DETOX(1) | General Commands Manual | DETOX(1) |
NAME¶
detox
— clean up
filenames
SYNOPSIS¶
detox |
[-hnLrv ] [-s
sequence] [-f
configfile] [--dry-run ]
[--special ] file ... |
DESCRIPTION¶
The detox
utility renames files to make
them easier to work with. It removes spaces and other such annoyances. It'll
also translate or cleanup Latin-1 (ISO 8859-1) characters encoded in 8-bit
ASCII, Unicode characters encoded in UTF-8, and CGI escaped characters.
Sequences¶
detox
is driven by a configurable series
of filters, called a sequence. Sequences are covered in more detail in
detoxrc(5) and are discoverable with the
-L
option. Some examples of default sequences are
iso8859_1
and utf_8
.
Options¶
The main options:
-f
configfile- Use configfile instead of the default configuration files for loading translation sequences. No other config file will be parsed.
-h
--help
- Display helpful information.
-L
- List the currently available sequences. When paired with
-v
this option shows what filters are used in each sequence and any properties applied to the filters. -n
--dry-run
- Doesn't actually change anything. This implies the
-v
option. -r
- Recurse into subdirectories.
-s
sequence- Use sequence instead of default.
--special
- Works on special files (including links). Normally
detox
ignores these files. -v
- Be verbose about which files are being renamed.
-V
- Show the current version of
detox
.
Deprecated Options¶
Deprecated Options are options that were available in earlier
versions of detox
but have lost their meaning and
are being phased out.
--remove-trailing
- Removes _ and - after .'s in filenames. This was first provided in the 0.9
series of
detox
. After the introduction of sequences, it lost its meaning, as you could now determine the properties of wipeup through a particular sequence's configuration. It presently forces all instances of the wipeup filter to use remove trailing, regardless of what's actually in the config files.
FILES¶
- detoxrc
- The system-wide detoxrc file.
- ~/.detoxrc
- A user's personal detoxrc. Normally it extends the system-wide detoxrc,
unless
-f
has been specified, in which case, it is ignored. - iso8859_1.tbl
- The default ISO 8859-1 translation table.
- unicode.tbl
- The default Unicode (UTF-8) translation table.
EXAMPLES¶
detox
-s
iso8859_1-r
-v
-n
/tmp/new_files- Will run the sequence iso8859_1 recursively, listing any changes, without changing anything, on the files of /tmp/new_files.
detox
-f
my_detoxrc-L
-v
- Will list the sequences within my_detoxrc, showing their filters and options.
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
detox
was originally designed to clean up
files that I had received from friends which had been created using other
operating systems. It's trivial to create a filename with spaces,
parenthesis, brackets, and ampersands under some operating systems. These
have special meaning within FreeBSD and Linux, and cause problems when you
go to access them. I created detox
to clean up these
files.
AUTHORS¶
detox
was written by Doug
Harple.
BUGS¶
If, after the translation of a filename is finished, a file
already exists with that same name, detox
will not
rename the file. This could cause a problem with the
max_length
filter, if it was imperative that the
files be cut down to a certain length.
Long options don't work under Solaris or Darwin.
An error in the config file will cause a segfault as it's going to print the offending word within the config file.
February 11, 2021 | Debian |