09-30-2005
Now way. AIX filesystems have block sizes.
Man mkfs shows
Quote:
-s Size Specifies the size of the file system. Size can be specified in units of
512-byte blocks, Megabytes (suffix M should be used) or Gigabytes (suffix G
should be used). See "Understanding JFS Size Limitations" for more information.
Is this because of the Journaled File Systems in AIX?
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LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
rahash2
HASHER2(1) BSD General Commands Manual HASHER2(1)
NAME
hasher2 -- block based hashing utility
SYNOPSIS
hasher2 [-hBrv] [-a algorithm] [-b size] [-s string] [-f from] [-t to] [[file] ...]
DESCRIPTION
This program is part of the radare project.
Hasher allows you to calculate, check and show the hash values of each block of a target file. The block size is 32768 bytes by default. It's
allowed to hash from stdin using '-' as a target file.
You can hash big files by hashing each block and later determine what part of it has been modified. Useful for filesystem analysis.
This command can be used to calculate hashes of a certain part of a file or a command line passed string.
This is the command used by the '#' command of radare.
-a algo Select an algorithm for the hashing. Valid values are md5, crc32 and sha1
-b block size
Define the block size
-B Show per-block hash
-s string Hash this string instead of using the 'source' and 'hash-file' arguments.
-f from Start hashing at given address
-t to Stop hashing at given address
-r Show output in radare commands
-v Show version information
-h Show usage help message.
SEE ALSO
radare2(1), rafind2(1), rahash2(1), rabin2(1), ranal2(1), radiff2(1), rasm2(1), ragg2(1), rarun2(1), rax2(1),
AUTHORS
pancake <pancake@nopcode.org>, nibble <nibble@develsec.org>
BSD
Mar 12, 2010 BSD