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Date:      Sat, 3 May 2003 04:28:00 +0300
From:      Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@ceid.upatras.gr>
To:        Joshua Oreman <oremanj@www.get-linux.org>
Cc:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Zeros and ones
Message-ID:  <20030503012800.GC1747@gothmog.gr>
In-Reply-To: <20030503010727.GA28640@webserver.get-linux.org>
References:  <200305022353.h42NreOY018887@clunix.cl.msu.edu> <20030503000330.GA98398@falcon.midgard.homeip.net> <54693.192.85.47.1.1051923045.squirrel@new.host.name> <20030503010727.GA28640@webserver.get-linux.org>

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On 2003-05-02 18:07, Joshua Oreman <oremanj@www.get-linux.org> wrote:
>On Fri, May 02, 2003 at 05:50:45PM -0700 or thereabouts, Kevin Stevens seemed to write:
>>> On Fri, May 02, 2003 at 07:53:40PM -0400, Jerry McAllister wrote:
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> This should be easy, but short of writing something specific to do it,
>>>> I am not getting my head around how.
>>>>
>>>> It is easy and convenient to use /dev/zero to write out a number of
>>>> zero bytes to somewhere - as in:
>>>>
>>>> But, I would like to write all ones - as in 0xff or maybe some
>>>> other pattern - as if there was a /dev/one also.
>>
>> I absolutely can't believe it.  At the exact time Jerry was struggling
>> with this, I was working on *exactly* the same issue.  Couldn't have
>> phrased his question any better - I was actually looking in /dev for a
>> "one" device!
>>
>> My way of resolving the problem, BTW, was to create a pure white bitmap in
>> PhotoShop and trim it to the size I needed with "head".  Different ways to
>> skin the cat!  ;)
>
> Yet another (theoretical) way to do it:
> Create a 'rept' device driver in the kernel that uses ioctl() to set the
> bytes to spew out. Base 'zero' on that. Could have a few uses... not :-)

Not.  We have tr(1) already.

	dd if=/dev/zero | tr '\000' '\xxx' >filename

is the canonical way of creating ANY type of file that contains \xxx
bytes, and it doesn't require special kernel hacking skills to work on
any number of platforms :-)



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