START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY * gnuit: (gnuit). GNU Interactive Tools END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY `GNUIT' is a package containing a file system browser, a process viewer/killer and an ASCII/HEX file viewer. This is edition 2.9.4, for GNU Interactive Tools version 4.9.5. 1 Introduction ************** `GNUIT' is a set of interactive tools. It contains an extensible file system browser, an ascii/hex file viewer, a process viewer/killer and some other related utilities and shell scripts. It can be used to increase the speed and efficiency of most of the daily tasks such as copying and moving files and directories, invoking editors, compressing and uncompressing files, creating and expanding archives, compiling programs, sending mail, etc. It looks nice, has colors (if the standard ANSI color sequences are supported) and is user-friendly. `GNUIT' runs on a wide variety of `UNIX' systems because it uses the `GNU Autoconf' package to get system specific information. Please refer to the PLATFORMS file included in the standard distribution for a detailed list of systems on which `GNUIT' has been tested. One of the main advantages of `GNUIT' is its flexibility. It is not limited to a given set of commands. The configuration file can be easily enhanced, allowing the user to add new commands or file operations, depending on its needs or preferences. `GNUIT' also provides a shell like command prompt, just to make sure that the entire power of the `UNIX' shell commands is still there. 2 Distributing GNU Interactive Tools ************************************ `GNUIT' is "free software"; this means that everyone is free to use it and free to redistribute it on certain conditions. `GNUIT' is not in the public domain; it is copyrighted and there are restrictions on its distribution, but these restrictions are designed to permit everything that a good cooperating citizen would want to do. What is not allowed is to try to prevent others from further sharing any version of `GNUIT' that they might get from you. The precise conditions are found in the GNU General Public License that comes with `GNUIT' and also appears following this section. The easiest way to get a copy of `GNUIT' is from someone else who has it. You need not ask for our permission to do so, or tell any one else; just copy it. If you have access to the Internet, you can get the latest distribution version of `GNUIT' from host `ftp.gnu.org' using anonymous login. See the file `/pub/gnu/GETTING.GNU.SOFTWARE' on that host to find out about your options for copying and which files to use. You may also receive `GNU Interactive Tools' when you buy a computer. Computer manufacturers are free to distribute copies on the same terms that apply to everyone else. These terms require them to give you the full sources, including whatever changes they may have made, and to permit you to redistribute the GNU Interactive Tools received from them under the usual terms of the General Public License. In other words, the program must be free for you when you get it, not just free for the manufacturer. 3 Using GNU Interactive Tools ***************************** The `GNUIT' package contains three interactive programs and a few additional utilities. Here there is a description of each of them. 3.1 The GIT file system browser =============================== `gitfm' is a file system browser with some shell like features designed to make your work much easier and much efficient. It displays one or two panels, each one containing a file system directory. You can browse the directory tree with the usual cursor keys, pressing `ENTER' when you want to enter or leave a directory and `TAB' when you want to change the panels. Under the two panels there is a shell like input line which you can use to type normal shell commands. The input line can handle an unlimited number of characters and keeps a history of typed commands (using the GNU history library). Under the input line there is a status bar. You can see there the status of the currently executed command, the warnings and errors and you will be prompted if a decision has to be taken. 3.1.1 Key binding conventions ----------------------------- `gitfm' now follows a new, easy to remember, scheme to bind commands on keys. This is only a convention, if you define new key bindings you may, or may not follow it. All the file commands start with `^C'. This prefix can be followed by some modifiers, in order to affect the default behavior of the given command. These modifiers are `b' and `r'. `b' - this modifier specifies that the command will run in background: ^CM = CHMOD; chmod %s{New mode of %i: ,%m} %i;;;;y defines a command that changes the current selected files mode in foreground, while ^CbM = B-CHMOD; chmod %s{New mode of %i: ,%m} %i&;;;;y defines a background command that does the same thing. `r' - this modifier specifies that the command will be run recursively: ^CrM = R-CHMOD; chmod -R %s{New mode of %i: ,} %i;;;;y defines a command that recursively changes the mode of the selected entries. The `b' and `r' modifiers can be combined, the resulting command running recursively and in background: ^CbrM = B-R-CHMOD; chmod -R %s{New mode of %i: ,} %i&;;;;y You should also note that for some commands (like `gzip') there is no need for a non-recursive version. Running `gzip' recursively on files is harmless. If there is a directory between these files, `gzip' will recursively compress that directory, so you can use the same key binding for recursively and non-recursively compressing. In fact, it is a matter of selecting files or directories. Unfortunately, we can't run `chmod' recursively trying to change the mode of all the files in a directory to 0644 because that directory might contain subdirectories and removing the execution permission from them is a bad idea. So, in this case, we need separate commands. 3.1.2 Command line ------------------ This is a brief description of the command line arguments. `-h' print this help message `-v' print the version number `-c' use ANSI colors `-b' don't use ANSI colors `-l' don't use the last screen character `-p' output final path at exit The `-p' option can be used to make gitfm force bash (assuming that you're using it as your shell) chdir to the last directory gitfm was in before quitting. In order to do this, you need to invoke gitfm using this function (put it into your .profile): function g { gitfm -p $ 3> /tmp/gitfm.p.$$ if test -s /tmp/gitfm.p.$$; then if test -d "`cat /tmp/gitfm.p.$$`"; then cd "`cat /tmp/gitfm.p.$$`" else cd fi fi rm -f /tmp/gitfm.p.$$ } This will not work if you suspend gitfm. Nothing bad will happen, just the chdir will not be performed. 