|
|
| |
git-annex-addurl(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
git-annex-addurl(1) |
git-annex-addurl - add urls to annex
git annex addurl [url ...]
Downloads each url to its own file, which is added to the annex.
When youtube-dl is installed, it can be used to check for a
video embedded in a web page at the url, and that is added to the annex
instead. (However, this is disabled by default as it can be a security risk.
See the documentation of annex.security.allowed-ip-addresses in git-annex(1)
for details.)
Special remotes can add other special handling of particular urls.
For example, the bittorrent special remotes makes urls to torrent files
(including magnet links) download the content of the torrent, using
aria2c.
Normally the filename is based on the full url, so will look like
"www.example.com_dir_subdir_bigfile". In some cases, addurl is
able to come up with a better filename based on other information. Options
can also be used to get better filenames.
- --fast
- Avoid immediately downloading the url. The url is still checked (via HEAD)
to verify that it exists, and to get its size if possible.
- --relaxed
- Don't immediately download the url, and avoid storing the size of the
url's content. This makes git-annex accept whatever content is there at a
future point.
- This is the fastest option, but it still has to access the network to
check if the url contains embedded media. When adding large numbers of
urls, using --relaxed --raw is much faster.
- --raw
- Prevent special handling of urls by youtube-dl, bittorrent, and other
special remotes. This will for example, make addurl download the .torrent
file and not the contents it points to.
- --no-raw
- Require content pointed to by the url to be downloaded using youtube-dl or
a special remote, rather than the raw content of the url. if that cannot
be done, the add will fail.
- --file=name
- Use with a filename that does not yet exist to add a new file with the
specified name and the content downloaded from the url.
- If the file already exists, addurl will record that it can be downloaded
from the specified url(s).
- --preserve-filename
- When the web server (or torrent, etc) provides a filename, use it as-is,
avoiding sanitizing unusual characters, or truncating it to length, or any
other modifications.
- git-annex will still check the filename for safety, and if the filename
has a security problem such as path traversal or an escape sequence, it
will refuse to add it.
- --pathdepth=N
- Rather than basing the filename on the whole url, this causes a path to be
constructed, starting at the specified depth within the path of the
url.
- For example, adding the url http://www.example.com/dir/subdir/bigfile with
--pathdepth=1 will use "dir/subdir/bigfile", while
--pathdepth=3 will use "bigfile".
- It can also be negative; --pathdepth=-2 will use the last two parts
of the url.
- --prefix=foo --suffix=bar
- Use to adjust the filenames that are created by addurl. For example,
--suffix=.mp3 can be used to add an extension to the file.
- --no-check-gitignore
- By default, gitignores are honored and it will refuse to download an url
to a file that would be ignored. This makes such files be added despite
any ignores.
- --jobs=N -JN
- Enables parallel downloads when multiple urls are being added. For
example: -J4
- Setting this to "cpus" will run one job per CPU core.
- --batch
- Enables batch mode, in which lines containing urls to add are read from
stdin.
- -z
- Makes the --batch input be delimited by nulls instead of the usual
newlines.
- --with-files
- When batch mode is enabled, makes it parse lines of the form: "$url
$file"
- That adds the specified url to the specified file, downloading its content
if the file does not yet exist; the same as git annex addurl $url
--file $file
- --json
- Enable JSON output. This is intended to be parsed by programs that use
git-annex. Each line of output is a JSON object.
- --json-progress
- Include progress objects in JSON output.
- --json-error-messages
- Messages that would normally be output to standard error are included in
the json instead.
- Also the git-annex-common-options(1) can be used.
If annex.largefiles is configured, and does not match a file, git annex addurl
will add the non-large file directly to the git repository, instead of to the
annex. However, this is not done when --fast or --relaxed is used.
git-annex(1)
git-annex-rmurl(1)
git-annex-registerurl(1)
git-annex-importfeed(1)
Joey Hess <id@joeyh.name>
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. Output converted with ManDoc. |