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[*] Emulating binary name: jq
[*] Emulator used: qemu-arm-static
[*] Using root directory: /logs/s115_usermode_emulator/firmware/patool_extraction/rootfs.img_unblob_extracted/rootfs.img_extract/0-80367616.squashfs_v4_le_extract (1/2)
[*] Using CPU config:
[*] Emulating binary: /usr/bin/jq
[*] Change permissions +x to /logs/s115_usermode_emulator/firmware/patool_extraction/rootfs.img_unblob_extracted/rootfs.img_extract/0-80367616.squashfs_v4_le_extract/./usr/bin/jq.
[*] Emulating binary ./usr/bin/jq with parameter NONE
jq: error: NONE/0 is not defined at <top-level>, line 1:
NONE
jq: 1 compile error
[*] Emulating binary ./usr/bin/jq with parameter -v
./usr/bin/jq: Unknown option -v
Use ./usr/bin/jq --help for help with command-line options,
or see the jq manpage, or online docs at https://stedolan.github.io/jq
[*] Emulating binary ./usr/bin/jq with parameter -V
jq-1.6-159-gcff5336-dirty
[*] Emulating binary ./usr/bin/jq with parameter -h
jq - commandline JSON processor [version 1.6-159-gcff5336-dirty]
Usage: ./usr/bin/jq [options] <jq filter> [file...]
./usr/bin/jq [options] --args <jq filter> [strings...]
./usr/bin/jq [options] --jsonargs <jq filter> [JSON_TEXTS...]
jq is a tool for processing JSON inputs, applying the given filter to
its JSON text inputs and producing the filter's results as JSON on
standard output.
The simplest filter is ., which copies jq's input to its output
unmodified (except for formatting, but note that IEEE754 is used
for number representation internally, with all that that implies).
For more advanced filters see the jq(1) manpage ("man jq")
and/or https://stedolan.github.io/jq
Example:
$ echo '{"foo": 0}' | jq .
{
"foo": 0
}
Some of the options include:
-c compact instead of pretty-printed output;
-n use `null` as the single input value;
-e set the exit status code based on the output;
-s read (slurp) all inputs into an array; apply filter to it;
-r output raw strings, not JSON texts;
-R read raw strings, not JSON texts;
-C colorize JSON;
-M monochrome (don't colorize JSON);
-S sort keys of objects on output;
--tab use tabs for indentation;
--arg a v set variable $a to value <v>
--argjson a v set variable $a to JSON value <v>
--slurpfile a f set variable $a to an array of JSON texts read from <f>
--rawfile a f set variable $a to a string consisting of the contents of <f>
--args remaining arguments are string arguments, not files;
--jsonargs remaining arguments are JSON arguments, not files;
-- terminates argument processing;
Named arguments are also available as $ARGS.named[], while
positional arguments are available as $ARGS.positional[].
See the manpage for more options.
[*] Emulating binary ./usr/bin/jq with parameter -help
jq - commandline JSON processor [version 1.6-159-gcff5336-dirty]
Usage: ./usr/bin/jq [options] <jq filter> [file...]
./usr/bin/jq [options] --args <jq filter> [strings...]
./usr/bin/jq [options] --jsonargs <jq filter> [JSON_TEXTS...]
jq is a tool for processing JSON inputs, applying the given filter to
its JSON text inputs and producing the filter's results as JSON on
standard output.
The simplest filter is ., which copies jq's input to its output
unmodified (except for formatting, but note that IEEE754 is used
for number representation internally, with all that that implies).
For more advanced filters see the jq(1) manpage ("man jq")
and/or https://stedolan.github.io/jq
Example:
$ echo '{"foo": 0}' | jq .
{
"foo": 0
}
Some of the options include:
-c compact instead of pretty-printed output;
-n use `null` as the single input value;
-e set the exit status code based on the output;
-s read (slurp) all inputs into an array; apply filter to it;
-r output raw strings, not JSON texts;
-R read raw strings, not JSON texts;
-C colorize JSON;
-M monochrome (don't colorize JSON);
-S sort keys of objects on output;
--tab use tabs for indentation;
--arg a v set variable $a to value <v>
--argjson a v set variable $a to JSON value <v>
--slurpfile a f set variable $a to an array of JSON texts read from <f>
--rawfile a f set variable $a to a string consisting of the contents of <f>
--args remaining arguments are string arguments, not files;
--jsonargs remaining arguments are JSON arguments, not files;
-- terminates argument processing;
Named arguments are also available as $ARGS.named[], while
positional arguments are available as $ARGS.positional[].
See the manpage for more options.
[*] Emulating binary ./usr/bin/jq with parameter --help
jq - commandline JSON processor [version 1.6-159-gcff5336-dirty]
Usage: ./usr/bin/jq [options] <jq filter> [file...]
./usr/bin/jq [options] --args <jq filter> [strings...]
./usr/bin/jq [options] --jsonargs <jq filter> [JSON_TEXTS...]
jq is a tool for processing JSON inputs, applying the given filter to
its JSON text inputs and producing the filter's results as JSON on
standard output.
The simplest filter is ., which copies jq's input to its output
unmodified (except for formatting, but note that IEEE754 is used
for number representation internally, with all that that implies).
For more advanced filters see the jq(1) manpage ("man jq")
and/or https://stedolan.github.io/jq
Example:
$ echo '{"foo": 0}' | jq .
{
"foo": 0
}
Some of the options include:
-c compact instead of pretty-printed output;
-n use `null` as the single input value;
-e set the exit status code based on the output;
-s read (slurp) all inputs into an array; apply filter to it;
-r output raw strings, not JSON texts;
-R read raw strings, not JSON texts;
-C colorize JSON;
-M monochrome (don't colorize JSON);
-S sort keys of objects on output;
--tab use tabs for indentation;
--arg a v set variable $a to value <v>
--argjson a v set variable $a to JSON value <v>
--slurpfile a f set variable $a to an array of JSON texts read from <f>
--rawfile a f set variable $a to a string consisting of the contents of <f>
--args remaining arguments are string arguments, not files;
--jsonargs remaining arguments are JSON arguments, not files;
-- terminates argument processing;
Named arguments are also available as $ARGS.named[], while
positional arguments are available as $ARGS.positional[].
See the manpage for more options.
[*] Emulating binary ./usr/bin/jq with parameter --version
jq-1.6-159-gcff5336-dirty
[*] Emulating binary ./usr/bin/jq with parameter version
-----------------------------------------------------------------
jq: error: version/0 is not defined at <top-level>, line 1:
version
jq: 1 compile error