3.1.3 Panel modes ----------------- `gitfm' has three major modes of displaying the panels. In the first (default) mode, two panels are displayed, each one using half of the screen. In the second mode, only one panel uses the entire screen. In the third mode, only the status bar and the input line are displayed, both panels being hidden. Briefly, a panel can use the entire screen or just half of it. Even when a panel is hidden, it still exists. Users can switch between these three major modes as needed: `^X 0' Enlarges the other panel to use the entire screen. It also changes the minor mode to `Enable all'. The current panel will become invisible (`enlarge-other-panel'). `^X 1' Enlarges the current panel to use the entire screen. It also changes the minor mode to `Enable all'. The other panel will become invisible (`enlarge-panel'). `^X 2' Switches back to the two panel mode (`two-panel-mode'). `^O', `ESC o' Switches to the tty mode (no panels on the screen) (`tty-mode'). A panel displays the files and subdirectories in a directory. You can optionally specify some additional information about each entry (file, directory, ...) to be displayed (a minor mode). When using the full screen mode, all the minor modes here can be used. In half screen mode, the `panel-enable-all' mode is not available. These are the panel minor modes: `ESC e o' Display the entry owner and group (`panel-enable-owner-group'). `ESC e d' Display the entry date and time (`panel-enable-date-time'). `ESC e s' Display the entry size (`panel-enable-size'). `ESC e S' Display the entry size, scaled (e.g. `123M') (`panel-enable-abbrevsize'). `ESC e m' Display the entry mode (`panel-enable-mode'). `ESC e f' Display the entry full name (`panel-enable-full-name'). `ESC e a' Display the entire information about file (`panel-enable-all'). This mode is only available if the panel has been enlarged to use the entire screen with `enlarge-panel' or `enlarge-other-panel' (`panel-enable-all'). There is another way of changing the panel minor modes: `^]', `^[]' Switches to the next panel minor mode (`panel-enable-next-mode'). 3.1.4 Sorting methods --------------------- Entries in a panel can be sorted in different ways. These are the available options: `ESC s n' Display the panel entries sorted by their names (`panel-sort-by-name'). `ESC s e' Display the panel entries sorted by their extensions (`panel-sort-by-extension'). `ESC s s' Display the panel entries sorted by their sizes (`panel-sort-by-size'). `ESC s d' Display the panel entries sorted by their `last modified' stamps (`panel-sort-by-date'). `ESC s m' Display the panel entries sorted by their modes (`panel-sort-by-mode'). `ESC s o i' Display the panel entries sorted by their owner ids (`panel-sort-by-owner-id'). `ESC s g i' Display the panel entries sorted by their group ids (`panel-sort-by-group-id'). `ESC s o n' Display the panel entries sorted by their owner names (`panel-sort-by-owner-name'). `ESC s g n' Display the panel entries sorted by their group names (`panel-sort-by-group-name'). There is also another way to change the sort method: `ESC s u' Switch to the next panel sort method (`panel-sort-next-method'). 3.1.5 Moving the cursor in the panel ------------------------------------ Moving the cursor in the panel is very easy. If your keyboard has arrows, use them. If the arrow keys don't work (it might be due to a badly configured TERM environment variable), you can use the Emacs commands bindings as well. `UP', `^P' Move the cursor vertically up one entry (`previous-line'). `DOWN', `^N' Move the cursor vertically down one entry (`next-line'). `HOME', `ESC <' Move the cursor on the first entry in the panel (`beginning-of-panel'). `END', `ESC >' Move the cursor on the last entry in the panel (`end-of-panel'). `PGUP', `ESC v' Move the cursor vertically down one page (`scroll-down'). `PGDOWN', `^V' Move the cursor vertically down one page (`scroll-up'). `ESC g' Scroll the panel entries to the left (`horizontal-scroll-left'). `ESC j' Scroll the panel entries to the right (`horizontal-scroll-right'). `^X P' In order to optimize the screen output, you can modify the scroll step (`set-scroll-step'). This is the number of lines to try scrolling a panel when the cursor moves out. The `StartupScrollStep' specifies the initial scroll step, but using `set-scroll-step' you can dynamically change it. `TAB', `^I', `^X o' Move the cursor in the other panel (`other-panel'). `^X P' Switch the two panels. This command works even when `gitfm' is not in the `two panels' mode (`switch-panels'). 3.1.6 Selecting files --------------------- `INS', `^T', `^X \', `^\' Toggle the `selected' flag of the current entry (`select-entry'). `^C s' Select (marks) all the files matching at least one pattern from a space separated list of shell patterns. Spaces and \s are allowed in the patterns but they have to be escaped with a \. The user will be prompted for a pattern to match against (`select-files-matching-pattern'). `^C u' Unselect (unmarks) all the files matching at least one pattern from a space separated list of shell patterns. Spaces and \s are allowed in the patterns but they have to be escaped with a \. The user will be prompted for a pattern to match against (`unselect-files-matching-pattern'). `ESC +' Select (marks) all the files having the same extension as the current file. If the current file name doesn't have an extension or starts with a dot, no files are selected (`select-extension'). `ESC -' Unselect (unmarks) all the files having the same extension as the current file. If the current file name doesn't have an extension or starts with a dot, no files are unselected (`unselect-extension'). *Note Selecting Files::, for additional ways of selecting and unselecting files. 3.1.7 Incremental searching files in a panel -------------------------------------------- Users sometime need to search a file in a panel, especially when the panel contains a big number of entries. For that reason `gitfm' provides an incremental search feature. Using forward and backward incremental search, files can be very easy located. Wrapped incremental search is also provided. `^S', `^Xs' Incremental search forward a file name in the current panel (`isearch-forward'). Pressing `^S' or `^Xs' again will force `gitfm' to go to the next entry that matches the current isearched string. When the end of the panel is reached, the isearch is restarted from its beginning. `^R', `^Xr' Incremental search backward a file name in the current panel (`isearch-backward'). Pressing `^R' or `^Xr' again will force `gitfm' to go to the next entry that matches the current isearched string. When the beginning of the panel is reached, the isearch is restarted from its end. 3.1.8 Using the input line -------------------------- The input line is one of the main methods used by `gitfm' to interact with the user. All the answers the user should give in order to perform some operation and all the shell like commands are built using it. So here is a description of all the basic editing operations that the `input line' provides. They are very much inspired from `Emacs', so `Emacs' users should have no problem using them. 3.1.8.1 Inserting Text ...................... Typing characters is the most usual way of inserting text into the input line. Key sequences starting with printable ascii characters are not allowed in `gitfm' so typing `a' for example results in inserting `a' at the current point position. Of course, there are some other ways of inserting text into the command line and here there is a description of most of them. `ESC RET' Copy the current entry name into the input line at the current point position (`entry-to-input-line'). `ESC ESC RET' Copy the other panel path into the input line at the current point position (`other-path-to-input-line'). `^X ^I' Copy the names of all the selected entries into the input line at the current point position (`selected-entries-to-input-line'). 