| 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 Linux and other Unix-like
operating systems. It replaces characters that make it hard to type out a
filename with dashes and underscores. It also provides transcoding-based
filters, converting ISO-8859-1 or CP-1252 to UTF-8. 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
iso8859_1-legacy, which both provide transcoding to
UTF-8, and then finish with the safe and
wipeup filters.
Options¶
-fconfigfile- 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
-vthis option shows what filters are used in each sequence and any properties applied to the filters. -ssequence- 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
-fhas been specified, in which case, it is ignored. - /usr/share/detox/cp1252.tbl
- The provided CP-1252 transcoding table.
- /usr/share/detox/iso8859_1.tbl
- The provided ISO-8859-1 transcoding table.
- /usr/share/detox/safe.tbl
- The provided safe character translation table.
- /usr/share/detox/unicode.tbl
- The provided Unicode control character filtering table, used by the UTF-8 filter.
EXAMPLES¶
- echo Foo Bar |
inline-detox-slower-v - Will run the sequence lower, listing any changes and returning the result to the output stream.
SEE ALSO¶
detox(1), 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. Version 3.0 further shifted this, by removing most of the transliteration from the tables. 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.
| March 31, 2024 | Debian |