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SHTOOL.TMP(1) |
GNU Portable Shell Tool |
SHTOOL.TMP(1) |
GNU shtool - The GNU Portable Shell Tool
GNU shtool 2.0.8 (18-Jul-2008)
shtool [ global_options ] command [ command_options
] [ command_args ]
GNU shtool is a compilation of small but very stable and portable shell
scripts into a single shell tool. All ingredients were in successful use over
many years in various free software projects. The compiled shtool
script is intended to be used inside the source tree of those free software
packages. There it can take over various (usually non-portable) tasks related
to the building and installation of such packages.
The following global options are available for shtool. Any
commands are ignored if one of them is present on the shtool
command line.
- -h, --help
- Displays a short help page describing the usage of shtool and it's
ingredient commands in a compact way.
- -v, --version
- Displays the version number of shtool.
- -d, --debug
- Displays shell trace messages for debugging purposes.
- -r, --recreate
- Recreate the shtool script with its own individual
shtoolize(1) call.
The following commands are provided by shtool. They are all called
via ""shtool" command". Any
command options command_opts and arguments command_args are
specific to the particular command and are described in the
corresponding manual page shtool_command(1). The commands are
listed here sorted by topic, i.e., related commands are listed side-by-side.
- echo
- echo(1) style print command providing special expansion constructs
(terminal bold mode, environment details, date) and newline control.
- mdate
- Pretty-printing of the last modification time of a file or directory.
- table
- Pretty-printing a field-separated list as a two-dimensional table.
- prop
- Displaying of a processing indication though a running terminal character
propeller.
- move
- mv(1) style command for renaming/moving multiple files at once and
allowing source files just to be deleted if contents did not change.
- install
- install(1) style command for installing a program, script or data
file in a portable way.
- mkdir
- mkdir(1) style command providing support for automatical parent
directory creation, directory permission control and smart skipping if
directory already exists.
- mkln
- ln(1) style command providing automatic calculation and usage of
relative links if possible.
- mkshadow
- Creation of a shadow filesystem tree by the help of symbolic links.
- fixperm
- Fixing of file permissions in a source tree by cleaning up the permission
bits.
- rotate
- Rotate a logfile.
- tarball
- Roll standardized distribution tarballs.
- subst
- Apply sed(1) substitution operations.
- platform
- Determines platform identification information.
- arx
- Extended archive command which can even put existing archives into an
archive.
- slo
- Separate linker options by library class.
- scpp
- An additional C source file pre-processor for sharing cpp(1) code,
internal variables and internal functions.
- version
- Maintain a version information file in either Text, C/C++, Perl or Python.
format.
- path
- Deal with shell path variables.
shtoolize(1), shtool-arx(1), shtool-echo(1),
shtool-fixperm(1), shtool-install(1), shtool-mdate(1),
shtool-mkdir(1), shtool-mkln(1), shtool-mkshadow(1),
shtool-move(1), shtool-path(1), shtool-platform(1),
shtool-prop(1), shtool-rotate(1), shtool-scpp(1),
shtool-slo(1), shtool-subst(1), shtool-table(1),
shtool-tarball(1), shtool-version(1).
Some scripts contained in GNU shtool were already written in 1994 by
Ralf S. Engelschall for use inside some private source trees. Then they
evolved into more elaborated versions over the years and were used in various
free software projects like ePerl, WML, iSelect, gFONT, etc. They were
complemented with other scripts from the author which he wrote in March 1998
for the ``Apache Autoconf-style Interface'' (APACI) for Apache 1.3. In April
1999 the shtool package was created out of the accumulated master
versions of the scripts and in June 1999 it entered the status of an official
GNU program and this way finally joined the group of GNU autoconf, GNU
automake and GNU libtool.
Ralf S. Engelschall
rse@engelschall.com
www.engelschall.com
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