3.1.8.2 Moving Point .................... `^B', `LEFT' Move the point backward one character (`backward-char'). `^F', `RIGHT' Move the point forward one character (`forward-char'). `ESC b' Move the point one word backward (`backward-word'). `ESC f' Move the point one word forward (`forward-word'). `^A' Move the cursor at the beginning of the input line (`beginning-of-line'). `^E' Move the cursor at the end of the input line (`end-of-line'). 3.1.8.3 Deleting and killing text ................................. `DEL', `^D' Delete the character under the cursor (`delete-char'). `^H', `BKSPC' Delete the character before the cursor (`backward-delete-char'). `ESC BKSPC' Delete backward one word (`backward-kill-word'). `ESC d' Delete forward one word (`kill-word'). `ESC k' Delete the entire line (`kill-line'). `^U' Delete all the characters between the beginning of the input line and the point (`kill-to-beginning-of-line'). `^K' Delete all the characters between the point and the end of the input line (`kill-to-end-of-line'). `ESC SPC' Delete all the spaces around the point, leaving only one space (`just-one-space'). `ESC \' Delete all the spaces around the point (`delete-horizontal-space'). `^W' Save the region between the point and the mark into the kill "ring" and then kills it (`kill-region'). Note that there is no real kill-ring here. The so-called kill-ring has only one entry. `ESC w' Save the region between the point and the mark without killing it (`kill-ring-save'). 3.1.8.4 Case conversion of words. ................................. `ESC l' Convert the following word to lower case, moving over. (`downcase-word'). `ESC u' Convert the following word to upper case, moving over. (`upcase-word'). `ESC c' Capitalize the following word, moving over. (`capitalize-word'). 3.1.8.5 Reusing recent input line arguments ........................................... A separate history is kept for both built-in and user-defined commands. If you call a command that you have used before, you can re-edit a previously entered string in order to minimize the amount of characters needed to be typed for the new one. There is no limit on the number of strings that can be kept in the history. `ESC p' Walk backward through the history of previously entered strings (`previous-history-element'). `ESC n' Walk forward through the history of previously entered strings (`next-history-element'). 3.1.8.6 Commands to set the mark ................................ `^SPC' Set the mark at the current point position (`set-mark'). `^X ^X' Exchange the current point position with the mark one (`exchange-point-and-mark'). 3.1.8.7 Reinserting recently killed text ........................................ `^Y' Reinsert a previously killed text at the current point position (`yank'). 3.1.8.8 Selecting files matching patterns ......................................... If the very first character in the input line is a `+', what comes after it is considered a (space separated) list of shell patterns, and all the files that match at least one pattern from that list will be marked as selected. An empty list of shell patterns (i.e. the `+' by itself) will cause all the files to be selected. If the very first character in the input line is a `-', the space separated list of shell patterns that follows is used to unselect files. An empty list of shell patterns (i.e. the `-' by itself) will cause all the selected files to be unselected. Finally, if the first and only character in the input line is a `*', then all the selected files will become unselected, and all the unselected files will become selected. 3.1.9 File operations --------------------- 3.1.9.1 Copying Files ..................... `F5', `ESC 5', `^C C' Copy the currently selected entries to the user supplied path (`copy'). `^C b C' Copy the currently selected entries to the user supplied path. The operation is performed in background (`B-COPY'). 3.1.9.2 Moving Files .................... `F6', `ESC 6', `^C T' Move the currently selected entries to the user supplied path (`move'). `^C b T' Move the currently selected entries to the user supplied path. The operation is performed in background (`B-MOVE'). 3.1.9.3 Creating Files ...................... The easiest way to create a new file is to start an editor passing the file name as an argument. Most editors will try to create the file if the file doesn't exist. *Note Editing Files::, for more information. 3.1.9.4 Deleting Files ...................... `F8', `ESC 8', `^C D' Delete the currently selected entries (`delete'). `^C b D' Delete the currently selected entries. The operation is performed in background (`B-DELETE'). 3.1.9.5 Linking Files ..................... `^C H' Create a hard link from the current files to a user supplied file name (`LINK'). `^C b H' Create a hard link from the current files to a user supplied file name (`B-LINK'). The action is performed in background. `^C S' Create a symbolic link from the current files to a user supplied file name (`SYMLINK'). `^C b S' Create a symbolic link from the current files to a user supplied file name (`B-SYMLINK'). The action is performed in background. 3.1.9.6 Renaming Files ...................... `^C R' Rename the current file or directory with the user supplied name (`RENAME'). `^C b R' Rename the current file or directory with the user supplied name. The operation is performed in background (`B-RENAME'). `^C n d' Change the name of all the selected entries to lowercase. (`name-downcase'). `^C n u' Change the name of all the selected entries to uppercase. (`name-upcase'). 3.1.9.7 Splitting files into smaller parts .......................................... `^C /' Split the current file into several smaller files of a given size and named based on a given prefix (`SPLIT'). `^C b /' Split the current file into several smaller files of a given size and named based on a given prefix. The operation is performed in background (`B-SPLIT'). 3.1.9.8 Packing files into the minimum number of bins ..................................................... `^C ~' Pack the files into the smallest number of bins. This is an approximation - the problem is NP-complete and no known algorithm can guarantee a solution better than `(11/9) * OPTIMAL + 4'. To make things even worse, for large files, there is no portable way to predict how many blocks the file system implementation will require for indirect blocks, directories, etc. So keep in mind that this is only an approximation. Bin packing can be useful when you want to put a bunch of files on floppies or zip disks and you want to optimize things a little bit (`bin-packing'). `gitfm' assumes that you want to pack all the files in the current directory - if there is any selected file in that directory it will be unselected first. Then `gitfm' will ask for a bin size, and select the files that should go in the first bin. You are supposed to place those files in the first bin (e.g. a tar archive), remove them from the current directory, then run `bin-packing' again, to obtain the list of the files that should go into the second bin, etc. 3.1.9.9 Changing a file's mode, owner and group ............................................... `^C M' Change the mode of the currently selected entries (`CHMOD'). `^C b M' Change the mode of the currently selected entries. The operation is performed in background (`B-CHMOD'). `^C r M' Recursively change the modes of the selected entries if one of them is a directory (`R-CHMOD'). `^C b r M' Recursively change the modes of the selected entries if one of them is a directory. The operation is performed in background (`B-R-CHMOD'). `^C O' Change the owner of the currently selected entries (`CHOWN'). `^C b O' Change the owner of the currently selected entries. The operation is performed in background (`B-CHOWN'). `^C r O' Recursively change the owners of the selected entries if one of them is a directory (`R-CHOWN'). `^C b r O' Recursively change the owners of the selected entries if one of them is a directory. The operation is performed in background (`B-R-CHOWN'). `^C G' Change the group of the currently selected entries (`CHGRP'). `^C b G' Change the group of the currently selected entries. The operation is performed in background (`B-CHGRP'). `^C r G' Recursively change the groups of the selected entries if one of them is a directory (`R-CHGRP'). `^C b r G' Recursively change the groups of the selected entries if one of them is a directory. The operation is performed in background (`B-R-CHGRP'). 