LLVM-STRINGS(1) | LLVM | LLVM-STRINGS(1) |
llvm-strings - print strings
llvm-strings [options] [input…]
llvm-strings is a tool intended as a drop-in replacement for GNU’s strings, which looks for printable strings in files and writes them to the standard output stream. A printable string is any sequence of four (by default) or more printable ASCII characters. The end of the file, or any other byte, terminates the current sequence.
llvm-strings looks for strings in each input file specified. Unlike GNU strings it looks in the entire input file, regardless of file format, rather than restricting the search to certain sections of object files. If “-” is specified as an input, or no input is specified, the program reads from the standard input stream.
$ cat input.txt bars foo wibble blob $ llvm-strings input.txt bars wibble blob
Example:
$ llvm-strings --print-file-name test.o test.elf test.o: _Z5hellov test.o: some_bss test.o: test.cpp test.o: main test.elf: test.cpp test.elf: test2.cpp test.elf: _Z5hellov test.elf: main test.elf: some_bss
Example:
$ llvm-strings --radix=o test.o
1054 _Z5hellov
1066 .rela.text
1101 .comment
1112 some_bss
1123 .bss
1130 test.cpp
1141 main $ llvm-strings --radix=d test.o
556 _Z5hellov
566 .rela.text
577 .comment
586 some_bss
595 .bss
600 test.cpp
609 main $ llvm-strings -t x test.o
22c _Z5hellov
236 .rela.text
241 .comment
24a some_bss
253 .bss
258 test.cpp
261 main
llvm-strings exits with a non-zero exit code if there is an error. Otherwise, it exits with code 0.
To report bugs, please visit <https://bugs.llvm.org/>.
Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).
2003-2023, LLVM Project
2023-01-22 | 13 |