how to get hexdump of a structure data
A hex dump for Android, should be suitable for other platforms as well.
LOGD()
, same as DLOG()
, plays the role of printf()
because printf()
does not work in Android. For platforms other than Android, you may #define DLOG printf
.
dlog.h:
// Android logging
#include <android/log.h>
#define LOGD(...) __android_log_print(ANDROID_LOG_DEBUG , "~~~~~~", __VA_ARGS__)
#define DLOG(...) __android_log_print(ANDROID_LOG_DEBUG , "~~~~~~", __VA_ARGS__)
#define LOGE(...) __android_log_print(ANDROID_LOG_ERROR , "~~~~~~", __VA_ARGS__)
#define ELOG(...) __android_log_print(ANDROID_LOG_ERROR , "~~~~~~", __VA_ARGS__)
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
void log_dump(const void*addr,int len,int linelen);
void log_dumpf(const char*fmt,const void*addr,int len,int linelen);
#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif
dump.cpp:
#include <dlog.h>
//#include <alloca.h>
inline char hdigit(int n){return "0123456789abcdef"[n&0xf];};
#define LEN_LIMIT 8
#define SUBSTITUTE_CHAR '`'
static const char* dumpline(char*dest, int linelen, const char*src, const char*srcend)
{
if(src>=srcend) {
return 0;
}
int i;
unsigned long s = (unsigned long)src;
for(i=0; i<8; i++) {
dest[i] = hdigit(s>>(28-i*4));
}
dest[8] = ' ';
dest += 9;
for(i=0; i<linelen/4 ; i++) {
if(src+i<srcend) {
dest[i*3] = hdigit(src[i]>>4);
dest[i*3+1] = hdigit(src[i]);
dest[i*3+2] = ' ';
dest[linelen/4*3+i] = src[i] >= ' ' && src[i] < 0x7f ? src[i] : SUBSTITUTE_CHAR;
}else{
dest[i*3] = dest[i*3+1] = dest[i*3+2] = dest[linelen/4*3+i] = ' ';
}
}
return src+i;
}
void log_dumpf(const char*fmt,const void*addr,int len,int linelen)
{
#if LEN_LIMIT
if(len>linelen*LEN_LIMIT) {
len=linelen*LEN_LIMIT;
}
#endif
linelen *= 4;
static char _buf[4096];
char*buf = _buf;//(char*)alloca(linelen+1); // alloca() causes the initialization to fail!!!!
buf[linelen]=0;
const char*start = (char*)addr;
const char*cur = start;
const char*end = start+len;
while(!!(cur = dumpline(buf,linelen,cur,start+len))){DLOG(fmt,buf);}
}
void log_dump(const void*addr,int len,int linelen)
{
log_dumpf("%s\n",addr,len,linelen);
}
Usage example:
log_dumpf("args: %s\n", &p, 0x20, 0x10);
Output:
args: 61efadc4 00 3c 17 01 6d bc 59 61 02 00 00 00 80 ae ef 61 `<``m`Ya```````a
args: 61efadd4 00 3c 17 01 00 00 00 00 31 a5 59 61 80 ae ef 61 `<``````1`Ya```a
UPDATE: see dump.cpp and re_dump.h in reDroid (github), it includes a recursive dump that checks if a pointer is valid.
The following code will give you a hex dump of arbitrary memory from within your code.
#include <stdio.h>
// Usage:
// hexDump(desc, addr, len, perLine);
// desc: if non-NULL, printed as a description before hex dump.
// addr: the address to start dumping from.
// len: the number of bytes to dump.
// perLine: number of bytes on each output line.
void hexDump (
const char * desc,
const void * addr,
const int len,
int perLine
) {
// Silently ignore silly per-line values.
if (perLine < 4 || perLine > 64) perLine = 16;
int i;
unsigned char buff[perLine+1];
const unsigned char * pc = (const unsigned char *)addr;
// Output description if given.
if (desc != NULL) printf ("%s:\n", desc);
// Length checks.
if (len == 0) {
printf(" ZERO LENGTH\n");
return;
}
if (len < 0) {
printf(" NEGATIVE LENGTH: %d\n", len);
return;
}
// Process every byte in the data.
for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
// Multiple of perLine means new or first line (with line offset).
if ((i % perLine) == 0) {
// Only print previous-line ASCII buffer for lines beyond first.
if (i != 0) printf (" %s\n", buff);
// Output the offset of current line.
printf (" %04x ", i);
}
// Now the hex code for the specific character.
printf (" %02x", pc[i]);
// And buffer a printable ASCII character for later.
if ((pc[i] < 0x20) || (pc[i] > 0x7e)) // isprint() may be better.
buff[i % perLine] = '.';
else
buff[i % perLine] = pc[i];
buff[(i % perLine) + 1] = '\0';
}
// Pad out last line if not exactly perLine characters.
while ((i % perLine) != 0) {
printf (" ");
i++;
}
// And print the final ASCII buffer.
printf (" %s\n", buff);
}
// Very simple test harness.
int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
char my_str[] = "a char string greater than 16 chars";
hexDump ("my_str", &my_str, sizeof (my_str), 16);
return 0;
}
You pass into hexDump
a description, memory address, length, and how many bytes you want on each line.
It will output a hex dump (including character data) for examination. When you run it with the included main
, the output is:
my_str:
0000 61 20 63 68 61 72 20 73 74 72 69 6e 67 20 67 72 a char string gr
0010 65 61 74 65 72 20 74 68 61 6e 20 31 36 20 63 68 eater than 16 ch
0020 61 72 73 00 ars.