INLINE-DETOX(1) | General Commands Manual | INLINE-DETOX(1) |
NAME¶
inline-detox
—
clean up filenames (stream-based)
SYNOPSIS¶
inline-detox |
[-f configfile]
[-s sequence]
[-v ] |
inline-detox |
[-f configfile]
[-s sequence]
[-v ] file ... |
inline-detox |
[-L ] [-f
configfile] [-v ] |
inline-detox |
[-h | --help ] |
inline-detox |
[-V ] |
DESCRIPTION¶
The inline-detox
utility generates new
filenames to make them easier to work with under Unix and Unix-like
operating systems. It replaces characters that make it hard to type out a
filename with dashes and underscores. It also provides transliteration-based
filters, converting ISO 8859-1 or UTF-8 to ASCII, in part or in whole. An
additional filter unescapes CGI-escaped filenames.
inline-detox
reads filename(s) from the
input stream and writes the updated filename(s) to the output stream.
If a filename is passed on the command line,
inline-detox
reads this file and processes each line
before writing it to the output stream.
Running detox
--inline
is identical to running
inline-detox
.
Sequences¶
inline-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. The default sequence will run the
safe and wipeup filters. Other
examples of pre-configured sequences are iso8859_1 and
utf_8, which both provide transliteration to ASCII and
then finish with the safe and
wipeup filters.
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. -s
sequence- Use sequence instead of
default
. -v
- Be verbose about which files are being renamed.
-V
- Show the current version of
inline-detox
.
FILES¶
- /etc/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. - /usr/share/detox/cp1252.tbl
- The provided CP-1252 transliteration table.
- /usr/share/detox/iso8859_1.tbl
- The provided ISO 8859-1 transliteration table.
- /usr/share/detox/safe.tbl
- The provided safe character translation table.
- /usr/share/detox/unicode.tbl
- The provided Unicode transliteration table, used by the UTF-8 filter.
- /usr/share/detox/unidecode.tbl
- An additional Unicode tranlsiteration table, based on Text::Unidecode(3pm).
EXAMPLES¶
- echo Foo Bar |
inline-detox
-s
lower-v
- Will run the sequence lower, listing any changes and returning the result to the output stream.
SEE ALSO¶
detox(1), Text::Unidecode(3pm), detox.tbl(5), detoxrc(5), ascii(7), iso_8859-1(7), unicode(7), utf-8(7)
HISTORY¶
inline-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
inline-detox
to clean up these files.
Version 2.0 stepped back from transliteration out of the box, instead focusing on ease of use. The primary motivations for this were user-provided feedback, and the fact that many modern Unix-like OSs use UTF-8 as their primary character set. Transliterating from UTF-8 to ASCII in this scenario is lossy and pointless.
AUTHORS¶
inline-detox
was written by
Doug Harple.
February 24, 2021 | Debian |