Provided by: srecord_1.58-1.1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       srec_input - input file specifications

SYNOPSIS

       srec_* filename [ format ]

DESCRIPTION

       This  manual page describes the input file specifications for the srec_cat(1), srec_cmp(1)
       and srec_info(1) commands.

       Input files may be qualified in a number of ways: you may specify their format and you may
       specify filters to apply to them.  An input file specification looks like this:
              filename [ format ][ -ignore‐checksums ][ filter ... ]

       The  filename may be specified as a file name, or the special name “-” which is understood
       to mean the standard input.

   Grouping with Parentheses
       There are some cases where operator precedence of the filters  can  be  ambiguous.   Input
       specifications  may  also  be  enclosed  by  (  parentheses  )  to make grouping explicit.
       Remember that the parentheses must be separate words, i.e. surrounded by spaces, and  they
       will need to be quoted to get them past the shell's interpretation of parentheses.

   Those Option Names Sure Are Long
       All  options may be abbreviated; the abbreviation is documented as the upper case letters,
       all lower case letters and  underscores  (_)  are  optional.   You  must  use  consecutive
       sequences of optional letters.

       All  options  are  case  insensitive,  you  may type them in upper case or lower case or a
       combination of both, case is not important.

       For example: the arguments “-help”, “-HEL” and “-h” are all interpreted to mean the  -Help
       option.   The  argument  “-hlp”  will  not  be  understood,  because  consecutive optional
       characters were not supplied.

       Options and other command line arguments may be mixed arbitrarily on the command line.

       The GNU long option names are understood.  Since all option names for srec_input are long,
       this  means  ignoring  the  extra  leading  “-”.   The “--option=value” convention is also
       understood.

   File Formats
       The format is specified by the argument after the  file  name.   The  format  defaults  to
       Motorola S‐Record if not specified.  The format specifiers are:

       -Absolute_Object_Module_Format
               This option says to use the Intel Absolute Object Module Format (AOMF) to read the
               file.  (See srec_aomf(5) for a description of this file format.)

       -Ascii_Hex
               This  option  says  to  use  the  Ascii‐Hex  format  to  read   the   file.    See
               srec_ascii_hex(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Atmel_Generic
               This  option  says  to  use  the  Atmel  Generic  format  to  read  the file.  See
               srec_atmel_genetic(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Binary This option says the file is a raw binary file,  and  should  be  read  literally.
               (This option may also be written -Raw.)  See srec_binary(5) for more information.

       -B‐Record
               This  option  says  to  use  the Freescale MC68EZ328 Dragonball bootstrap b‐record
               format to read the file.  See srec_brecord(5)  for  a  description  of  this  file
               format.

       -COsmac This  option  says  to  use  the  RCA  Cosmac  Elf  format  to read the file.  See
               srec_cosmac(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Dec_Binary
               This option says to use the DEC Binary  (XXDP)  format  to  read  the  file.   See
               srec_dec_binary(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Elektor_Monitor52
               This  option  says  to use the EMON52 format to read the file.  See srec_emon52(5)
               for a description of this file format.

       -FAIrchild
               This option says to use the Fairchild  Fairbug  format  to  read  the  file.   See
               srec_fairchild(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Fast_Load
               This  option  says  to  use  the LSI Logic Fast Load format to read the file.  See
               srec_fastload(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Formatted_Binary
               This option says to use the  Formatted  Binary  format  to  read  the  file.   See
               srec_formatted_binary(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Four_Packed_Code
               This  option  says  to use the FPC format to read the file.  See srec_fpc(5) for a
               description of this file format.

       -Guess  This option may be used to ask the command to guess the  input  format.   This  is
               slower  than  specifying an explicit format, as it may open and scan and close the
               file a number of times.

       -HEX_Dump
               This option says to try to read a hexadecimal dump file, more or less in the style
               output by the same option.  This is not an exact reverse mapping, because if there
               are ASCII equivalents on the right hand side,  these  may  be  confused  for  data
               bytes.   Also, it doesn't understand white space representing holes in the data in
               the line.

       -IDT    This option says to the the IDT/sim binary format to read the file.

       -Intel  This option says to use the Intel hex format to read the file.  See  srec_intel(5)
               for a description of this file format.

       -INtel_HeX_16
               This  option  says  to use the Intel hex 16 (INHX16) format to read the file.  See
               srec_intel16(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Memory_Initialization_File
               This option says to use the Memory Initialization File (MIF) format by  Altera  to
               read the file.  See srec_mif (5) for a description of this file format.

