1FILE(1) BSD General Commands Manual FILE(1)
2
4 file — determine file type
5
7 file [-bcdEhiklLNnprsSvzZ0] [--apple] [--exclude-quiet] [--extension]
8 [--mime-encoding] [--mime-type] [-e testname] [-F separator]
9 [-f namefile] [-m magicfiles] [-P name=value] file ...
10 file -C [-m magicfiles]
11 file [--help]
12
14 This manual page documents version 5.39 of the file command.
15
16 file tests each argument in an attempt to classify it. There are three
17 sets of tests, performed in this order: filesystem tests, magic tests,
18 and language tests. The first test that succeeds causes the file type to
19 be printed.
20
21 The type printed will usually contain one of the words text (the file
22 contains only printing characters and a few common control characters and
23 is probably safe to read on an ASCII terminal), executable (the file con‐
24 tains the result of compiling a program in a form understandable to some
25 UNIX kernel or another), or data meaning anything else (data is usually
26 “binary” or non-printable). Exceptions are well-known file formats (core
27 files, tar archives) that are known to contain binary data. When modify‐
28 ing magic files or the program itself, make sure to preserve these
29 keywords. Users depend on knowing that all the readable files in a
30 directory have the word “text” printed. Don't do as Berkeley did and
31 change “shell commands text” to “shell script”.
32
33 The filesystem tests are based on examining the return from a stat(2)
34 system call. The program checks to see if the file is empty, or if it's
35 some sort of special file. Any known file types appropriate to the sys‐
36 tem you are running on (sockets, symbolic links, or named pipes (FIFOs)
37 on those systems that implement them) are intuited if they are defined in
38 the system header file <sys/stat.h>.
39
40 The magic tests are used to check for files with data in particular fixed
41 formats. The canonical example of this is a binary executable (compiled
42 program) a.out file, whose format is defined in <elf.h>, <a.out.h> and
43 possibly <exec.h> in the standard include directory. These files have a
44 “magic number” stored in a particular place near the beginning of the
45 file that tells the UNIX operating system that the file is a binary exe‐
46 cutable, and which of several types thereof. The concept of a “magic”
47 has been applied by extension to data files. Any file with some invari‐
48 ant identifier at a small fixed offset into the file can usually be
49 described in this way. The information identifying these files is read
50 from the compiled magic file /usr/share/misc/magic.mgc, or the files in
51 the directory /usr/share/misc/magic if the compiled file does not exist.
52 In addition, if $HOME/.magic.mgc or $HOME/.magic exists, it will be used
53 in preference to the system magic files.
54
55 If a file does not match any of the entries in the magic file, it is
56 examined to see if it seems to be a text file. ASCII, ISO-8859-x, non-
57 ISO 8-bit extended-ASCII character sets (such as those used on Macintosh
58 and IBM PC systems), UTF-8-encoded Unicode, UTF-16-encoded Unicode, and
59 EBCDIC character sets can be distinguished by the different ranges and
60 sequences of bytes that constitute printable text in each set. If a file
61 passes any of these tests, its character set is reported. ASCII,
62 ISO-8859-x, UTF-8, and extended-ASCII files are identified as “text”
63 because they will be mostly readable on nearly any terminal; UTF-16 and
64 EBCDIC are only “character data” because, while they contain text, it is
65 text that will require translation before it can be read. In addition,
66 file will attempt to determine other characteristics of text-type files.
67 If the lines of a file are terminated by CR, CRLF, or NEL, instead of the
68 Unix-standard LF, this will be reported. Files that contain embedded
69 escape sequences or overstriking will also be identified.
70
71 Once file has determined the character set used in a text-type file, it
72 will attempt to determine in what language the file is written. The lan‐
73 guage tests look for particular strings (cf. <names.h>) that can appear
74 anywhere in the first few blocks of a file. For example, the keyword .br
75 indicates that the file is most likely a troff(1) input file, just as the
76 keyword struct indicates a C program. These tests are less reliable than
77 the previous two groups, so they are performed last. The language test
78 routines also test for some miscellany (such as tar(1) archives, JSON
79 files).
