bits - Man Page
convert bit masks or lists from/to various formats
Synopsis
Description
The bits utility converts between bit masks and bit lists. It supports combining multiple masks or lists using bitwise operations.
Positional Arguments
- mask
A set of bits specified as a hexadecimal mask value (for example: 0xeec2).
- list
A set of bits specified as a comma-separated list of bit IDs (for example: 1,5,29,32).
If no argument is specified, the sets of bits will be read from standard input, one group per line.
Consecutive IDs can be compressed as ranges (for example: 5,6,7,8,9,10 → 5-10).
Optionally, if an argument starts with a comma, it will be parsed as a single hexadecimal mask split in 32-bit groups (for example: ,00014000,00000000,00020000 → 17,78,80).
By default, all groups will be OR’ed together. If a group has one of the prefixes &, ^, or ~, it will be combined with the resulting mask using a different binary operation:
- &mask|&list
The group will be combined with a binary AND operation. That is: all bits that are set to 1 in the group AND in the combined groups so far will be preserved as 1. All other bits will be reset to 0.
- ^mask|^list
The group will be combined with a binary XOR operation. That is: all bits that are set to 1 in the group AND to 0 in the combined groups so far (or the other way around) will be set to 1. Bits that are set both to 1 or both to 0 will be reset to 0.
- ~mask|~list
All bits set to 1 in the group will be cleared (reset to 0) in the combined groups so far.
Options
- -w number, --width number
The maximum number of bits in the masks handled by bits. The default is 8192. Any bit larger than this number will be truncated.
- -h, --help
Display help text and exit.
- -V, --version
Display version and exit.
Conversion Mode
One of the following conversion modes can be specified. If not specified, it defaults to -m, --mask.
- -b, --binary
Print the combined arguments as a binary mask value.
- -g, --grouped-mask
Print the combined arguments as a hexadecimal mask value in 32-bit comma-separated groups.
- -l, --list
Print the combined arguments as a list of bit IDs. Consecutive IDs are compressed to ranges.
- -m, --mask
Print the combined arguments as a hexadecimal mask value (default).
Examples
~$ bits --mask 4,5-8 16,30 0x400101f0 ~$ bits --list 0xeec2 1,6,7,9-11,13-15 ~$ bits --binary 4,5-8 16,30 0b100_0000_0000_0001_0000_0001_1111_0000 ~$ bits --list ,00300000,03000000,30000003 0,1,28,29,56,57,84,85 ~$ bits --list 1,2,3,4 ~3-10 1,2 ~$ bits --list 1,2,3,4 ^3-10 1,2,5-10 ~$ bits --grouped-mask 2,22,74,79 8400,00000000,00400004 ~$ bits --width 64 --list 2,22,74,79 2,22
Authors
Robin Jarry.
Reporting Bugs
For bug reports, use the issue tracker.
Availability
The bits command is part of the util-linux package which can be downloaded from Linux Kernel Archive.