       -Mips_Flash_BigEndian

       -Mips_Flash_LittleEndian
               This  option  says  to  use  the  MIPS  Flash  file  format to read the file.  See
               srec_mips_flash (5) for a description of this file format.

       -MOS_Technologies
               This option says to use the  Mos  Technologies  format  to  read  the  file.   See
               srec_mos_tech(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Motorola [ width ]
               This  option  says  to use the Motorola S‐Record format to read the file.  (May be
               written -S‐Record as well.)  See srec_motorola(5) for a description of  this  file
               format.

               The  optional width argument describes the number of bytes which form each address
               multiple.  For normal uses the default of  one  (1)  byte  is  appropriate.   Some
               systems  with  16‐bit  or  32‐bit targets mutilate the addresses in the file; this
               option will correct for that.  Unlike most other parameters, this  one  cannot  be
               guessed.

       -MsBin  This  option says to use the Windows CE Binary Image Data Format to read the file.
               See srec_msbin(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Needham_Hexadecimal
               This option says to use the Needham Electronics ASCII  file  format  to  read  the
               file.  See srec_needham(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Ohio_Scientific
               This  option  says  to  use  the  Ohio Scientific format.  See srec_os65v(5) for a
               description of this file format.

       -PPB    This option says to use the Stag Prom Programmer binary format.   See  srec_ppb(5)
               for a description of this file format.

       -PPX    This  option  says  to  use  the  Stag  Prom  Programmer  hexadecimal format.  See
               srec_ppx(5) for a description of this file format.

       -SIGnetics
               This option says to use the Signetics format.  See srec_spasm(5) for a description
               of this file format.

       -SPAsm  This  option  says  to use the SPASM assembler output format (commonly used by PIC
               programmers).  See srec_spasm(5) for a description of this file format.

       -SPAsm_LittleEndian
               This option says to use the SPASM assembler output format (commonly  used  by  PIC
               programmers).  But with the data the other way around.

       -STewie This  option  says  to  use  the  Stewie  binary  format  to  read  the file.  See
               srec_stewie(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Tektronix
               This option says  to  use  the  Tektronix  hex  format  to  read  the  file.   See
               srec_tektronix(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Tektronix_Extended
               This  option  says to use the Tektronix extended hex format to read the file.  See
               srec_tektronix_extended(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Texas_Instruments_Tagged
               This option says to use the Texas Instruments Tagged format to read the file.  See
               srec_ti_tagged(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Texas_Instruments_Tagged_16
               This  option says to use the Texas Instruments SDSMAC 320 format to read the file.
               See srec_ti_tagged_16(5) for a description of this file format.

       -Texas_Instruments_TeXT
               This option says to use the Texas Instruments TXT  (MSP430)  format  to  read  the
               file.  See srec_ti_txt(5) for a description of this file format.

       -VMem   This  option  says  to  use  the  Verilog  VMEM  format  to  read  the  file.  See
               srec_vmem(5) for a description of this file format.

       -WILson This option says to use the wilson format to read the  file.   See  srec_wilson(5)
               for a description of this file format.

   Ignore Checksums
       The  -IGnore‐Checksums  option  may be used to disable checksum validation of input files,
       for those formats which have checksums at all.  Note that the checksum  values  are  still
       read  in and parsed (so it is still an error if they are missing) but their values are not
       checked.  Used after an input file name, the option affects that file alone; used anywhere
       else on the command line, it applies to all following files.

   Generators
       It  is  also  possible  to  generate data, rather than read it from a file.  You may use a
       generator anywhere you could use a file.  An  input  generator  specification  looks  like
       this:

         -GENerate address‐range -data‐source

       The -data‐source may be one of the following:

       -CONSTant byte‐value
               This  generator  manufactures  data  with  the  given  byte value of the the given
               address range.  It is an error if the byte‐value is not in the range 0..255.

               For example, to fill memory addresses 100..199 with newlines (0x0A), you could use
               a command like

                 srec_cat -generate 100 200 -constant 10 -o newlines.srec

               This can, of course, be combined with data from files.

       -REPeat_Data byte‐value...
               This generator manufactures data with the given byte values repeating over the the
               given address range.  It is an error if any of the the byte‐values are not in  the
               range 0..255.

               For  example,  to create a data region with 0xDE in the even bytes and 0xAD in the
               odd bytes, use a generator like this:

                 srec_cat -generate 0x1000 0x2000 -repeat‐data 0xDE 0xAD

               The repeat boundaries are aligned with the base of the address range,  modulo  the
               number of bytes.

