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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How do I test whether that is a binary file? Post 51841 by jim mcnamara on Thursday 3rd of June 2004 10:23:14 AM
Old 06-03-2004
mbb -

In unix a file is a bag of bytes. Period. There is no such thing as a binary file or a text file, except perhaps in terms of how you retreive data from it, or which magic number the file has. All I/O uses base modules like read. The higher-level i/o modules call read, then play with the data in the buffer and return chunks of it.


Windows programmers insist on "binary". When they come to linux it takes them along time to figure out what the file system actually does.
 

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MODULES.DEP(5)							    modules.dep 						    MODULES.DEP(5)

NAME
modules.dep, modules.dep.bin - Module dependency information SYNOPSIS
/lib/modules/modules.dep /lib/modules/modules.dep.bin DESCRIPTION
modules.dep.bin is a binary file generated by depmod listing the dependencies for every module in the directories under /lib/modules/version. It is used by kmod tools such as modprobe and libkmod. Its text counterpar is located in the same directory with the name modules.dep. The text version is maintained only for easy of reading by humans and is in no way used by any kmod tool. These files are not intended for editing or use by any additional utilities as their format is subject to change in the future. You should use the modinfo(8) command to obtain information about modules in a future proof and compatible fashion rather than touching these files. COPYRIGHT
This manual page originally Copyright 2002, Rusty Russell, IBM Corporation. Maintained by Jon Masters and others. SEE ALSO
depmod(8), modprobe(8) AUTHORS
Jon Masters <jcm@jonmasters.org> Developer Lucas De Marchi <lucas.de.marchi@gmail.com> Developer kmod 01/28/2018 MODULES.DEP(5)
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