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ADPLUGDB(1) |
User Commands |
ADPLUGDB(1) |
adplugdb - AdPlug database maintenance utility
adplugdb [OPTION]... COMMAND [ARGUMENT]...
adplugdb maintains database files in AdPlug database format. It can
add, list and remove records within a central database,
or merge a set of databases together into one single database.
adplugdb always operates on a central database file. The
location of this database file is determined by first checking if the user
has a home directory. If a home directory is present, the database file will
be located in ~/.adplug/adplug.db. If a home directory is not
present, a database file adplug.db will be looked for in the current
working directory.
A system-wide database file can be used instead, by specifying the
-s commandline option. The system-wide database file is located in
/usr/local/com/adplug/adplug.db and may only be manipulated as the
superuser. An arbitrary database file might be used as well, by specifying
the -d commandline parameter. Only one database file may be
manipulated at a time.
adplugdb returns with a successful exit status (0 on most systems)
on successful operation. An unsuccessful exit status (1 on most
systems) is returned otherwise.
Commands control the main operation mode of adplugdb. Commands can have a
number of arguments. Only one command may be specified at a time.
- add
- This command takes a list of filenames, separated by spaces, as arguments.
Each file is examined and a record is added to the database if the file is
supported by AdPlug. By default, the record will be of type Plain,
unless the -t commandline option is specified (see below). The
default comment entry is the specified filename. If a record for a file is
already in the database, it will be replaced by the new record.
- list
- This command takes an optional list of filenames or keys, separated by
spaces, as arguments. Each file is examined and the corresponding record
is looked up from the database and displayed on stdout, in a
human-readable form. If no arguments are given, all records from the
database are displayed.
- remove
- This command takes a list of filenames or keys, separated by spaces, as
arguments. Each file is examined and the corresponding record is removed
from the database.
- merge
- This command takes a list of database filenames, separated by spaces, as
arguments. Each database file is loaded and the contents are merged and
written to the central database file. The database files are processed in
the order they are specified on the commandline. Records from databases
that were specified earlier take precedence over records from databases
that were specified later. Records from the central database take
precedence over all other records. This means that only additional records
from the other databases will be added to the central database and if a
record is found that is not already in the central database, the version
from the earliest specified database that contains this record will be
taken. In no way will records ever be overwritten in the central
database.
The order of the option commandline parameters is not important.
- -d <file>
- Specify an arbitrary file to use as the central database.
- -s
- Use the system-wide database file as the central database. This option is
only present if adplugdb was compiled with system-wide database
file support.
- -t <type>
- Specify a record type to be used as the type for all newly added records.
Each record needs a special type to be useful to AdPlug's players. The
commandline help, displayed using the -h commandline option,
presents a list of types that may be specified.
- -c
- Prompt for record comment. If this option is given, the user will be
prompted and asked for each newly added record's comment.
- -k
- Specify keys instead of filenames. If this option is given, all command
arguments that normally are filenames are expected to be record keys
instead. Each record in the database has a unique identifying key,
generated from the corresponding file's contents. To manipulate a record
entry, you either must have the exact same file and specify its name, or
you specify the record's key, using this option. Keys are specified the
same way they are displayed using the list command, as CRC16:CRC32
value in hexadecimal format.
- -q, --quiet
- Be more quiet.
- -v, --verbose
- Be more verbose.
- -h, --help
- Show summary of commandline commands, arguments and options.
- -V, --version
- Show version and author information of the program.
Simon Peter <dn.tlp@gmx.net>
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