3.1.9.10 Editing Files ...................... `F4', `ESC 4' Call the default editor with the current file name as an argument (`EDIT'). `^X e' Call the default editor with the selected entry names as arguments (`MULTIPLE-EDIT'). `^X ^F' Create a new file by calling the default editor with the user supplied file name as an argument (`FILE-CREATE'). `^X 4 a' Call the default editor in order to edit the `ChangeLog' file (`CHANGE-LOG'). The default editor can be specified using the EDITOR or GNUIT_EDITOR environment variables. *Note Environment Variables::, for more information. $GNUIT_EDITOR used to be called $GIT_EDITOR. The old name is still accepted for backwards-compatibility. 3.1.9.11 Viewing Files ...................... `F3', `ESC 3' Call the default viewer (`gitview') with the current file name as argument (`VIEW'). `^X v' Call the default pager (`more') with the currently selected entry names as arguments (`MULTIPLE-VIEW'). 3.1.9.12 Compressing Files .......................... `^C z' Compress the currently selected entries with `gzip' (`COMPRESS'). `^C b z' Compress the currently selected entries with `gzip'. The operation is performed in background (`B-COMPRESS'). `^C Z' Uncompress the currently selected entries with `gunzip' (`UNCOMPRESS'). `^C b Z' Uncompress the currently selected entries with `gunzip'. The operation is performed in background (`B-UNCOMPRESS'). `^C f Z' Uncompress the currently selected entries with `gunzip' (`F-UNCOMPRESS'). Force uncompression of links. `^C b f Z' Uncompress the currently selected entries with `gunzip'. Force uncompression of links. The operation is performed in background (`BF-UNCOMPRESS'). `^C .' Compress the currently selected entries with `bzip2' (`BZIP2-COMPRESS'). `^C b .' Compress the currently selected entries with `bzip2'. The operation is performed in background (`B-BZIP2-COMPRESS'). `^C o' Uncompress the currently selected entries with `bunzip2' (`BZIP2-UNCOMPRESS'). `^C b o' Uncompress the currently selected entries with `bunzip2'. The operation is performed in background (`B-BZIP2-UNCOMPRESS'). 3.1.9.13 Encoding Files ....................... `^C e' Encode the currently selected file (`UUENCODE'). `^C b e' Encode the currently selected file. The operation is performed in background (`B-UUENCODE'). `^C E' Decode the currently selected file (`UUDECODE'). `^C b E' Decode the currently selected file. The operation is performed in background (`B-UUDECODE'). `^C k' Encode the currently selected file using mpack (`MIME-PACK'). `^C b k' Encode the currently selected file using mpack. The operation is performed in background (`B-MIME-PACK'). `^C K' Decode the currently selected file using munpack (`MIME-UNPACK'). `^C b K' Decode the currently selected file using munpack. The operation is performed in background (`B-MIME-UNPACK'). 3.1.9.14 Encrypting Files ......................... `^C p' Encrypt (using `pgp') the current file (`ENCRYPT'). `^C P' Decrypt (using `pgp') the current file (`DECRYPT'). 3.1.9.15 Comparing Files ........................ `^C =' Compare (using `diff') the current ASCII file with the other panel's current file (`DIFF'). If both entries are directories, a recursive diff is performed. `^C ESC =' Compare (using `diff') the current ASCII file with its latest backup. The latest backup is the file having the same name and a '~' at the end (`LAST-BACKUP-DIFF'). `^C B' Compare the current file with the other panel current file. A binary comparison is performed (`compare'). 3.1.9.16 Spell Checking Files ............................. `^X I' Run the `ispell' command with the current file name as an argument. 3.1.9.17 Printing Files ....................... `^C j' Print the selected files via `lpr' to the user specified printer or to the default one if no `lpr' options are given (`PRINT-JOB'). `^C J' Print the list of active printing jobs via `lpq'. The default printer is queried if no `lpq' options are given (`PRINT-JOB-LIST'). 3.1.9.18 Wiping Files ..................... `^C W' Call `gitwipe' to wipe the selected files. Asks for confirmation before actually wiping them in order to avoid errors (`WIPE'). *Note gitwipe::, for more information. 3.1.9.19 Searching Files ........................ `ESC %' Search files on the file system, starting from the current directory (`FIND'). `ESC &' Use 'locate' to search files on the file system, starting from the current directory (`LOCATE'). `^X w' Locate the binary, source, and manual page files for a command (`WHEREIS'). `^X W' Locate a command; display its pathname or alias (`WHICH'). 3.1.9.20 Managing tar based archive files ......................................... `^C a' Create a `tar' archive containing all the currently selected entries (`TAR'). `^C b a' Create a `tar' archive containing all the currently selected entries. The operation is performed in background (`B-TAR'). `^C x' Create a compressed `tar' archive containing the current entry, provided it is a directory (`TAR-COMPRESS'). `^C b x' Create a compressed `tar' archive containing the current entry, provided it is directory. The operation is performed in background (`B-TAR-COMPRESS'). `^C -' Create a bzip2 compressed `tar' archive containing the current entry, provided it is a directory (`TAR-BZIP2'). `^C b -' Create a bzip2 compressed `tar' archive containing the current entry, provided it is a directory. The operation is performed in background (`B-TAR-BZIP2'). `^C X' Expand the selected archives into the current directory. The utility used is selected based on the extension of the file (`GENERIC-UNPACK'). `^C b X' Expand the selected archives into the current directory. The utility used is based on the extension of the file. The operation is performed in background (`B-GENERIC-UNPACK'). `^C V' Expand the selected archives into an user supplied current directory. The utility used is selected based on the extension of the file (`GENERIC-UNPACK-INTO'). `^C b V' Expand the selected archives into an user supplied directory. The utility used is based on the extension of the file. The operation is performed in background (`B-GENERIC-UNPACK-INTO'). 