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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Extract sequences of bytes from binary for differents blocks Post 302844249 by Ophiuchus on Saturday 17th of August 2013 05:15:14 PM
Old 08-17-2013
Hello ahamed,

Sorry, maybe I didn't explaine me very well.

The sequence after FF 34 if present is 0x03 and after 0x03 could be follow by 0x80 or 0x81.... etc. Because of that I've put 0x8Z, where Z=0,1,3,4,6 or 7.

But independently which is the byte that appear after 0x03, the byte 0x03 only will appear once to represent the begin of this sub-block of sequences.

So, if I call the sequences like follow:
Z1=80 B1 B2 ... B16
Z2=81 B1 B2 ... B16
Z3=83 B1 B2 ... B16
.
.
Z6=87 B1 B2 ... B16

Then, if 0x03 is present the "sub-block" could contain:
0x03 Z1 Z2 Z3
or
0x03 Z2 Z3 Z6
or
0x03 Z1 Z2 Z3 Z4 Z5 Z6
or only one sequence like
0x03 Zx

But I would like to extract all the sequences in sub-block independently if
has all sequences Z1 to Z6 or if only have 1 sequence Zx.

I hope is not too complicated and you can help me.

Thanks in advance for all the help.
 

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io_tryread(3)						     Library Functions Manual						     io_tryread(3)

NAME
io_tryread - read from a descriptor without blocking SYNTAX
#include <io.h> int io_tryread(int64 fd,char* buf,int64 len); DESCRIPTION
io_tryread tries to read len bytes of data from descriptor fd into buf[0], buf[1], ..., buf[len-1]. (The effects are undefined if len is 0 or smaller.) There are several possible results: o o_tryread returns an integer between 1 and len: This number of bytes was available for immediate reading; the bytes were read into the beginning of buf. Note that this number can be, and often is, smaller than len; you must not assume that io_tryread always succeeds in reading exactly len bytes. o io_tryread returns 0: No bytes were read, because the descriptor is at end of file. For example, this descriptor has reached the end of a disk file, or is reading an empty pipe that has been closed by all writers. o io_tryread returns -1, setting errno to EAGAIN: No bytes were read, because the descriptor is not ready. For example, the descriptor is reading an empty pipe that could still be written to. o io_tryread returns -3, setting errno to something other than EAGAIN: No bytes were read, because the read attempt encountered a persis- tent error, such as a serious disk failure (EIO), an unreachable network (ENETUNREACH), or an invalid descriptor number (EBADF). io_tryread does not pause waiting for a descriptor that is not ready. If you want to pause, use io_waitread or io_wait. You can make io_tryread faster and more efficient by making the socket non-blocking with io_nonblock(). SEE ALSO
io_nonblock(3), io_waitread(3), io_tryreadtimeout(3) io_tryread(3)
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