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DETOX(1) General Commands Manual DETOX(1) NAME detox -- clean up filenames SYNOPSIS detox [-f configfile] [-n | --dry-run] [-r] [-s sequence] [--special] [-v] file ... detox [-L] [-f configfile] [-v] detox [-h | --help] detox [-V] DESCRIPTION The detox utility renames files 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-es- caped filenames. 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. 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. --inline Run in inline mode. See inline-detox(1) for more details. -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 op- tion. -r Recurse into subdirectories. Any file or directory that starts with a period, such as .git/ or .cache/, will be ig- nored during recursion unless specified on the command line. Also, any file or directory specified in the ignore section of the config file will be ignored during recur- sion. -s sequence Use sequence instead of default. --special Works on special files (including links). Normally detox ignores these files. detox will not recurse into symlinks that point at directories. -v Be verbose about which files are being renamed. -V Show the current version of 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 detox -s lower -r -v -n /tmp/new_files Will run the sequence lower recursively, listing any changes, without changing anything, on the files of /tmp/new_files. detox -f my_detoxrc -L -v Will list the sequences within my_detoxrc, showing their filters and options. SEE ALSO inline-detox(1), Text::Unidecode(3pm), detox.tbl(5), detoxrc(5), ascii(7), iso_8859-1(7), unicode(7), utf-8(7) 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 mean- ing within FreeBSD and Linux, and cause problems when you go to access them. I created 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 detox was written by Doug Harple. CAVEATS If, after the translation of a filename is finished, a file already ex- ists with that same name, detox will not rename the file. FreeBSD Ports 14.quarterly February 24, 2021 DETOX(1)
NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | FILES | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | HISTORY | AUTHORS | CAVEATS
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