3.1.9.21 Working with DPKG .......................... `dpkg' provides commands for manipulating and querying the dpkg database, `gitfm''s DPKG commands allow quick access to most of those which operate on binary packages, files, or require package names as arguments. All commands expecting package names can also be given binary packages, the package names will be automatically extracted. Most commands use their single character `dpkg' option letter as the key command. `^C ^D i' Install the `deb' file(s) selected or pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-INSTALL'). `^C ^D R i' Recursively install the `deb' file(s) in the directories selected or pointed by the cursor (`R-DPKG-INSTALL'). `^C ^D u' Unpack the `deb' file(s) selected or pointed by the cursor, but don't configure it (`DPKG-UNPACK'). `^C ^D R u' Recursively unpack the `deb' file(s) in the directories selected or pointed by the cursor, but don't configure them (`R-DPKG-UNPACK'). `^C ^D C' Configure the unpacked package(s) selected or pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-CONFIGURE'). `^C ^D r' Remove the package(s) selected or pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-REMOVE'). `^C ^D P' Purge the package(s) selected or pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-PURGE'). `^C ^D A' Update dpkg and dselect's idea of which packages are available with information from the `deb' file(s) selected or pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-RECORDAVAIL'). `^C ^D R A' Recursively update dpkg and dselect's idea of which packages are available with information from the `deb' file(s) in the directories selected or pointed by the cursor (`R-DPKG-RECORDAVAIL'). `^C ^D h' Display quick help file for GITFM's DPKG commands. (`DPKG-HELP'). `^C ^D c' Lists the contents of the filesystem tree archive portion of the `deb' file pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-CONTENTS'). `^C ^D f' Extracts control file information from a `deb' file pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-FIELD'). You are presented with the file name and can either hit ENTER to see all fields, or add control file field names (space separated) to see only those fields. `^C ^D I' Provides information about a `deb' file pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-INFO'). `^C ^D l' List the package(s) selected or pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-LISTPKGS'). `^C ^D s' Display status details for the package(s) selected or pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-STATUS'). `^C ^D L' List files owned by the package(s) selected or pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-LISTFILES'). `^C ^D S' Find package owning file pointed to by the cursor (`DPKG-SEARCH'). `^C ^D p' Display available version details of package(s) selected or pointed by the cursor (`DPKG-PRINTAVAIL'). 3.1.9.22 Installing and Uninstalling RPM packages ................................................. Red Hat Linux Distributions use a very powerful package manager called `rpm'. It is used whenever you need to install/remove/upgrade/etc a software package. The packages used by `rpm' use the extension `.rpm'. `gitfm' provides default key bindings for some of the basic operations `rpm' can perform on packages: install, uninstall, upgrade and query. `^C I' Install the `rpm' package pointed by the cursor (`RPM-INSTALL'). `^C b I' Install the `rpm' package pointed by the cursor (`B-RPM-INSTALL'). The operation is performed in background. `^C i' Uninstall the `rpm' package pointed by the cursor (`RPM-UNINSTALL'). `^C b i' Uninstall the `rpm' package pointed by the cursor (`B-RPM-UNINSTALL'). The operation is performed in background. `^C N' Upgrade the `rpm' package pointed by the cursor (`RPM-UPGRADE'). `^C b N' Upgrade the `rpm' package pointed by the cursor (`B-RPM-UPGRADE'). The operation is performed in background. `^C q' Query the `rpm' package manager (`RPM-QUERY'). The default options used are `-qil'. See the `rpm' manual page for more details on using `rpm'. 3.1.9.23 File Types ................... `^C t' Print the type of a file using the `file' utility (`FILE-TYPE'). 3.1.9.24 Accessing MSDOS Files .............................. `^C m d', `^C m ^D' Change the current `MSDOS' directory to a given directory (`MTOOLS-CHDIR'). `^C m P' Put the currently selected files on a `MSDOS' floppy (`MTOOLS-PUT'). `^C b m P' Put the currently selected files on a `MSDOS' floppy (`B-MTOOLS-PUT'). The operation is performed in background. `^C m G' Get some files from a `MSDOS' floppy and put them in a given directory (`MTOOLS-GET'). `^C b m G' Get some files from a `MSDOS' floppy and put them in a given directory (`B-MTOOLS-GET'). The operation is performed in background. `^C m D' Delete files from a `MSDOS' floppy (`MTOOLS-DELETE'). `^C b m D' Delete files from a `MSDOS' floppy (`B-MTOOLS-DELETE'). The operation is performed in background. `^C m L' List files and directories on a `MSDOS' floppy (`MTOOLS-DIR'). `^C m F' Format a `MSDOS' floppy (`MTOOLS-FORMAT'). `^C b m F' Format a `MSDOS' floppy (`B-MTOOLS-FORMAT'). The operation is performed in background. `^C m M' Create a directory on a `MSDOS' floppy (`MTOOLS-MKDIR'). `^C b m M' Create a directory on a `MSDOS' floppy (`B-MTOOLS-MKDIR'). The operation is performed in background. `^C m K' Remove a directory from a `MSDOS' floppy (`MTOOLS-RMDIR'). All the files and subdirectories in that directory are removed as well. `^C b m K' Remove a directory from a `MSDOS' floppy (`B-MTOOLS-RMDIR'). All the files and subdirectories in that directory are removed as well. The operation is performed in background. `^C m R' Rename a file or directory on a `MSDOS' floppy (`MTOOLS-RENAME'). `^C b m R' Rename a file or directory on a `MSDOS' floppy (`B-MTOOLS-RENAME'). The operation is performed in background. `^C m T' Display the contents of a file located on a `MSDOS' floppy (`MTOOLS-TYPE'). 3.1.9.25 A different action for each file type .............................................. Many files on `UNIX' systems have one or more extensions specifying their types. For example, a file that ends in `.c' is a file containing a `C' program, while a file ending in `.tar.gz' is a `tar' archive compressed with the `gzip' utility. Having a default action for each file type, binded on the same key, seems to be a good idea because you can use that key to obtain type specific information about a file or to process it in some type specific way much easier. The `GNUIT' package contains a script called `gitaction' that is used to detect the current file type and perform a type specific action. *Note gitaction::, for more information. `F2', `ESC 2', `^X a' Perform an action on the current file, depending on its type (`FILE-ACTION'). 3.1.10 Directory operations --------------------------- 3.1.10.1 Creating directories ............................. `F7', `ESC 7', `^X M' Create a new subdirectory in the current directory with the user supplied name (`make-directory'). 3.1.10.2 Copying directories ............................ `F5 (for directories)', `ESC 5 (for directories)', `^C C (for directories)' Copy the currently selected entries to the user supplied path (`copy'). `^C b C (for directories)' Copy the currently selected entries to the user supplied path. The operation is performed in background (`B-COPY'). 3.1.10.3 Deleting directories ............................. `F8 (for subdirectories)', `ESC 8 (for directories)', `^C D (for subdirectories)' Delete the currently selected entries (`delete'). `^C b D (for directories)' Delete the currently selected entries. The operation is performed in background (`B-DELETE'). 3.1.10.4 Moving directories ........................... `F6 (for directories)', `ESC 6 (for directories)', `^C T (for directories)' Move the currently selected entries to the user supplied path (`move'). `^C b T (for directories)' Move the currently selected entries to the user supplied path. The operation is performed in background (`B-MOVE'). 