table of contents
XE(1) | General Commands Manual | XE(1) |
NAME¶
xe
— execute a
command for every argument
SYNOPSIS¶
xe |
[-0FLRnqv ] [-I
replace-arg] [-N
maxargs] [-j
maxjobs]
command ... |
xe |
[flags ...] -p
pattern command ...
[+ pattern
command ...]... |
xe |
[flags ...] -f
argfile
command ... |
xe |
[flags ...] -s
shellscript |
xe |
[flags ...] -a
command ... --
args ... |
xe |
[flags ...] -A
argsep command ...
argsep args ... |
DESCRIPTION¶
The xe
utility constructs command lines
from specified arguments, combining some of the best features of
xargs(1) and apply(1).
xe
means “execute for every
...”.
xe
supports different methods to specify
arguments to commands:
- command ...
- By default, arguments - separated by newlines - are read from the standard
input. The resulting command is constructed from the command line
parameters, replacing replace-arg with the read
argument, and is executed with execvp(3).
In this mode, no shell is involved and replace-arg must appear as a word on its own, i.e. ‘foo {} bar’ will work, but ‘foo{} bar’ will not, where {} is the default value for replace-arg.
If no argument is specified, the default is ‘
printf %s\n
’. -f
argfile- Read arguments from argfile, instead of the standard
input.
This does not close the standard input for execution, it is passed to the forked process.
-s
shellscript- In this mode, the single parameter shellscript is
executed using
sh -c
. In the script, the specified arguments can be accessed using $1, $2, ...For example:
echo 'a\nb' | xe -N2 -s 'echo $2 $1'
-a
command ...--
args ...- In this mode, everything after
--
is passed as args to command. -A
argsep command ... argsep args ...- Same as
-a
, but the custom argument separator argsep is used to distinguish between command and its args.
The options are as follows:
-0
- Input filenames are separated by NUL bytes (instead of newlines, which is the default)
-F
- Fatal: stop and exit when a command execution fails.
-L
- Run the resulting commands with line-buffered output; lines from two jobs
will not interleave. When used twice, or with
-vv
, also prefix each line with the number of the job (see ENVIRONMENT) in such a manner that the output can be piped to ‘sort -snk1
’ to group it. -R
- Return with status 122 when no arguments have been specified (instead of
0, the default).
xe
never executes a command when no arguments are specified. -n
- Dry run: don't run the resulting commands, just print them.
-q
- Quiet mode: redirect standard output and standard error of commands to /dev/null.
-v
- Verbose: print commands to standard error before running them. When used twice, also print job id and exit status for each command.
-p
- Enable make(1)-style percent rules. The first argument
of command ... is regarded as a pattern, see
PERCENT RULES below. Patterns
without a slash (or ‘
**
’) are matched against the basenames only.Multiple runs of patterns and commands are separated by ‘
+
’. Only the first matching percent rule is executed; in case no pattern matches, no command is run. -I
replace-arg- Replace first occurrence of replace-arg (default:
{}
) in the resulting command with the argument(s). Pass an empty replace-arg to disable the replace function. Contrary to xargs(1) this will expand into multiple arguments when needed. -N
maxargs- Pass up to maxargs arguments to each command
(default: 1).
Using-N0
will pass as many arguments as possible. -j
maxjobs- Run up to maxjobs processes concurrently. Using
-j0
will run as many processes as there are CPU cores running. If maxjobs ends with an ‘x
’, it is regarded as a multiplier of the number of running CPU cores (rounded down, but using at least one core).
PERCENT RULES¶
The percent rules of xe
are similar to the
globs of sh(1) or fnmatch(3):
‘?
’ matches a single character that is
not ‘/
’.
‘/
’ matches one or multiple
‘/
’ in the string.
‘*
’ matches zero or more characters,
but never ‘/
’.
‘**
’ matches zero or more characters,
including ‘/
’. Note that all of these
also match leading dots in file names.
‘{
a,b,c}’
matches either a, b or
c.
‘[
abc]’ matches
one of the characters abc (but never
‘/
’).
‘[
!abc]’ matches
all characters but abc. Alternatively,
‘[
^abc]’ can be
used too.
‘[
a-c]’
matches any character in the range between a and
c inclusive. In character ranges, characters can be
escaped using a backslash.
In the pattern, a single occurrence of
‘%
’ matches one or more characters,
and replaces the first occurrence of
‘%
’ with the matched string in the
remaining arguments, which are then used as the command to be executed.
ENVIRONMENT¶
The environment variable ITER
is passed to
the child process and incremented on each command execution.
EXIT STATUS¶
xe
follows the convention of GNU and
OpenBSD xargs:
- 0
- on success
- 123
- if any invocation of the command exited with status 1 to 125.
- 124
- if the command exited with status 255
- 125
- if the command was killed by a signal
- 126
- if the command cannot be run
- 127
- if the command was not found
- 1
- if some other error occurred
Additionally, 122 is returned when -R
was
passed and the command was never executed.
EXAMPLES¶
Compress all .c files in the current directory, using all CPU cores:
xe -a -j0 gzip -- *.c
lr -U -t 'size == 0' | xe -N0
rm
xe -a -j0 -s 'ffmpeg -i
"${1}" "${1%.mp3}.ogg"' -- *.mp3
xe -a -j0 -p %.mp3 ffmpeg -i %.mp3
%.ogg -- *.mp3
xe -ap -j0 -vvq '%.{m4a,ogg,opus}'
ffmpeg -y -i {} out/%.mp3 -- *
SEE ALSO¶
AUTHORS¶
Leah Neukirchen <leah@vuxu.org>
LICENSE¶
xe
is in the public domain.
To the extent possible under law, the creator of this work has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this work.
November 3, 2017 | Debian |