[gull] Normalisation des noms de fichiers et dossiers
Pierre Maitre
po.maitre at gmail.com
Tue Dec 29 17:52:51 CET 2020
Le mar. 29 déc. 2020 à 17:43, Laurent Franceschetti
<laurent at franceschetti.net> a écrit :
>
> Mais je pense que comme tout bon utilitaire, detox doit être configurable?...
Oui bien sûr.
Pour installer detox sur ubuntu (et je pense sur debian), un simple
apt install detox fait l'affaire.
Voici la suite de "man detox":
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 -c my_detoxrc -L -v
Will list the sequences within my_detoxrc, showing
their filters and options.
SEE ALSO
inline-detox(1), detoxrc(5), detox.tbl(5).
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.
BSD
August 3, 2004
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