3.1.10.5 Renaming directories ............................. `^C R (for directories)' Rename the current file or directory with the user supplied name (`RENAME'). `^C b R (for directories)' Rename the current file or directory with the user supplied name. The operation is performed in background (`B-RENAME'). 3.1.10.6 Comparing Directories .............................. `^C c q' Quickly compare the files in the left panel with the files in the right one. Only the file names, sizes and time stamps are considered in the comparison. `^C c t' Compare the files in the left panel with the files in the right one. The contents of each file in the current panel will be compared against the contents of its counterpart (if any) from the other panel. `^C f d' Recursively compare (using `diff -r -q') the current directory with the other panel's current directory (`FAST-DIFF'). Print on standard output the names of the files that differ. `^C d' Compare (using `diff') the current directory with the other panel current directory. For successful operation, both panels should contain the same directory (`DIR-DIFF'). `^C b d' Compare (using `diff') the current directory with the other panel current directory. For successful operation, both panels should contain the same directory. The operation is performed in background (`DIR-DIFF'). 3.1.10.7 Summarize directory usage .................................. `^C U' Display the output of the `du -s' command on the status line (`DIRECTORY-USAGE'). 3.1.10.8 Changing directories ............................. `^X d', `^X ^D' Change the current working directory. The user is asked for a new directory name and the new directory is added to the directory history (`change-directory'). *Note Dirs History::, for more information. `ESC a c' Change the current directory of the current panel to the directory of the other panel (`adapt-current-directory'). `ESC a o' Change the current directory of the other panel to the directory of the current panel (`adapt-other-directory'). 3.1.10.9 Directory History .......................... Users usually work on a limited set of subdirectories. Providing a fast method of switching between a number of intensively used directories is a good idea and `gitfm' has a set of builtin commands for doing it. Usually new directories are added to the directory history when the `change-directory' built-in command is used. `gitfm' also adds the current directory to the history list when started, when the directory history is reset and when a command having a non empty `new-dir' field successfully completes its execution. *Note new-dir::, for more information. `^X ^N' Go to the next directory in the history (`next-directory'). `^X ^P' Go to the previous directory in the history (`previous-directory'). `^X ^R' Reset the entire directory history. As explained above, the current directory becomes the only directory in the history (`reset-directory-history'). 3.1.10.10 Hot Keys .................. `gitfm' provides default key bindings for switching to a number of important directories as "/", "..", "$HOME", etc. `ESC /' Go to the `/' directory (`ROOT-DIR'). `ESC .' Go to the `..' directory (`up-one-dir'). `ESC h' Go to the `~' ($HOME) directory (`HOME-DIR'). `ESC i' Go to the `/usr/include' directory (`INCLUDE-DIR'). `ESC ESC 1' Go to the `/mnt/fd0' directory (`FIRST-FLOPPY-DIR'). `ESC ESC 2' Go to the `/mnt/fd1' directory (`SECOND-FLOPPY-DIR'). 3.1.11 Compiling programs ------------------------- `F9', `ESC 9', `^X m' Run the `make' command in the current directory. Use -k as the default option (`MAKE'). `^X b m' Run the `make' command in background in the current directory (`B-MAKE'). *Note gitaction::, for more information. 3.1.12 Sending/receiving ascii/binary mail ------------------------------------------ `^C 2 a' Send the current current ascii file by mail to an user supplied email address (`ASCII-MAIL'). `^C b 2 a' The same as `ASCII-MAIL', the only difference being that the command runs in background (`B-ASCII-MAIL'). `^C 2 b' Send the current current binary file by mail to an user supplied list of email addresses. The file is uuencoded first (`BINARY-MAIL'). `^C b 2 b' The same as `BINARY-MAIL', the only difference being that the command runs in background (`B-BINARY-MAIL'). `^C 2 m' Send the current current binary file by mail to an user supplied list of email addresses. The file is encoded with mpack first (`MIME-MAIL'). `^C b 2 m' The same as `MIME-MAIL', the only difference being that the command runs in background (`B-MIME-MAIL'). `ESC x r m' Run the `emacs -f rmail' command. This will start the Emacs's `rmail' function so that you can read your mail (`READ-MAIL'). 3.1.13 Starting a sub-shell --------------------------- `^X z' Call a sub-shell as specified by the $GNUIT_SHELL environment variable (`SUB-SHELL'). $GNUIT_SHELL used to be called $GIT_SHELL. The old name is still accepted for backwards-compatibility. *Note Environment Variables::, for more information. 3.1.14 Using grep and recursive grep ------------------------------------ `^X g' Search using `grep' all the selected files for a given pattern (`GREP'). `^X g' Search recursively using `gitrgrep' all the user specified files and directories for a given pattern (`RECURSIVE-GREP'). *Note gitrgrep::, for more information. 3.1.15 Locking your console --------------------------- Having a lock feature might be a good idea and, since not all the `UNIX' systems provide one, `gitfm' tries to get around the problem ... `^X p' Prompt the user for a password and locks the console until the same password is reinserted (`lock'). 3.1.16 Refreshing the screen contents ------------------------------------- Sometimes your screen needs to be refreshed. Just think about what happens when somebody wants to talk with you and the talk daemon writes something like this Message from Talk_Daemon@galei.cs.vu.nl at 12:15 ... talk: connection requested by andrei@galei.cs.vu.nl. talk: respond with: talk andrei@galei.cs.vu.nl on your screen. And sometimes you might also want to re-read the current directories. `gitfm' provides a built-in command for refreshing the screen contents. `^L' Re-read the directories contents and refresh the screen (`refresh'). 3.1.17 Resetting your terminal ------------------------------ `^X ^L' Call `reset' in order to reset the terminal to its default settings (`TTY-RESET'). 