80
81 Any file that cannot be identified as having been written in any of the
82 character sets listed above is simply said to be “data”.
83
85 --apple
86 Causes the file command to output the file type and creator code
87 as used by older MacOS versions. The code consists of eight let‐
88 ters, the first describing the file type, the latter the creator.
89 This option works properly only for file formats that have the
90 apple-style output defined.
91
92 -b, --brief
93 Do not prepend filenames to output lines (brief mode).
94
95 -C, --compile
96 Write a magic.mgc output file that contains a pre-parsed version
97 of the magic file or directory.
98
99 -c, --checking-printout
100 Cause a checking printout of the parsed form of the magic file.
101 This is usually used in conjunction with the -m flag to debug a
102 new magic file before installing it.
103
104 -d Prints internal debugging information to stderr.
105
106 -E On filesystem errors (file not found etc), instead of handling
107 the error as regular output as POSIX mandates and keep going,
108 issue an error message and exit.
109
110 -e, --exclude testname
111 Exclude the test named in testname from the list of tests made to
112 determine the file type. Valid test names are:
113
114 apptype EMX application type (only on EMX).
115
116 ascii Various types of text files (this test will try to
117 guess the text encoding, irrespective of the setting of
118 the ‘encoding’ option).
119
120 encoding Different text encodings for soft magic tests.
121
122 tokens Ignored for backwards compatibility.
123
124 cdf Prints details of Compound Document Files.
125
126 compress Checks for, and looks inside, compressed files.
127
128 csv Checks Comma Separated Value files.
129
130 elf Prints ELF file details, provided soft magic tests are
131 enabled and the elf magic is found.
132
133 json Examines JSON (RFC-7159) files by parsing them for com‐
134 pliance.
135
136 soft Consults magic files.
137
138 tar Examines tar files by verifying the checksum of the 512
139 byte tar header. Excluding this test can provide more
140 detailed content description by using the soft magic
141 method.
142
143 text A synonym for ‘ascii’.
144
145 --exclude-quiet
146 Like --exclude but ignore tests that file does not know about.
147 This is intended for compatilibity with older versions of file.
148
149 --extension
150 Print a slash-separated list of valid extensions for the file
151 type found.
152
153 -F, --separator separator
154 Use the specified string as the separator between the filename
155 and the file result returned. Defaults to ‘:’.
156
157 -f, --files-from namefile
158 Read the names of the files to be examined from namefile (one per
159 line) before the argument list. Either namefile or at least one
160 filename argument must be present; to test the standard input,
161 use ‘-’ as a filename argument. Please note that namefile is
162 unwrapped and the enclosed filenames are processed when this
163 option is encountered and before any further options processing
164 is done. This allows one to process multiple lists of files with
165 different command line arguments on the same file invocation.
166 Thus if you want to set the delimiter, you need to do it before
167 you specify the list of files, like: “-F @ -f namefile”, instead
168 of: “-f namefile -F @”.
169
170 -h, --no-dereference
171 option causes symlinks not to be followed (on systems that sup‐
172 port symbolic links). This is the default if the environment
173 variable POSIXLY_CORRECT is not defined.
174
175 -i, --mime
176 Causes the file command to output mime type strings rather than
177 the more traditional human readable ones. Thus it may say
178 ‘text/plain; charset=us-ascii’ rather than “ASCII text”.
179
180 --mime-type, --mime-encoding
181 Like -i, but print only the specified element(s).
182
183 -k, --keep-going
184 Don't stop at the first match, keep going. Subsequent matches
185 will be have the string ‘\012- ’ prepended. (If you want a new‐
186 line, see the -r option.) The magic pattern with the highest
187 strength (see the -l option) comes first.
188
189 -l, --list
190 Shows a list of patterns and their strength sorted descending by
191 magic(5) strength which is used for the matching (see also the -k
192 option).
