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19:35
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Q: Removing null bytes inline from file on OS X

waza-ariI have a set of files which have null bytes roughly at every second byte slot. Further, they have the byte sequence FF FE at the beginning, which needs to be removed. I was given the files (they are actually router configuration files, so plain text), and I have no idea how those bytes got in the...

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Can you please open the file in vi and tell me what you are seeing "check for this sign ^@ ". also you can do :set list to show all invisible characters.
also see suggestions here : stackoverflow.com/questions/2398393/…
Interestingly, vi does show no such characters. It shows ^M at the end of every line, which however does not explain the problem. vi however shows [converted] at the bottom.
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first thing to do =>> open the file in vi(m) and do :%s/<Ctrl-V><Ctrl-M>/\r/g so that you can get ride of windows carriage return to a *nix ones .
is your file showing as a one line
No, its not, there are newlines in between. Interestingly, on a Debian system, the sed examples work great.
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soemone suggested : A large number of unwanted NUL characters, say one every other byte, indicates that the file is encoded in UTF-16 and that you should use iconv to convert it to UTF-8. so you may want to run the file through iconv.
19:35
Interesting idea. iconv -f UTF-8 -t UTF-16 R3.txt results in iconv: R3.txt:1:0: cannot convert
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hi
waza
hi z_
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is the null part of the string or just in between
Thanks for helping me out with that, somehow it really frustrates me... What do you mean by part of the string?
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like are the bad bytes attached to the string? or are they control charachters
19:38
looks like they are part of the string. there are words like "enable", and a null byte is between every single pair of characters, and FEFF in the beginning
I can send you the file if that helps. Nothing secret in there
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I think this is utf-8 vs utf-16 issue
Could be. However iconv is not able to convert it. Let my try on Debian again, could be a OS X thing...
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can you find out about the encodings of the file
what is the encoding of the file ?
Not sure what you mean.
file -bi R3.txt
text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Ah wait. That is one file I converted by hand
file -bi R4.txt
text/plain; charset=utf-16le
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the encoding of the words inside the text are "charset=utf-16le"
19:43
Yeah, that explains why the router I want to apply the configs on cannot deal with it, it actually expects plain ascii files
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yup , I guess you may even want to read the file one line at a time ad convert from utf-16 to utf-8
I am not sure what routers accept but good point .
Still interesting that OS X is not able to convert that file... iconv just spits out "cannot convert". converting the same file on debian with the exact same command works just fine...
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ox x sucks, I am not surprised to be honest
os x*
Looks like... :)
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haha
so did it work , are you good to go
19:47
Still cannot convert it directly to ascii, but i guess utfß8 will be fine
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let me know
Thanks for helping me
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np
I will post an answer with what we discussed so that other people can benefit from the question you posted
Sure. In the end, iconv -f utf-16le -t us-ascii//TRANSLIT -o R4.txt.conv R4.txt helped
//TRANSLIT seems to be important, as otherwise it could not convert to ASCII
Its not on OS X, and not inline, but helps nevertheless :)
Thanks agiuan
*again

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