       -REPeat_String text
               This  generator  is  almost  identical  to -repeat‐data except that the data to be
               repeated is the text of the given string.

               For example, to fill the  holes  in  an  EPROM  image  eprom.srec  with  the  text
               “Copyright (C) 1812 Tchaikovsky”, combine a generator and an -exclude filter, such
               as the command

                 srec_cat eprom.srec \
                     -generate 0 0x100000 \
                         -repeat‐string 'Copyright (C) 1812 Tchaikovsky. ' \
                         -exclude -within eprom.srec \
                     -o eprom.filled.srec

               The thing to note is that we have two  data  sources:  the  eprom.srec  file,  and
               generated  data  over  an  address range which covers first megabyte of memory but
               excluding areas covered by the eprom.srec data.

       -Litte_Endian_CONSTant value width
               This generator manufactures data with the given numeric value,  of  a  given  byte
               width,  in  little‐endian  byte order.  It is an error if the given value does not
               fit into the given byte width.  It will repeat over and over  within  the  address
               range range.

               For  example,  to insert a subversion commit number into 4 bytes at 0x0008..0x000B
               you would use a command like

                 srec_cat -generate 8 12 -l‐e‐constant $VERSION 4 \
                     -o version.srec

               This generator is a convenience wrapper around  the  -REPeat_Data  generator.   It
               can, of course, be combined with data from files.

       -Big_Endian_CONSTant value width
               As above, but using big‐endian byte ordering.

       Anything else will result in an error.

   Input Filters
       You  may specify zero or more filters to be applied.  Filters are applied in the order the
       user specifies.

       -AND value
               This filter may be used to bit‐wise AND a value  to  every  data  byte.   This  is
               useful  if  you  need  to clear bits.  Only existing data is altered, no holes are
               filled.

       -Big_Endian_Adler_16 address
               This filter may be used to insert an “Adler” 16‐bit checksum of the data into  the
               data.   Two  bytes, big‐endian order, are inserted at the address given.  Holes in
               the input data are ignored.  Bytes are processed in ascending address  order  (not
               in the order they appear in the input).

               Note: If you have holes in your data, you will get a different Adler checksum than
               if there were no holes.  This is important because the in‐memory EPROM image  will
               not  have holes.  You almost always want to use the -fill filter before any of the
               Adler checksum filters.  You will receive a warning  if  the  data  presented  for
               Adler checksum has holes.

               You  should  also be aware that the lower and upper bounds of your data may not be
               the same as the lower and upper bounds of your EPROM.  This is another  reason  to
               use  the  -fill  filter,  because it will establish the data across the full EPROM
               address range.

               http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adler‐32

       -Big_Endian_Adler_32 address
               This filter may be used to insert a Adler 32‐bit checksum of  the  data  into  the
               data.   Four bytes, big‐endian order, are inserted at the address given.  Holes in
               the input data are ignored.  Bytes are processed in ascending address  order  (not
               in the order they appear in the input).

               Note: If you have holes in your data, you will get a different Adler checksum than
               if there were no holes.  This is important because the in‐memory EPROM image  will
               not  have holes.  You almost always want to use the -fill filter before any of the
               Adler checksum filters.  You will receive a warning  if  the  data  presented  for
               Adler checksum has holes.

               You  should  also be aware that the lower and upper bounds of your data may not be
               the same as the lower and upper bounds of your EPROM.  This is another  reason  to
               use  the  -fill  filter,  because it will establish the data across the full EPROM
               address range.

               http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adler‐32

       -Big_Endian_Checksum_BitNot address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               This filter may be used to insert the one's complement checksum of the  data  into
               the data, most significant byte first.  The data is literally summed; if there are
               duplicate bytes, this will produce an incorrect result, if  there  are  holes,  it
               will  be as if they were filled with zeros.  If the data already contains bytes at
               the checksum location, you need to use an exclude filter, or  this  will  generate
               errors.  You need to apply and crop or fill filters before this filter.  The value
               will be written with the most significant byte first.   The  number  of  bytes  of
               resulting  checksum  defaults  to  4.  The width (the width in bytes of the values
               being summed) defaults to 1.

       -Big_Endian_Checksum_Negative address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               This filter may be used to insert the two's complement (negative) checksum of  the
               data into the data.  Otherwise similar to the above.

       -Big_Endian_Checksum_Positive address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               This  filter  may be used to insert the simple checksum of the data into the data.
               Otherwise similar to the above.