193
194 -L, --dereference
195 option causes symlinks to be followed, as the like-named option
196 in ls(1) (on systems that support symbolic links). This is the
197 default if the environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT is defined.
198
199 -m, --magic-file magicfiles
200 Specify an alternate list of files and directories containing
201 magic. This can be a single item, or a colon-separated list. If
202 a compiled magic file is found alongside a file or directory, it
203 will be used instead.
204
205 -N, --no-pad
206 Don't pad filenames so that they align in the output.
207
208 -n, --no-buffer
209 Force stdout to be flushed after checking each file. This is
210 only useful if checking a list of files. It is intended to be
211 used by programs that want filetype output from a pipe.
212
213 -p, --preserve-date
214 On systems that support utime(3) or utimes(2), attempt to pre‐
215 serve the access time of files analyzed, to pretend that file
216 never read them.
217
218 -P, --parameter name=value
219 Set various parameter limits.
220
221 Name Default Explanation
222 bytes 1048576 max number of bytes to read from
223 file
224 elf_notes 256 max ELF notes processed
225 elf_phnum 2048 max ELF program sections processed
226 elf_shnum 32768 max ELF sections processed
227 indir 50 recursion limit for indirect magic
228 name 50 use count limit for name/use magic
229 regex 8192 length limit for regex searches
230
231 -r, --raw
232 Don't translate unprintable characters to \ooo. Normally file
233 translates unprintable characters to their octal representation.
234
235 -s, --special-files
236 Normally, file only attempts to read and determine the type of
237 argument files which stat(2) reports are ordinary files. This
238 prevents problems, because reading special files may have pecu‐
239 liar consequences. Specifying the -s option causes file to also
240 read argument files which are block or character special files.
241 This is useful for determining the filesystem types of the data
242 in raw disk partitions, which are block special files. This
243 option also causes file to disregard the file size as reported by
244 stat(2) since on some systems it reports a zero size for raw disk
245 partitions.
246
247 -S, --no-sandbox
248 On systems where libseccomp
249 (https://github.com/seccomp/libseccomp) is available, the -S flag
250 disables sandboxing which is enabled by default. This option is
251 needed for file to execute external decompressing programs, i.e.
252 when the -z flag is specified and the built-in decompressors are
253 not available. On systems where sandboxing is not available,
254 this option has no effect.
255
256 -v, --version
257 Print the version of the program and exit.
258
259 -z, --uncompress
260 Try to look inside compressed files.
261
262 -Z, --uncompress-noreport
263 Try to look inside compressed files, but report information about
264 the contents only not the compression.
265
266 -0, --print0
267 Output a null character ‘\0’ after the end of the filename. Nice
268 to cut(1) the output. This does not affect the separator, which
269 is still printed.
270
271 If this option is repeated more than once, then file prints just
272 the filename followed by a NUL followed by the description (or
273 ERROR: text) followed by a second NUL for each entry.
274
275 --help Print a help message and exit.
276
278 The environment variable MAGIC can be used to set the default magic file
279 name. If that variable is set, then file will not attempt to open
280 $HOME/.magic. file adds “.mgc” to the value of this variable as appro‐
281 priate. The environment variable POSIXLY_CORRECT controls (on systems
282 that support symbolic links), whether file will attempt to follow sym‐
283 links or not. If set, then file follows symlink, otherwise it does not.
284 This is also controlled by the -L and -h options.
285
287 /usr/share/misc/magic.mgc Default compiled list of magic.
288 /usr/share/misc/magic Directory containing default magic files.
