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Full Discussion: Display EBCDIC as Characters
Operating Systems AIX Display EBCDIC as Characters Post 80547 by LouPelagalli on Tuesday 9th of August 2005 01:03:00 PM
Old 08-09-2005
Display EBCDIC as Characters

Hi,

Does anybody have a command to share that will display EBCDIC files as character?

I have od -x -A d
which will display hex as follows
f0f1 f4f3 f0f0 f0f0 f0f6 f1f4 f6f3 f3f0
f3f9 f8f3 f1f6 f8f2 f860 d1e4 d360 f2f0
f0f5 4000 0000 5014 8c00 0000 0000 0c00
0000 0000 0d00 0000 5014 8c00 0000 1702
3c00 0000 6717 1cf2 f0c1 4040 4040 4040
0af0 f1f4 f3f0 f0f0 f0f0 f6f1 f4f6 f3f3
f0f3 f9f8 f3f1 f6f8 f2f8 60d1 e4d3 60f2
f0f0 f540 0000 0050 148c 0000 0000 000c
0000 0000 000d 0000 0050 148c 0000 0017
023c 0000 0067 171c f2f0 c140 4040 4040


but it would sure be nice to view it as characters.

Thank You in Advance for Your Help,

Lou
 

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DD(1)							      General Commands Manual							     DD(1)

NAME
dd - convert and copy a file SYNOPSIS
dd [option=value] ... DESCRIPTION
Dd copies the specified input file to the specified output with possible conversions. The standard input and output are used by default. The input and output block size may be specified to take advantage of raw physical I/O. option values if= input file name; standard input is default of= output file name; standard output is default ibs=n input block size n bytes (default 512) obs=n output block size (default 512) bs=n set both input and output block size, superseding ibs and obs; also, if no conversion is specified, it is particularly effi- cient since no copy need be done cbs=n conversion buffer size skip=n skip n input records before starting copy files=n copy n files from (tape) input seek=n seek n records from beginning of output file before copying count=n copy only n input records conv=ascii convert EBCDIC to ASCII ebcdic convert ASCII to EBCDIC ibm slightly different map of ASCII to EBCDIC lcase map alphabetics to lower case ucase map alphabetics to upper case swab swap every pair of bytes noerror do not stop processing on an error sync pad every input record to ibs ... , ... several comma-separated conversions Where sizes are specified, a number of bytes is expected. A number may end with k, b or w to specify multiplication by 1024, 512, or 2 respectively; a pair of numbers may be separated by x to indicate a product. Cbs is used only if ascii or ebcdic conversion is specified. In the former case cbs characters are placed into the conversion buffer, con- verted to ASCII, and trailing blanks trimmed and new-line added before sending the line to the output. In the latter case ASCII characters are read into the conversion buffer, converted to EBCDIC, and blanks added to make up an output record of size cbs. After completion, dd reports the number of whole and partial input and output blocks. For example, to read an EBCDIC tape blocked ten 80-byte EBCDIC card images per record into the ASCII file x: dd if=/dev/rmt0 of=x ibs=800 cbs=80 conv=ascii,lcase Note the use of raw magtape. Dd is especially suited to I/O on the raw physical devices because it allows reading and writing in arbitrary record sizes. To skip over a file before copying from magnetic tape do (dd of=/dev/null; dd of=x) </dev/rmt0 SEE ALSO
cp(1), tr(1) DIAGNOSTICS
f+p records in(out): numbers of full and partial records read(written) BUGS
The ASCII/EBCDIC conversion tables are taken from the 256 character standard in the CACM Nov, 1968. The `ibm' conversion, while less blessed as a standard, corresponds better to certain IBM print train conventions. There is no universal solution. Newlines are inserted only on conversion to ASCII; padding is done only on conversion to EBCDIC. These should be separate options. DD(1)
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