\x01\x2c\x48\x13\x4f" (* R........45.,H.O *)
]

Repository has an OPAM package, so:

$ opam pin add hxd https://github.com/dinosaure/hxd.git

is enough to get this fabulous binary.