289
291 file will exit with 0 if the operation was successful or >0 if an error
292 was encountered. The following errors cause diagnostic messages, but
293 don't affect the program exit code (as POSIX requires), unless -E is
294 specified:
295 · A file cannot be found
296 · There is no permission to read a file
297 · The file type cannot be determined
298
300 $ file file.c file /dev/{wd0a,hda}
301 file.c: C program text
302 file: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1 (SYSV),
303 dynamically linked (uses shared libs), stripped
304 /dev/wd0a: block special (0/0)
305 /dev/hda: block special (3/0)
306
307 $ file -s /dev/wd0{b,d}
308 /dev/wd0b: data
309 /dev/wd0d: x86 boot sector
310
311 $ file -s /dev/hda{,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10}
312 /dev/hda: x86 boot sector
313 /dev/hda1: Linux/i386 ext2 filesystem
314 /dev/hda2: x86 boot sector
315 /dev/hda3: x86 boot sector, extended partition table
316 /dev/hda4: Linux/i386 ext2 filesystem
317 /dev/hda5: Linux/i386 swap file
318 /dev/hda6: Linux/i386 swap file
319 /dev/hda7: Linux/i386 swap file
320 /dev/hda8: Linux/i386 swap file
321 /dev/hda9: empty
322 /dev/hda10: empty
323
324 $ file -i file.c file /dev/{wd0a,hda}
325 file.c: text/x-c
326 file: application/x-executable
327 /dev/hda: application/x-not-regular-file
328 /dev/wd0a: application/x-not-regular-file
329
330
332 hexdump(1), od(1), strings(1), magic(5)
333
335 This program is believed to exceed the System V Interface Definition of
336 FILE(CMD), as near as one can determine from the vague language contained
337 therein. Its behavior is mostly compatible with the System V program of
338 the same name. This version knows more magic, however, so it will pro‐
339 duce different (albeit more accurate) output in many cases.
340
341 The one significant difference between this version and System V is that
342 this version treats any white space as a delimiter, so that spaces in
343 pattern strings must be escaped. For example,
344
345 >10 string language impress (imPRESS data)
346
347 in an existing magic file would have to be changed to
348
349 >10 string language\ impress (imPRESS data)
350
351 In addition, in this version, if a pattern string contains a backslash,
352 it must be escaped. For example
353
354 0 string \begindata Andrew Toolkit document
355
356 in an existing magic file would have to be changed to
357
358 0 string \\begindata Andrew Toolkit document
359
360 SunOS releases 3.2 and later from Sun Microsystems include a file command
361 derived from the System V one, but with some extensions. This version
362 differs from Sun's only in minor ways. It includes the extension of the
363 ‘&’ operator, used as, for example,
364
365 >16 long&0x7fffffff >0 not stripped
366
368 On systems where libseccomp (https://github.com/seccomp/libseccomp) is
369 available, file is enforces limiting system calls to only the ones neces‐
370 sary for the operation of the program. This enforcement does not provide
371 any security benefit when file is asked to decompress input files running
372 external programs with the -z option. To enable execution of external
373 decompressors, one needs to disable sandboxing using the -S flag.
374
376 The magic file entries have been collected from various sources, mainly
377 USENET, and contributed by various authors. Christos Zoulas (address
378 below) will collect additional or corrected magic file entries. A con‐
379 solidation of magic file entries will be distributed periodically.
380
381 The order of entries in the magic file is significant. Depending on what
382 system you are using, the order that they are put together may be incor‐
383 rect. If your old file command uses a magic file, keep the old magic
384 file around for comparison purposes (rename it to
385 /usr/share/misc/magic.orig).
386
388 There has been a file command in every UNIX since at least Research
389 Version 4 (man page dated November, 1973). The System V version intro‐
390 duced one significant major change: the external list of magic types.
391 This slowed the program down slightly but made it a lot more flexible.
392
393 This program, based on the System V version, was written by Ian Darwin
394 ⟨ian@darwinsys.com⟩ without looking at anybody else's source code.
395
396 John Gilmore revised the code extensively, making it better than the
397 first version. Geoff Collyer found several inadequacies and provided
398 some magic file entries. Contributions of the ‘&’ operator by Rob McMa‐
399 hon, ⟨cudcv@warwick.ac.uk⟩, 1989.
