I used this very simple little php script to make this

filename: mk55:
#!/usr/bin/php -q
<?php
for ($i=0;$i<262144;$i++){
    print chr(85);
}
?>

and ran it:

./mk55 > 55

ls -l 55
-rw-r--r-- 1 smarlowe smarlowe 262144 2008-09-24 13:41 55

i.e. it's 256k.

And it's attached.

On Wed, Sep 24, 2008 at 1:20 PM, Carol Walter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Does anyone know what the format of hex characters for postgres are?  I'm
> trying to create files that contain a 0x55.  It looks to me like it should
> require a delimiter of some sort between the characters.  I don't know how
> postgres would know that the string was a hex representation and not just a
> character zero, followed by a character x, followed by a character 5,
> followed by a character 5.
>
> Carol
>
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Attachment: mk55
Description: Binary data

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