table of contents
wmiir(1) | General Commands Manual | wmiir(1) |
NAME¶
wmiir - The wmii 9P filesystem client
SYNOPSIS¶
wmiir [-a <address>] [-b] {create | ls [-dlp] | read | remove | write} <file>
wmiir [-a <address>] [-b] xwrite <file> <data> ...
wmiir -v
DESCRIPTION¶
wmiir is a simple 9P filesystem client which ships with wmii, and connects to its virtual filesystem by default. wmiir is most often used to query and issue commands to wmii, both from the command line and from its sh-based configuration scripts.
Since the default encoding of 9P filesystems is UTF-8, wmiir assumes that all data read and written is text data and translates to or from your locale character encoding as necessary. When working with non-text data in a non-UTF-8 locale, the -b flag should be specified to disable this behavior.
ARGUMENTS¶
:
COMMANDS¶
The following commands deal with 9P filesystems.
- create <file>
- Creates a new file or directory in the filesystem. Permissions and file type are inferred by wmii. The contents of the standard input are written to the new file.
- ls [-dlp] <path>
- Lists the contents of <path>.
Flags:
- -d
- Don't list the contents of directories.
- -l
- Long output. For each file, list its permissions, owner, group, size (bytes), mtime, and name.
- -p
- Print the full path to each file.
- read <file>
- Reads the entire contents of a file from the filesystem. Blocks until
interrupted or EOF is received.
Synonyms: cat
- remove <path>
- Removes <path> from the filesystem.
Synonyms: rm
- write <file>
- Writes the contents of the standard input to <file>.
- xwrite <file> <data> ...
- Writes each argument after <file> to the latter.
Additionally, wmiir provides the following utility commands relevant to scripting wmii:
wmiir setsid \-0 \-sh sh
ENVIRONMENT¶
- $WMII_ADDRESS
- The address at which to connect to wmii.
- $NAMESPACE
- The namespace directory to use if no address is provided.
SEE ALSO¶
wmii(1), libixp[2]
Oct, 2009 | wmii-hg2813 |