Home Explore Blog CI



man-pages

1st chunk of `dd.man`
a4eee9eeace49b08a9672027e7ef72c0bb308fe638a1e436000000010000092d
DD(1)                                                                                                     User Commands                                                                                                    DD(1)

NAME
       dd - convert and copy a file

SYNOPSIS
       dd [OPERAND]...
       dd OPTION

DESCRIPTION
       Copy a file, converting and formatting according to the operands.

       bs=BYTES
              read and write up to BYTES bytes at a time (default: 512); overrides ibs and obs

       cbs=BYTES
              convert BYTES bytes at a time

       conv=CONVS
              convert the file as per the comma separated symbol list

       count=N
              copy only N input blocks

       ibs=BYTES
              read up to BYTES bytes at a time (default: 512)

       if=FILE
              read from FILE instead of stdin

       iflag=FLAGS
              read as per the comma separated symbol list

       obs=BYTES
              write BYTES bytes at a time (default: 512)

       of=FILE
              write to FILE instead of stdout

       oflag=FLAGS
              write as per the comma separated symbol list

       seek=N (or oseek=N) skip N obs-sized output blocks

       skip=N (or iseek=N) skip N ibs-sized input blocks

       status=LEVEL
              The LEVEL of information to print to stderr; ’none’ suppresses everything but error messages, ’noxfer’ suppresses the final transfer statistics, ’progress’ shows periodic transfer statistics

       N  and  BYTES may be followed by the following multiplicative suffixes: c=1, w=2, b=512, kB=1000, K=1024, MB=1000*1000, M=1024*1024, xM=M, GB=1000*1000*1000, G=1024*1024*1024, and so on for T, P, E, Z, Y.  Binary pre‐
       fixes can be used, too: KiB=K, MiB=M, and so on.  If N ends in ’B’, it counts bytes not blocks.

       Each CONV symbol may be:

       ascii  from EBCDIC to ASCII

       ebcdic from ASCII to EBCDIC

       ibm    from ASCII to alternate EBCDIC

       block  pad newline-terminated records with spaces to cbs-size

       unblock
              replace trailing spaces in cbs-size records with newline

       lcase  change upper case to lower case

       ucase  change lower case to upper case

       sparse try to seek rather than write all-NUL output blocks

       swab   swap every pair of

Title: dd Command: Convert and Copy Files
Summary
This document describes the `dd` command, used for copying and converting files. It details the various options available, including specifying input and output files, block sizes, conversion types (like ASCII to EBCDIC), and skipping blocks. It also lists suffixes for specifying sizes and different conversion symbols.