SIZE(1) General Commands Manual SIZE(1)NAME
size - size of an object file
SYNOPSIS
size [ object ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Size prints the (decimal) number of bytes required by the text, data, and bss portions, and their sum in hex and decimal, of each object-
file argument. If no file is specified, a.out is used.
SEE ALSO a.out(5)7th Edition April 29, 1985 SIZE(1)
Check Out this Related Man Page
SIZE(1) GNU Development Tools SIZE(1)NAME
size - list section sizes and total size.
SYNOPSIS
size [-A|-B|--format=compatibility]
[--help]
[-d|-o|-x|--radix=number]
[-t|--totals]
[--target=bfdname] [-V|--version]
[objfile...]
DESCRIPTION
The GNU size utility lists the section sizes---and the total size---for each of the object or archive files objfile in its argument list.
By default, one line of output is generated for each object file or each module in an archive.
objfile... are the object files to be examined. If none are specified, the file "a.out" will be used.
OPTIONS
The command line options have the following meanings:
-A
-B
--format=compatibility
Using one of these options, you can choose whether the output from GNU size resembles output from System V size (using -A, or --for-
mat=sysv), or Berkeley size (using -B, or --format=berkeley). The default is the one-line format similar to Berkeley's.
Here is an example of the Berkeley (default) format of output from size:
$ size --format=Berkeley ranlib size
text data bss dec hex filename
294880 81920 11592 388392 5ed28 ranlib
294880 81920 11888 388688 5ee50 size
This is the same data, but displayed closer to System V conventions:
$ size --format=SysV ranlib size
ranlib :
section size addr
.text 294880 8192
.data 81920 303104
.bss 11592 385024
Total 388392
size :
section size addr
.text 294880 8192
.data 81920 303104
.bss 11888 385024
Total 388688
--help
Show a summary of acceptable arguments and options.
-d
-o
-x
--radix=number
Using one of these options, you can control whether the size of each section is given in decimal (-d, or --radix=10); octal (-o, or
--radix=8); or hexadecimal (-x, or --radix=16). In --radix=number, only the three values (8, 10, 16) are supported. The total size is
always given in two radices; decimal and hexadecimal for -d or -x output, or octal and hexadecimal if you're using -o.
-t
--totals
Show totals of all objects listed (Berkeley format listing mode only).
--target=bfdname
Specify that the object-code format for objfile is bfdname. This option may not be necessary; size can automatically recognize many
formats.
-V
--version
Display the version number of size.
SEE ALSO ar(1), objdump(1), readelf(1), and the Info entries for binutils.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or
any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover
Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
binutils-2.15.97 2005-04-20 SIZE(1)
Hello again;
I have a directories and subdirectories in my current directory and i wanna to find the directories( and subdirectories ) which are larger than what user enters as first parameter.
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I used this command and i am not sure it is... (19 Replies)
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Problem:
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/dev/dsk/c1t1d0s0 4.2G 3.9G 284M 94% /
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Hi All,
I have some requirement. i dont know if we can write some shell script to fulfill the requirement. Here is my requirement...
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Greetings. I've been into computers since the '80s, but this is my first attempt at Linux.
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Hi guys, i am new to perl. I started reading the perl documents and try to come up with some logic.
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If file size is less... (26 Replies)
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also if i do &a-&b i get 1, but if i... (30 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a requirement to monitor the sub-directories under /home in a way that if the the folder size increases by 30 GB in a span of like an hour then it needs to send email alerts listing what as the actual size was and what's the current size which the subject listing the sub-directory... (25 Replies)
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It is a nightly job, called by crontab. After copy finishes, the file sizes are different between source and destination. Say .gz file is 14782805941 bytes on source and 13496172544 bytes on destination. When I... (20 Replies)
to get the most granular size of a file, you can do so with:
solaris hosts:
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This thread is about using tar & other compression utilities on AIX ;
1. Find out which version of tar you are using
thanks to bakunin
>what $(which tar)
/usr/bin/tar:
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10 ... (21 Replies)