Question

On windows machine there are lots of third party editors available to edit a binary file. I belive there should be some thing similer buildin in the *nix systems as well. any idea how can i edit a binary file on unix?

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Solution

You can also try ghex2 GNOME utilities. This give you the automated hex-to-ASCII on the side, as well as the various character/integer decodes at the bottom. ghex2
(source: googlepages.com)

OTHER TIPS

In vim You can type :%!xxd to turn it into a hexeditor. :%!xxd -r to go back to normal mode. xxd is shipped in a vim installation.

See here for some remarks about editing binary files with vim (boils down to :set binary to avoid trouble, use only the "R" or "r" command to change text, don't delete characters).

If You are an Emacs fan, see here for a guide on how to edit a binary file with Emacs.

There are much more hexeditors on Linux/Unix....

I use hexedit on Ubuntu

sudo apt-get install hexedit

you can check wikipedia.

I prefer BIEW especially.

Bless is a high quality, full featured hex editor.

It is written in mono/Gtk# and its primary platform is GNU/Linux. However it should be able to run without problems on every platform that mono and Gtk# run. Main Features Bless currently provides the following features:

  • Efficient editing of large data files and block devices.
  • Multilevel undo - redo operations.
  • Customizable data views.
  • Fast data rendering on screen.
  • Multiple tabs.
  • Fast find and replace operations.
  • A data conversion table.
  • Advanced copy/paste capabilities.
  • Highlighting of selection pattern matches in the file.
  • Plugin based architecture.
  • Export of data to text and html (others with plugins).
  • Bitwise operations on data.
  • A comprehensive user manual.

copied from http://home.gna.org/bless/

I used to use bvi.

I am developing hexvi to overcome :%!xxd and bvi's limitations.

hexvi

Features

  • vim-like keybindings and commands
  • going to specific offsets
  • inserting, replacing, deleting
  • searching for stuff (PCRE regexes)
  • everything is a command, and can be mapped in hexvirc
  • color schemes
  • support for large files
  • support for multiple files (via tabs)
  • Python so the entry level to hack around should be lower than C's
  • CLI through and through

Cons

  • as of March 2016, it's alpha so features are missing, but I'm working on those:
    • file saving
    • undo/redo
    • command history
    • visual selection
    • man page
  • no autocomplete

bvi

Features

  • vim-like keybindings and commands
  • going to specific offsets
  • inserting, deleting, replacing
  • searching for stuff (text and hex)
  • undo/redo
  • CLI through and through

Cons

  • regarding its vim capabilities - unfortunately, it understands only the most basic things and definitely needs more love in this regard (example: doesn't understand :wq, but understands :w and :q)
  • no visual selection support whatsoever
  • no tab/split screen support
  • crashes often
  • no support for large files
  • no command history
  • no autocomplete

I like KHexEdit, which is part of KDE

Its "Windows style" UI is probably quite quick to learn for most people (compared to Vim or Emacs anyway :)

There's lightweight binary editor, check hexedit. http://www.linux.org/apps/AppId_6968.html. I tried using it for editing ELF binaries in Linux at least.

I made wxHexEditor, it's open sourced, written with C++/wxWidgets GUI libs and can open even your exabyte sized disk!

http://wxhexeditor.sf.net

Just try.

As variant, you can use radare2:

> r2 -w /usr/bin/ls

[0x004049d0]>V

[0x004049d0 14% 1104 (0x0:-1=1)]> x @ entry0
- offset - | 0 1  2 3  4 5  6 7  8 9  A B  C D  E F| 0123456789ABCDEF
0x004049d0 |31ed 4989 d15e 4889 e248 83e4 f050 5449| 1.I..^H..H...PTI
0x004049e0 |c7c0 103a 4100 48c7 c1a0 3941 0048 c7c7| ...:A.H...9A.H..
0x004049f0 |202a 4000 e877 dcff fff4 660f 1f44 0000|  *@..w....f..D..
0x00404a00 |b807 e661 0055 482d 00e6 6100 4883 f80e| ...a.UH-..a.H...
0x00404a10 |4889 e576 1bb8 0000 0000 4885 c074 115d| H..v......H..t.]
0x00404a20 |bf00 e661 00ff e066 0f1f 8400 0000 0000| ...a...f........
0x00404a30 |5dc3 0f1f 4000 662e 0f1f 8400 0000 0000| ]...@.f.........
0x00404a40 |be00 e661 0055 4881 ee00 e661 0048 c1fe| ...a.UH....a.H..
0x00404a50 |0348 89e5 4889 f048 c1e8 3f48 01c6 48d1| .H..H..H..?H..H.
0x00404a60 |fe74 15b8 0000 0000 4885 c074 0b5d bf00| .t......H..t.]..
0x00404a70 |e661 00ff e00f 1f00 5dc3 660f 1f44 0000| .a......].f..D..
0x00404a80 |803d c19b 2100 0075 1155 4889 e5e8 6eff| .=..!..u.UH...n.
0x00404a90 |ffff 5dc6 05ae 9b21 0001 f3c3 0f1f 4000| ..]....!......@.
0x00404aa0 |bf10 de61 0048 833f 0075 05eb 930f 1f00| ...a.H.?.u......
0x00404ab0 |b800 0000 0048 85c0 74f1 5548 89e5 ffd0| .....H..t.UH....
0x00404ac0 |5de9 7aff ffff 662e 0f1f 8400 0000 0000| ].z...f.........
0x00404ad0 |488b 0731 d248 f7f6 4889 d0c3 0f1f 4000| H..1.H..H.....@.

For details about how work in visual mode you can read here

For small changes, I have used hexedit:

http://rigaux.org/hexedit.html

Simple but fast and useful.

I've had good experience with wxHexEditor... just make sure if you are hex-editing a drive you do it via the menu

Devices -> Open Disk Device -> SCSI Disk Drive Partition #_N_
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