400
401 Guy Harris, ⟨guy@netapp.com⟩, made many changes from 1993 to the present.
402
403 Primary development and maintenance from 1990 to the present by Christos
404 Zoulas ⟨christos@astron.com⟩.
405
406 Altered by Chris Lowth ⟨chris@lowth.com⟩, 2000: handle the -i option to
407 output mime type strings, using an alternative magic file and internal
408 logic.
409
410 Altered by Eric Fischer ⟨enf@pobox.com⟩, July, 2000, to identify charac‐
411 ter codes and attempt to identify the languages of non-ASCII files.
412
413 Altered by Reuben Thomas ⟨rrt@sc3d.org⟩, 2007-2011, to improve MIME sup‐
414 port, merge MIME and non-MIME magic, support directories as well as files
415 of magic, apply many bug fixes, update and fix a lot of magic, improve
416 the build system, improve the documentation, and rewrite the Python bind‐
417 ings in pure Python.
418
419 The list of contributors to the ‘magic’ directory (magic files) is too
420 long to include here. You know who you are; thank you. Many contribu‐
421 tors are listed in the source files.
422
424 Copyright (c) Ian F. Darwin, Toronto, Canada, 1986-1999. Covered by the
425 standard Berkeley Software Distribution copyright; see the file COPYING
426 in the source distribution.
427
428 The files tar.h and is_tar.c were written by John Gilmore from his pub‐
429 lic-domain tar(1) program, and are not covered by the above license.
430
432 Please report bugs and send patches to the bug tracker at
433 https://bugs.astron.com/ or the mailing list at ⟨file@astron.com⟩ (visit
434 https://mailman.astron.com/mailman/listinfo/file first to subscribe).
435
437 Fix output so that tests for MIME and APPLE flags are not needed all over
438 the place, and actual output is only done in one place. This needs a
439 design. Suggestion: push possible outputs on to a list, then pick the
440 last-pushed (most specific, one hopes) value at the end, or use a default
441 if the list is empty. This should not slow down evaluation.
442
443 The handling of MAGIC_CONTINUE and printing \012- between entries is
444 clumsy and complicated; refactor and centralize.
445
446 Some of the encoding logic is hard-coded in encoding.c and can be moved
447 to the magic files if we had a !:charset annotation
448
449 Continue to squash all magic bugs. See Debian BTS for a good source.
450
451 Store arbitrarily long strings, for example for %s patterns, so that they
452 can be printed out. Fixes Debian bug #271672. This can be done by allo‐
453 cating strings in a string pool, storing the string pool at the end of
454 the magic file and converting all the string pointers to relative offsets
455 from the string pool.
456
457 Add syntax for relative offsets after current level (Debian bug #466037).
458
459 Make file -ki work, i.e. give multiple MIME types.
460
461 Add a zip library so we can peek inside Office2007 documents to print
462 more details about their contents.
463
464 Add an option to print URLs for the sources of the file descriptions.
465
466 Combine script searches and add a way to map executable names to MIME
467 types (e.g. have a magic value for !:mime which causes the resulting
468 string to be looked up in a table). This would avoid adding the same
469 magic repeatedly for each new hash-bang interpreter.
470
471 When a file descriptor is available, we can skip and adjust the buffer
472 instead of the hacky buffer management we do now.
473
474 Fix “name” and “use” to check for consistency at compile time (duplicate
475 “name”, “use” pointing to undefined “name” ). Make “name” / “use” more
476 efficient by keeping a sorted list of names. Special-case ^ to flip
477 endianness in the parser so that it does not have to be escaped, and doc‐
478 ument it.
479
480 If the offsets specified internally in the file exceed the buffer size (
481 HOWMANY variable in file.h), then we don't seek to that offset, but we
482 give up. It would be better if buffer managements was done when the file
483 descriptor is available so move around the file. One must be careful
484 though because this has performance (and thus security considerations).
485
487 You can obtain the original author's latest version by anonymous FTP on
488 ftp.astron.com in the directory /pub/file/file-X.YZ.tar.gz.
489
490BSD June 7, 2020 BSD