Record Editor is a data file editor CSV (Comma/Tab delimited values) files and files where fields occupy fixed positions in a record. This program uses a record-layout definition to display the data file in a human readable form. It can handle PC (text and binary), Unix (text and binary), and native IBM mainframe (text and binary) file formats. It is similar to Net-Cobols Cobol-Editor or Compuwares FileAid. License: GNU General Public License (GPL) Changes:
This release contains a new Column view, Tree views, improved CSV support, and limited XML support.
Hi All,
I am running a script , working very fine on cmd prompt. The problem is that when I open do crontab -e even after setting editor to vi by
set EDITOR=vi it does not open a vi editor , rather it do as below.....
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////
$ set... (6 Replies)
srec_stewie(5) File Formats Manual srec_stewie(5)NAME
srec_stewie - Stewie's binary file format
DESCRIPTION
If you have a URL for documentation of this format, please let me know.
Any resemblance to the Motorola S-Record is superficial, and extends only to the data records. The header records and termination records
are completely different. None of the other Motorola S-Records record type are available.
The Records
All records start with an ASCII capital S character, value 0x53, followed by a type specifier byte. All records consist of binary bytes.
The Header Record
Each file starts with a fixed four byte header record.
+-----+------+------+------+
|0x53 | 0x30 | 0x30 | 0x33 |
+-----+------+------+------+
The Data Records
Each data record consists of 5 fields. These are the type field, length field, address field, data field, and the checksum. The lines
always start with a capital S character.
+-----+------+---------------+---------+------+----------+
|0x53 | Type | Record Length | Address | Data | Checksum |
+-----+------+---------------+---------+------+----------+
Type The type field is a one byte field that specifies whether the record has a two-byte address field (0x31), a three-byte address
field (0x32) or a four-byte address field (0x33). The address is big-endian.
Record Length
The record length field is a one byte field that specifies the number of bytes in the record following this byte.
Address This is a 2-, 3- or 4-byte address that specifies where the data in the record is to be loaded into memory.
Data The data field contains the executable code, memory-loadable data or descriptive information to be transferred.
Checksum
The checksum is a one byte field that represents the least significant byte of the one's complement of the sum of the values repre-
sented by the bytes making up the record's length, address, and data fields.
The Termination Record
Each file ends with a fixed two byte termination record.
+-----+------+
|0x53 | 0x38 |
+-----+------+
Size Multiplier
In general, binary data will expand in sized by approximately 1.2 times when represented with this format.
EXAMPLE
Here is an hex-dump example file. It contains the data "Hello, World[rq] to be loaded at address 0.
0000: 53 30 30 33 53 31 10 00 00 48 65 6C 6C 6F 2C 20 S003S1...Hello,
0010: 57 6F 72 6C 64 0A 9D 53 38 World..S8
COPYRIGHT
srec_cat version 1.58
Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 Peter Miller
The srec_cat program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details use the 'srec_cat -VERSion License' command. This is free software and
you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; for details use the 'srec_cat -VERSion License' command.
AUTHOR
Peter Miller E-Mail: pmiller@opensource.org.au
//* WWW: http://miller.emu.id.au/pmiller/
Reference Manual SRecord srec_stewie(5)