       -Big_Endian_CRC16 address [ modifier... ]
               This filter may be used to insert an industry standard 16‐bit CRC checksum of  the
               data  into  the  data.   Two  bytes, big‐endian order, are inserted at the address
               given.  Holes in the input data are ignored.  Bytes  are  processed  in  ascending
               address order (not in the order they appear in the input).

               The following additional modifiers are understood:

               number  Set the polynomial to be used to the given number.

               -Most_To_Least
                       The  CRC  calculation  is  performed with the most significant bit in each
                       byte processed first, and then proceeding towards  the  least  significant
                       bit.  This is the default.

               -Least_To_Most
                       The  CRC  calculation  is performed with the least significant bit in each
                       byte processed first, and then proceeding  towards  the  most  significant
                       bit.

               -CCITT  The  CCITT calculation is performed.  The initial seed is 0xFFFF.  This is
                       the default.

               -XMODEM The alternate XMODEM  calculation  is  performed.   The  initial  seed  is
                       0x0000.

               -BROKEN A  common‐but‐broken  calculation  is  performed  (see note 2 below).  The
                       initial seed is 0x84CF.

               -AUGment
                       The CRC is augmented by sixteen zero bits at the end of  the  calculation.
                       This is the default.

               -No‐AUGment
                       The  CRC  is  not  augmented  at the end of the calculation.  This is less
                       standard conforming, but some implementations do this.

               Note: If you have holes in your data, you will get a different CRC than  if  there
               were  no holes.  This is important because the in‐memory EPROM image will not have
               holes.  You almost always want to use the -fill  filter  before  any  of  the  CRC
               filters.  You will receive a warning if the data presented for CRC has holes.

               You  should  also be aware that the lower and upper bounds of your data may not be
               the same as the lower and upper bounds of your EPROM.  This is another  reason  to
               use  the  -fill  filter,  because it will establish the data across the full EPROM
               address range.

               Note  2:  there  are  a  great  many  CRC16   implementations   out   there,   see
               http://www.joegeluso.com/software/articles/ccitt.htm   (now  gone,  reproduced  at
               http://srecord.sourceforge.net/crc16-ccitt.html) and  “A  painless  guide  to  CRC
               error detection algorithms” http://www.repairfaq.org/filipg/LINK/F_crc_v3.html for
               more information.  If all else fails, SRecord is open source  software:  read  the
               SRecord source code.  The CRC16 source code (found in the srecord/crc16.cc file of
               the distribution tarball) has a great many explanatory comments.

               Please try all twelve combinations of the above options before reporting a bug  in
               the CRC16 calculation.

       -Big_Endian_CRC32 address [ modifier... ]
               This  filter may be used to insert an industry standard 32‐bit CRC checksum of the
               data into the data.  Four bytes, big‐endian order, are  inserted  at  the  address
               given.   Holes  in  the  input data are ignored.  Bytes are processed in ascending
               address order (not in the order they appear in the  input).   See  also  the  note
               about holes, above.

               The following additional modifiers are understood:

               -CCITT  The  CCITT  calculation  is  performed.  The initial seed is all one bits.
                       This is the default.

               -XMODEM An alternate XMODEM‐style calculation is performed.  The initial  seed  is
                       all zero bits.

       -Big_Endian_Exclusive_Length address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               The same as the -Big_Endian_Length filter, except that the result does not include
               the length itself.

       -Big_Endian_Exclusive_MAXimum address [ nbytes ]
               The same as the -Big_Endian_MAXimum  filter,  except  that  the  result  does  not
               include the maximum itself.

       -Big_Endian_Exclusive_MINimum address [ nbytes ]
               The  same  as  the  -Big_Endian_MINimum  filter,  except  that the result does not
               include the minimum itself.

       -Big_Endian_Fletcher_16 address [ sum1 sum2 [ answer ]]
               This filter may be used to insert an Fletcher 16‐bit checksum of the data into the
               data.   Two  bytes, big‐endian order, are inserted at the address given.  Holes in
               the input data are ignored.  Bytes are processed in ascending address  order  (not
               in the order they appear in the input).

               Note:  If  you have holes in your data, you will get a different Fletcher checksum
               than if there were no holes.  This is important because the in‐memory EPROM  image
               will not have holes.  You almost always want to use the -fill filter before any of
               the Fletcher checksum filters.  You will receive a warning if the  data  presented
               for Fletcher checksum has holes.

