 |
Index for Section 1 |
|
 |
Alphabetical listing for F |
|
file(1)
NAME
file - Determines file type
SYNOPSIS
file [-c] [-f file_list] [-m magic_file] file...
STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards
as follows:
file: XPG4, XPG4-UNIX
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about
industry standards and associated tags.
OPTIONS
-c [Compaq] Checks the magic file (/etc/magic by default) for format
errors. This validation is not normally done. File typing is not done
under this option.
-f file_list
[Compaq] Reads file_list for a list of files to examine.
-m magic_file
[Compaq] Specifies magic_file as the magic file (/etc/magic by
default).
OPERANDS
file
The path name of the file to be tested.
DESCRIPTION
The file command reads input files and performs a series of tests on each
one. It then attempts to classify them by type and writes the file types to
standard output.
The file command uses the /etc/magic file to identify files that have some
sort of a magic number (that is, any file containing a numeric or string
constant that indicates its type).
[Compaq] If a file appears to be plain text, file examines the first 512
bytes and tries to determine what kind of text it is. If the first 512
bytes only contain ASCII characters, file returns either ASCII text or
English text. If the file contains other characters (that is, European or
Asian extended characters), file returns data.
[Compaq] If a file does not appear to be plain text, file attempts to
distinguish a binary data file from a text file that contains extended
characters. If the file is an a.out file and the version number is greater
than zero, file displays the version stamp.
[Compaq] For character special files, part of the identification is
information about the devices the system shows as active. In particular,
file returns device-specific information such as controller type and unit,
device type and unit, and status (offline, write locked, density, errors).
The general categories currently implemented are disk, tape, and terminal
devices. The supported terminal devices include Local Area Terminals (LAT)
but not Local Area Network (LAN) pseudo-terminals.
[Compaq] The following example shows how the file command identifies a
device. The output is shown on two lines due to space considerations, but
appears on one line on a display.
% file /dev/rrz0c
/dev/rrz0c: character special (8/2) SCSI #0
RZ24 disk #0 (SCSI ID #0)
[Compaq] On Tru64 UNIX systems, the file command recognizes OSF core
files. For example:
% file core
core: core dump, generated from 'mwm'
[Compaq] The amount and type of information the file command returns can
depend on the permissions of the file being queried. For example, most
special device files have permissions that allow access only by root and
non-root users cannot open them. The file command has to open the device
and only root has the proper permissions. Thus, if the file command is
issued by a non-root user, it can report only information it can determine
without gaining access to the device.
[Compaq] The file command also uses internal tables to decode certain
types of files. The following example shows the keywords the file command
uses to locate troff, C code, and assembler code.
char *troff[] = { /* new troff intermediate lang */
"x","T","res","init","font","202","V0","p1",0};
char *c[] = {
"int","char","float","double","struct","extern",0};
char *as[] = {
"globl","byte","align","text","data","comm",0};
The file types recognized and identification displayed include those shown
in the following table:
____________________________________________________________
If file is a It is identified as
____________________________________________________________
directory directory
FIFO fifo
block special block special
character special character special
executable binary executable
empty regular file empty
archive
ar archive library (see ar)
cpio archive
extended cpio format (see pax)
tar archive
extended tar format (see tar)
shell script commands text
C-language source c program text
FORTRAN source fortran program text
____________________________________________________________
RESTRICTIONS
[Compaq] The file command often does a poor job of distinguishing C
programs, shell scripts, English text, and ASCII text. In addition, it
does not recognize certain programming languages, including Modula, Pascal,
and Lisp.
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 Successful completion.
>0 An error occurred.
EXAMPLES
1. To display the type of information a file contains, enter:
file myfile
This displays the file type of myfile (directory, data, ASCII text, C
program source, archive, and so on).
2. To display the type of each file named in a list of file names, enter:
file -f filenames
This displays the type of each file with a name that appears in
filenames. Each file name must appear alone on a line.
To create filenames, enter:
ls > filenames
Then edit filenames as desired.
FILES
/etc/magic
File type database
SEE ALSO
Commands: r(1), cpio(1), ls(1), pax(1), tar(1)
Files: magic(4)
Standards: standards(5)
Programmer's Guide