3.1.18 Mounting/unmounting file systems --------------------------------------- People dealing with lots of files usually need to save/restore/copy files from/to other file systems. In order to be more efficient, `gitfm' provides a set of key bindings for mounting and unmounting file systems. *Note gitmount::, for more information. The default key bindings set has been designed to work under `Linux', but it can be easily changed for other `UNIX' systems with different device names. Reading the configuration file `gnuitrc.common' should be enough. *Note Hot Keys::, for more information. As a convention, the `/mnt' directory is used to store an empty subdirectory for each mountable file system. Each file system is actually mounted in its counterpart `/mnt' subdirectory. Try to follow this convention since the `gitmount' script is heavily based on it. *Note Customization::, for more information. `ESC m a' Call `mount'(1) in order to mount the first floppy (`/dev/fd0') in the `/mnt/fd0' directory (`MOUNT-A'). `ESC m b' Call `mount'(1) in order to mount the second floppy (`/dev/fd1') in the `/mnt/fd1' directory (`MOUNT-B'). `ESC m c' Call `mount'(1) in order to mount the cdrom (`/dev/cdrom') in the `/mnt/cdrom' directory (`MOUNT-CDROM'). `ESC m f' Call `mount'(1) in order to mount the first floppy (`/dev/fd0') in the `/mnt/floppy' directory (`MOUNT-FLOPPY'). `ESC m z' Call `mount'(1) in order to mount the zip drive (`/dev/zip') in the `/mnt/zip' directory (`MOUNT-ZIP'). `ESC m j' Call `mount'(1) in order to mount the jaz drive (`/dev/jaz') in the `/mnt/jaz' directory (`MOUNT-JAZ'). `ESC m t' Call `mount'(1) in order to mount the file systems corresponding to the selected subdirectories. For example, if you are in the `/mnt' directory and the `cdrom' and `zip' subdirectories are selected, the cdrom and the zip disk will be mounted (`MOUNT-THESE'). `ESC r a' Call `umount'(1) in order to remove (unmount) the first floppy (`/dev/fd0') (`UMOUNT-A'). `ESC r b' Call `umount'(1) in order to remove (unmount) the second floppy (`/dev/fd1') (`UMOUNT-B'). `ESC r c' Call `umount'(1) in order to remove (unmount) the cdrom (`/dev/cdrom') (`UMOUNT-CDROM'). findex UMOUNT-CDROM `ESC r f' Call `umount'(1) in order to remove (unmount) the first floppy (`/dev/fd0') (`UMOUNT-FLOPPY'). `ESC r z' Call `umount'(1) in order to remove (unmount) the zip drive (`/dev/zip') (`UMOUNT-ZIP'). `ESC r j' Call `umount'(1) in order to remove (unmount) the jaz drive (`/dev/jaz') (`UMOUNT-JAZ'). `ESC r t' Call `umount'(1) in order to remove (unmount) the file systems mounted into the selected subdirectories. For example, if the current directory is `/mnt' and the `cdrom' and `zip' subdirectories are selected, the cdrom and the zip disk will be unmounted (`UMOUNT-THESE'). 3.1.19 Getting some useful system information --------------------------------------------- `^X T' Call `date'(1) in order to display the current time/date (`DATE'). `ESC S f' Call `finger'(1) in order to display information about local and remote users (`FINGER'). `ESC S m' Call `mount'(1) in order to display a list of the currently mounted file systems (`MOUNTED-FILE-SYSTEMS'). `ESC S q' Call `quota'(1) in order to display a user file system disk quota and quota (`QUOTA'). `ESC S s' Call `df'(1) in order to get the status of the currently mounted file systems (`DISK-FREE-SPACE'). `ESC S u' Call `users'(1) in order to get the name of the currently logged in users (`USERS'). `ESC S v' Call `$GNUIT_VMSTAT'(1) in order to get the current virtual memory status. This is very system dependent, `Linux' uses `free', other systems use `vmstat', so the $GNUIT_VMSTAT variable is used to deal with this (`VIRTUAL-MEMORY-STATUS'). $GNUIT_VMSTAT used to be called $GIT_VMSTAT. The old name is still accepted for backwards-compatibility. *Note Environment Variables::, for more information. `ESC S w' Call `who'(1) in order to find out who is on the system (`WHO'). 3.1.20 How to look at the environment variables ----------------------------------------------- `^X E' Call `env'(1) in order to display the current environment (`ENV'). `^X H' Call `xhost'(1) in order to add/remove hosts names to the list allowed to make connection to the X server (`XHOST'). 3.1.21 Viewing/killing processes -------------------------------- There are at least two kinds of `ps'(1) utilities. One that accepts (more or less) combinations of the 'a', 'u', and 'x' flags and another that accepts combinations of 'e', 'f' and 'l' flags. Since is quite difficult to test which one works fine on a given `UNIX' system, `gitfm' provides key bindings for both of them. Anyway, if your `ps'(1) fails to accept the predefined combinations, please take a look in its manual and then modify the `.gnuitrc.TERM' file as needed. Since the number of possible combinations of flags in the `ps' command line is quite big and *very* system dependent, there is no real reason to display them all here. We are only interested in giving you a starting point in your search through the `.gnuitrc.TERM' file. Note also that you can display a list of processes using `ps'(1) or browse through a list of them (killing as needed) using `gitps'. As a convention, we have used the same key sequence for a given set of `ps'(1) flags for both `ps'(1) and `gitps', the only difference being that `ps'(1) keys end in an uppercase letter. *Note gitps::, for more information. Under Linux it is possible to see a tree of processes using `pstree'(1). Here there are the default key bindings for the 'e', 'f' and 'l' `ps'(1) flags combinations: `ESC P b', `ESC P c', `ESC P e' Call `gitps' or `ps'(1) in order to browse through or display a list of currently running processes (`GITPS', `PS'). ... and the default key bindings for the 'a', 'u' and 'x' `ps'(1) flags combinations: `ESC P a', `ESC P l', `ESC P u' `ESC P x', `ESC P y' Call `gitps' or `ps'(1) in order to browse through or display a list of currently running processes (`GITPS', `PS'). `ESC P T' Call `pstree'(1) in order to display the tree of currently running processes (`PSTREE'). `^X k' Call `kill'(1) in order to kill a user specified process with a given signal (`KILL'). 3.1.22 Synchronizing the file systems ------------------------------------- `^X S' Call `sync'(1) in order to synchronize all the file systems (`SYNC'). 3.1.23 Reading the documentation -------------------------------- `^X q' Read a manual page. The user is prompted for its name (`MAN'). `F1', `ESC 1', `^X i' Read an info documentation. The user is prompted for the documentation name (`INFO'). `^X h' Read the html documentation using the viewer specified in GNUIT_BROWSER, or with lynx if GNUIT_BROWSER is not set (`HTML'). $GNUIT_BROWSER used to be called $GIT_BROWSER. The old name is still accepted for backwards-compatibility. `^X ^A' Show the key-bindings for commands matching a specified string (`apropos'). 3.1.24 Exiting GNU Interactive Tools ------------------------------------ `F10', `ESC 0', `^X ^C', `^X c' Exit GNU Interactive Tools (`exit'). 3.2 The GNUIT process viewer/killer =================================== `gitps' is an interactive process viewer/killer. It calls internally the `ps'(1) utility. This is a brief description of the command line arguments. `-h' print this help message `-v' print the version number `-i' print the installation directory `-c' use ANSI colors `-b' don't use ANSI colors `-l' don't use the last screen character `-p' pass the remaining arguments to ps(1) Running `gitps' is self explanatory. Use the `arrows', `PageUp', `PageDown', `Home', `End', `^N', `^P', `^V', `ESC v', `Space' and `Backspace' to move in the list, `^L' to refresh it, `Enter' to change the default signal and `F10', `q' or `^X ^C' to leave. You can change these keys, just read the GITPS-Setup, GITPS-Color, GITPS-Monochrome and GITPS-Keys sections in the configuration files `gnuitrc.TERM'. The selected signal can also be changed by pressing its first letter (in uppercase), e.g. for `SIGTERM' press `T', or by pressing the key corresponding to the signal number. For signals > 10, prefix with `^X', and for signals greater than 20, prefix with `^C'. For instance, to select signal 15 (`SIGTERM'), press `^X5'. Keys for signal numbers are hard-coded to the versions in i386 Linux, however most correspond to POSIX. Compare signal(7) or signal(5) with `http://linux.die.net/man/7/signal'. 