               You  should  also be aware that the lower and upper bounds of your data may not be
               the same as the lower and upper bounds of your EPROM.  This is another  reason  to
               use  the  -fill  filter,  because it will establish the data across the full EPROM
               address range.

               http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fletcher%27s_checksum

               It is possible to select seed values for sum1 and sum2 in the algorithm, by adding
               seed  values  on  the  command  line.  They each default to 0xFF if not explicitly
               stated.  The default values (0) means that an empty EPROM (all 0x00 or  all  0xFF)
               will sum to zero; by changing the seeds, an empty EPROM will always fail.

               The  third  optional  argument  is  the  desired  sum, when the checksum itself is
               summed.  A common value is 0x0000, placed in the last two bytes of  an  EPROM,  so
               that  the Fletcher 16 checksum of the EPROM is exactly 0x0000.  No manipulation of
               the final value is performed if this value if not specified.

       -Big_Endian_Fletcher_32 address
               This filter may be used to insert a Fletcher 32‐bit checksum of the data into  the
               data.   Four bytes, big‐endian order, are inserted at the address given.  Holes in
               the input data are ignored.  Bytes are processed in ascending address  order  (not
               in the order they appear in the input).

               Note:  If  you have holes in your data, you will get a different Fletcher checksum
               than if there were no holes.  This is important because the in‐memory EPROM  image
               will not have holes.  You almost always want to use the -fill filter before any of
               the Fletcher checksum filters.  You will receive a warning if the  data  presented
               for Fletcher checksum has holes.

               You  should  also be aware that the lower and upper bounds of your data may not be
               the same as the lower and upper bounds of your EPROM.  This is another  reason  to
               use  the  -fill  filter,  because it will establish the data across the full EPROM
               address range.

               http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fletcher%27s_checksum

       -Big_Endian_Length address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               This filter may be used to insert the length of the data  (high  water  minus  low
               water)  into  the  data.   This  includes  the length itself.  If the data already
               contains bytes at the length location, you need to use an exclude filter, or  this
               will  generate  errors.   The value will be written with the most significant byte
               first.  The number of bytes defaults to 4.   The  width  defaults  to  1,  and  is
               divided  into  the  actual length, thus you can insert the width in units of words
               (2) or longs (4).

       -Big_Endian_MAXimum address [ nbytes ]
               This filter may be used to insert the maximum address of the data (high water
                + 1) into the data.  This includes the  maximum  itself.   If  the  data  already
               contains  bytes  at  the given address, you need to use an exclude filter, or this
               will generate errors.  The value will be written with the  most  significant  byte
               first.  The number of bytes defaults to 4.

       -Big_Endian_MINimum address [ nbytes ]
               This filter may be used to insert the minimum address of the data (low water) into
               the data.  This includes the minimum itself.  If the data already  contains  bytes
               at  the  given  address,  you need to use an exclude filter, or this will generate
               errors.  The value will be written with the  most  significant  byte  first.   The
               number of bytes defaults to 4.

       -bit_reverse [ width ]
               This  filter  may  be used to reverse the order of the bits in each data byte.  By
               specifying a width (in bytes) it is  possible  to  reverse  the  order  multi‐byte
               values; this is implemented using the byte‐swap filter.

       -Byte_Swap [ width ]
               This  filter  may  be  used  to swap pairs of odd and even bytes.  By specifying a
               width (in bytes) it is possible to reverse the order of 4 and 8 bytes, the default
               is  2 bytes.  (Widths in excess of 8 are assumed to be number of bits.)  It is not
               possible to swap non‐power‐of‐two addresses.  To change  the  alignment,  use  the
               offset filter before and after.

       -Crop address‐range
               This filter may be used to isolate a section of data, and discard the rest.

       -Exclude address‐range
               This  filter  may be used to exclude a section of data, and keep the rest.  The is
               the logical complement of the -Crop filter.

       -eXclusive‐OR value
               This filter may be used to bit‐wise XOR a value  to  every  data  byte.   This  is
               useful  if  you  need to invert bits.  Only existing data is altered, no holes are
               filled.

       -Fill value address‐range
               This filter may be used to fill any gaps in the data with bytes  equal  to  value.
               The fill will only occur in the address range given.

       -Little_Endian_Adler_16 address
               This  filter  may  be used to insert an Adler 16‐bit checksum of the data into the
               data.  Two bytes, in little‐endian order,  are  inserted  at  the  address  given.
               Holes  in  the  input  data are ignored.  Bytes are processed in ascending address
               order (not in the order they appear in the input).

