Previously we detected this by reading the first line of the file.
However, "first line" is meaningless when dealing with binary files, but
IO#readline will happily keep reading until it finds a newline
character, which can result in some unnecessarily large buffers.
Aside from the performance issue, this causes an additional problem
under Ruby 1.9: trying to match the binary string against a pattern will
raise ArgumentError (unless the binary string just happens to also be
valid UTF-8, heh).
Fix both issues: only read the first 1024 bytes, as no sane shebang will
ever be that long, and use a plain read(), which returns an ASCII
encoded string even on 1.9.
Signed-off-by: Jack Nagel <jacknagel@gmail.com>