               Note: If you have holes in your data, you will get a different Adler checksum than
               if  there were no holes.  This is important because the in‐memory EPROM image will
               not have holes.  You almost always want to use the -fill filter before any of  the
               Adler  filters.   You  will  receive  a  warning  if  the data presented for Adler
               checksum has holes.

               You should also be aware that the lower and upper bounds of your data may  not  be
               the  same  as the lower and upper bounds of your EPROM.  This is another reason to
               use the -fill filter, because it will establish the data  across  the  full  EPROM
               address range.

               http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adler‐32

       -Little_Endian_Adler_32 address
               This  filter  may  be  used to insert a Adler 32‐bit checksum of the data into the
               data.  Four bytes, in little‐endian order, are  inserted  at  the  address  given.
               Holes  in  the  input  data are ignored.  Bytes are processed in ascending address
               order (not in the order they appear in the input).

               Note: If you have holes in your data, you will get a different Adler checksum than
               if  there were no holes.  This is important because the in‐memory EPROM image will
               not have holes.  You almost always want to use the -fill filter before any of  the
               Adler  checksum  filters.   You  will  receive a warning if the data presented for
               Adler checksum has holes.

               You should also be aware that the lower and upper bounds of your data may  not  be
               the  same  as the lower and upper bounds of your EPROM.  This is another reason to
               use the -fill filter, because it will establish the data  across  the  full  EPROM
               address range.

               http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adler‐32

       -Little_Endian_Checksum_BitNot address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               This  filter  may  be used to insert the one's complement (bitnot) checksum of the
               data into the data, least significant byte first.  Otherwise similar to the above.

       -Little_Endian_Checksum_Negative address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               This filter may be used to insert the two's complement (negative) checksum of  the
               data into the data.  Otherwise similar to the above.

       -Little_Endian_Checksum_Positive address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               This  filter  may be used to insert the simple checksum of the data into the data.
               Otherwise similar to the above.

       -Little_Endian_CRC16 address [ modifier... ]
               The same as the -Big_Endian_CRC16 filter, except little‐endian order.

       -Little_Endian_CRC32 address
               The same as the -Big_Endian_CRC32 filter, except little‐endian order.

       -Little_Endian_Exclusive_Length address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               The same as the -Little_Endian_Length filter, except  that  the  result  does  not
               include the length itself.

       -Little_Endian_Exclusive_MAXimum address [ nbytes ]
               The  same  as  the  -Little_Endian_MAXimum filter, except that the result does not
               include the maximum itself.

       -Little_Endian_Exclusive_MINimum address [ nbytes ]
               The same as the -Little_Endian_MINimum filter, except that  the  result  does  not
               include the minimum itself.

       -Little_Endian_Fletcher_16 address
               This filter may be used to insert an Fletcher 16‐bit checksum of the data into the
               data.  Two bytes, in little‐endian order,  are  inserted  at  the  address  given.
               Holes  in  the  input  data are ignored.  Bytes are processed in ascending address
               order (not in the order they appear in the input).

               Note: If you have holes in your data, you will get a different  Fletcher  checksum
               than  if there were no holes.  This is important because the in‐memory EPROM image
               will not have holes.  You almost always want to use the -fill filter before any of
               the  Fletcher  filters.   You  will  receive  a  warning if the data presented for
               Fletcher checksum has holes.

               You should also be aware that the lower and upper bounds of your data may  not  be
               the  same  as the lower and upper bounds of your EPROM.  This is another reason to
               use the -fill filter, because it will establish the data  across  the  full  EPROM
               address range.

               http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fletcher%27s_checksum

       -Little_Endian_Fletcher_32 address
               This  filter may be used to insert a Fletcher 32‐bit checksum of the data into the
               data.  Four bytes, in little‐endian order, are  inserted  at  the  address  given.
               Holes  in  the  input  data are ignored.  Bytes are processed in ascending address
               order (not in the order they appear in the input).

               Note: If you have holes in your data, you will get a different  Fletcher  checksum
               than  if there were no holes.  This is important because the in‐memory EPROM image
               will not have holes.  You almost always want to use the -fill filter before any of
               the  Fletcher  checksum filters.  You will receive a warning if the data presented
               for Fletcher checksum has holes.

               You should also be aware that the lower and upper bounds of your data may  not  be
               the  same  as the lower and upper bounds of your EPROM.  This is another reason to
               use the -fill filter, because it will establish the data  across  the  full  EPROM
               address range.

               http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fletcher%27s_checksum

       -Little_Endian_Length address [ nbytes [ width ]]
               The  same  as the -Big_Endian_Length filter, except the value will be written with
               the least significant byte first.

       -Little_Endian_MAXimum address [ nbytes ]
               The same as the -Big_Endian_MAXimum filter, except the value will be written  with
               the least significant byte first.

       -Little_Endian_MINimum address [ nbytes ]
               The  same as the -Big_Endian_MINimum filter, except the value will be written with
               the least significant byte first.

       -Message_Digest_5 address
               This filter may be used to insert a 16 byte MD5 hash into the data, at the address
               given.

       -NOT    This  filter  may  be  used to bit‐wise NOT the value of every data byte.  This is
               useful if you need to invert the data.  Only existing data is  altered,  no  holes
               are filled.

       -OFfset nbytes
               This  filter may be used to offset the addresses by the given number of bytes.  No
               data is lost, the addresses will wrap around in 32 bits, if  necessary.   You  may
               use negative numbers for the offset, if you wish to move data lower in memory.

               Please  note:  the  execution  start address is a different concept than the first
               address in memory of your data.  If you want to change  where  your  monitor  will
               start executing, use the -execution‐start‐address option (srec_cat(1) only).

       -OR value
               This filter may be used to bit‐wise OR a value to every data byte.  This is useful
               if you need to set bits.  Only existing data is altered, no holes are filled.

       -Random_Fill address‐range
               This filter may be used to fill any gaps in the data with random bytes.  The  fill
               will only occur in the address range given.

       -Ripe_Message_Digest_160 address
               This filter may be used to insert an RMD160 hash into the data.

       -Secure_Hash_Algorithm_1 address
               This  filter  may  be  used  to  insert  a 20 byte SHA1 hash into the data, at the
               address given.

       -Secure_Hash_Algorithm_224 address
               This filter may be used to insert a 28 byte SHA224 hash  into  the  data,  at  the
               address given.  See Change Notice 1 for FIPS 180‐2 for the specification.

       -Secure_Hash_Algorithm_256 address
               This  filter  may  be  used  to insert a 32 byte SHA256 hash into the data, at the
               address given.  See FIPS 180‐2 for the specification.

       -Secure_Hash_Algorithm_384 address
               This filter may be used to insert a 48 byte SHA384 hash  into  the  data,  at  the
               address given.  See FIPS 180‐2 for the specification.

       -Secure_Hash_Algorithm_512 address
               This  filter  may  be  used  to insert a 64 byte SHA512 hash into the data, at the
               address given.  See FIPS 180‐2 for the specification.

       -SPlit multiple [ offset [ width ] ]
               This filter may be used to split the input into a subset of the data, and compress
               the  address  range  so  as to leave no gaps.  This useful for wide data buses and
               memory striping.  The multiple is the bytes multiple to split over, the offset  is
               the  byte offset into this range (defaults to 0), the width is the number of bytes
               to extract (defaults to 1) within the multiple.  In order to leave  no  gaps,  the
               output addresses are (width / multiple) times the input addresses.

       -TIGer address
               This  filter  may  be used to insert a 24 byte TIGER/192 hash into the data at the
               address given.

       -UnFill value [ min‐run‐length ]
               This filter may be used to create gaps in the data with bytes equal to value.  You
               can  think of it as reversing the effects of the -Fill filter.  The gaps will only
               be created if the are at least min‐run‐length bytes in a row (defaults to 1).

       -Un_SPlit multiple [ offset [ width ] ]
               This filter may be used to reverse the effects of the split filter.  The arguments
               are  identical.  Note that the address range is expanded (multiple / width) times,
               leaving holes between the stripes.

       -WHIrlpool address
               This filter may be used to insert a 64 byte WHIRLPOOL hash into the data,  at  the
               address given.

   Address Ranges
       There are eight ways to specify an address range:

       minimum maximum
               If  you specify two number on the command line (decimal, octal and hexadecimal are
               understood, using the C conventions) this  is  an  explicit  address  range.   The
               minimum  is  inclusive, the maximum is exclusive (one more than the last address).
               If the maximum is given as zero then the range extends to the end of  the  address
               space.

       -Within input‐specification
               This  says  to use the specified input file as a mask.  The range includes all the
               places the specified input has data, and holes where  it  has  holes.   The  input
               specification  need  not  be  just a file name, it may be anything any other input
               specification can be.

               See also the -over option for a discussion on operator precedence.

       -OVER input‐specification
               This says to use the specified input file as a mask.  The range extends  from  the
               minimum  to  the maximum address used by the input, without any holes, even if the
               input has holes.  The input specification need not be just a file name, it may  be
               anything any other input specification can be.

               You  may  need to enclose input‐specification in parentheses to make sure it can't
               misinterpret  which  arguments  go  with  which  input  specification.   This   is
               particularly important when a filter is to follow.  For example
                      filename -fill 0 -over filename2 -swap‐bytes
               groups as
                      filename -fill 0 -over '(' filename2 -swap‐bytes ')'
               when what you actually wanted was
                      '(' filename -fill 0 -over filename2 ')' -swap‐bytes
               The  command  line  expression parsing tends to be “greedy” (or right associative)
               rather than conservative (or left associative).

       address‐range -RAnge‐PADding number
               It is also possible to pad ranges to be  whole  aligned  multiples  of  the  given
               number.  For example
                      input‐file -fill 0xFF -within input‐file -range‐pad 512
               will  fill the input‐file so that it consists of whole 512‐byte blocks, aligned on
               512 byte boundaries.  Any large holes in the data will also be  multiples  of  512
               bytes, though they may have been shrunk as blocks before and after are padded.

               This operator has the same precedence as the explicit union operator.

       address‐range -INTERsect address‐range
               You  can  intersect  two  address  ranges to produce a smaller address range.  The
               intersection operator has higher  precedence  than  the  implicit  union  operator
               (evaluated left to right).

       address‐range -UNIon address‐range
               You  can  union  two  address ranges to produce a larger address range.  The union
               operator has lower precedence than the intersection operator  (evaluated  left  to
               right).

       address‐range -DIFference address‐range
               You  can  difference  two  address ranges to produce a smaller address range.  The
               result is the left hand range with all of  the  right  hand  range  removed.   The
               difference  operator  has  the  same  precedence  as  the  implicit union operator
               (evaluated left to right).

       address‐range address‐range
               In addition, all of these methods may be used, and used more than  once,  and  the
               results  will  be  combined  (implicit union operator, same precedence as explicit
               union operator).

   Calculated Values
       Most of the places above where a number is expected, you may supply one of the following:

       - value
               The value of this expression is the negative of the expression argument.  Note the
               space between the minus sign and its argument: this space is mandatory.
                      srec_cat in.srec -offset − -minimum‐addr in.srec -o out.srec
               This example shows how to move data to the base of memory.

       ( value )
               You may use parentheses for grouping.  When using parentheses, they must each be a
               separate command line argument, they can't be within the text of the preceding  or
               following option, and you will need to quote them to get them past the shell, such
               as '(' and ')'.

       -MINimum‐Address input‐specification
               This inserts  the  minimum  address  of  the  specified  input  file.   The  input
               specification  need  not  be  just a file name, it may be anything any other input
               specification can be.

               See also the -over option for a discussion on operator precedence.

       -MAXimum‐Address input‐specification
               This inserts the maximum address of the specified input file, plus one.  The input
               specification  need  not  be  just a file name, it may be anything any other input
               specification can be.

               See also the -over option for a discussion on operator precedence.

       -Length input‐specification
               This inserts the length of the address range in the specified input file, ignoring
               any  holes.   The  input  specification  need  not  be just a file name, it may be
               anything any other input specification can be.

               See also the -over option for a discussion on operator precedence.

       For example, the -OVER input‐specification option can be thought of as short‐hand for  '('
       -min file -max file ')', except that it is much easier to type, and also more efficient.

       In addition, calculated values may optionally be rounded in one of three ways:

       value -Round_Down number
               The  value  is  rounded down to the the largest integer smaller than or equal to a
               whole multiple of the number.

       value -Round_Nearest number
               The value is rounded to the the nearest whole multiple of the number.

       value -Round_Up number
               The value is rounded up to the the smallest integer larger  than  or  equal  to  a
               whole multiple of the number.

       When  using parentheses, they must each be a separate command line argument, they can't be
       within the text of the preceding or following option, and you will need to quote  them  to
       get them past the shell, as '(' and ')'.

COPYRIGHT

       srec_input version 1.58
       Copyright  (C)  1998,  1999,  2000,  2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009,
       2010, 2011 Peter Miller

       The srec_input program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details use the  'srec_input
       -VERSion  License'  command.  This is free software and you are welcome to redistribute it
       under certain conditions; for details use the 'srec_input -VERSion License' command.

AUTHOR

       Peter Miller   E‐Mail:   pmiller@opensource.org.au
       /\/\*             WWW:   http://miller.emu.id.au/pmiller/