3.3 The GNUIT ASCII/HEX file viewer =================================== `gitview' is an ASCII/HEX file viewer. Use the `arrows', `PageUp', `PageDown', `Home', `End', `^N', `^P', `^V', `ESC v', `Space' and `Backspace' to move in the file, `^L' to refresh the screen and `F10', `q' or `^X ^C' to leave. You can change these keys, just read the GITVIEW-Setup, GITVIEW-Color, GITVIEW-Monochrome and GITVIEW-Keys sections in the configuration files `gnuitrc.TERM'. Here is a brief description of the command line arguments: `-h' print this help message `-v' print the version number `-i' print the installation directory `-c' use ANSI colors `-b' don't use ANSI colors `-l' don't use the last screen character 3.4 The GNUIT key sequences display utility =========================================== `gitkeys' is a program that displays the key sequence sent by the pressed key. This is the key sequence received by `GIT' tools, so this program is useful when setting up the `.gnuitrc.TERM' configuration files. 3.5 The GNUIT wipe file utility =============================== `gitwipe' is an utility for wiping files. It overwrites the file contents with a random sequence of numbers and then calls `sync'(). Note that `gitwipe' does *not* remove the wiped file since (under `Linux' at least) the `sync'() system call might return before actually writing the new file contents to disk. Removing the file might be dangerous because some file systems can detect that the blocks in the removed wiped file are no longer used and never write them back to disk in order to improve performance. It is up to you to remove the file(s) at a later moment. 3.6 The GNUIT mount utility =========================== `gitmount' is a script that allows you to mount a list of block devices (specified in the command line), without specifying the file system type. With a command like `gitmount fd0 cdrom' the first floppy will be mounted in `/mnt/fd0' and the cdrom will be mounted in `/mnt/cdrom'. Make sure your `/etc/fstab' settings are correct. You don't need to know the file system type anymore. If you want to use `gitmount' with the block device `/dev/xxx' then the directory `/mnt/xxx' is created if it doesn't exist. `gitmount' will attempt to create the necessary directories, but root permissions might be required. 3.7 The GNUIT per file type action script ========================================= `gitaction' is a script that executes a different action for each file type specified. It is called by the `gitfm' program when pressing `F2', `ESC 2' or `^Xa'. The first parameter is the current directory name and the second one is the file name to be matched against the default patterns. The matching is done using the shell 'case' statement. If you press `F2', `ESC 2' or `^Xa' on a `*.html' file, `gitfm' will invoke a browser to view it, if you press `F2', `ESC 2' or `^Xa' on a `*.tar.gz' file, `gitfm' will list the tar archive contents, if you press the same keys on a `*.gz' file, `gitfm' will display its uncompressed contents on the screen, etc ... If you press `F2', `ESC 2' or `^Xa' on a `*.gif' file or `*.jpg' file and you have the `xzgv' utility installed, you will be able to see it. If you want to change the gif/jpeg viewer, all you need to do is to change its name in the `gitaction' script. There are many more file types and viewers that gitaction knows about. In addition, if you are running under GNOME, gnome-open is used, and on MacOS, open(1) is used. see(1) and metamail(1) are also used as fallbacks. If all else fails, the file is displayed using $GNUIT_PAGER. If you want to find out what the default action for each file type is (or if you want to modify it), just read/modify the `gitaction' script. Also, you can add a `.gitaction' shell script in your home directory and/or in any other directory. Before trying to match a file name, `gitaction' will attempt to execute `./.gitaction'. If that one fails to match the file name against its patterns, it backs up to `$HOME/.gitaction'. When this one fails too the patterns in `gitaction' are tried. For an example of how to write .gitaction scripts take a look at the `.gitaction' shell script provided as part of the distribution and installed in the `$(prefix)/bin' directory. Debian users will find it in `/usr/share/doc/gnuit/examples/'. 3.8 Unified archive unpacking ============================= `gitunpack' is a shell script that accepts a directory and a set of archives as its command line parameters, and then attempts to unpack those archives in the given directory, selecting the utility used to unpack the archives based on the archive extensions. 3.9 The GIT recursive grep script ================================= `gitrgrep' is a very small script that calls `grep' recursively. It accepts `grep' like options / parameters, the only difference being that file specifications should be quoted: `gitrgrep' main '*.c' or `gitrgrep' errno '*.c *.h' `gitregrep' and `gitrfgrep' are recursive versions of the egrep and fgrep programs. 4 Customizing GNU Interactive Tools *********************************** 4.1 Environment Variables ========================= The configuration files use shell environment variables to call the shell, editor, mail reader, html viewer, compress and virtual memory status utility. That means that if you set GNUIT_SHELL, GNUIT_EDITOR, GNUIT_RMAIL, GNUIT_BROWSER, or GNUIT_VMSTAT to some value, that value will be used instead of the default one. The defaults are: GNUIT_SHELL='/bin/sh' GNUIT_EDITOR='vi' GNUIT_RMAIL='emacs -f rmail' GNUIT_PAGER='more GNUIT_VMSTAT='free' GNUIT_BROWSER='lynx' if the `configure' script is passed `--enable-debian', some of the defaults are changed as follows: GNUIT_EDITOR='sensible-editor' GNUIT_PAGER='sensible-pager' GNUIT_BROWSER='sensible-browser' If SHELL is defined, GNUIT_SHELL will be set to that value. If PAGER is defined, GNUIT_PAGER will be set to that value. If EDITOR is defined, GNUIT_EDITOR will be set to that value. If you want to change the default settings, put something like this into your `.profile': export GNUIT_SHELL='/usr/local/bin/bash' export GNUIT_EDITOR='emacs' export GNUIT_RMAIL='elm' export GNUIT_PAGER='less' export GNUIT_VMSTAT='vmstat' export GNUIT_BROWSER='netscape' These variables used to be prefixed with GIT_ (e.g. GIT_PAGER). The old names are still accepted for backwards compatibility. 4.2 Configuration Files ======================= There is one configuration file per terminal type in `GNUIT'. The configuration file(s) reside in the user's home directory or (the default versions) in the directory `/usr/share/gnuit/'). Files in the user's home directory start with a leading "." Their generic name is `gnuitrc.TERM'. `GNUIT' allows each terminal type to have its own configuration file (TERM is the value of the TERM environment variable (e.g `vt102'); for the `Linux' console the configuration file is `gnuitrc.console'). Since most of the key bindings are common to all the terminal types, a configuration file called `gnuitrc.common' is parsed before parsing the normal `.gnuitrc.TERM' configuration file, the later one defining only those keys that are terminal specific. However, if a key binding is redefined in the `gnuitrc.TERM' file, that binding will be used. If the `GNUIT' package have been compiled without passing the `--enable-terminfo' option to the `configure' script and your system has a huge `termcap' database (`/etc/termcap'), you can copy the termcap definition(s) of your terminal(s) in a file called, lets say `.termcap' and put it in your home directory. After that, set your TERMCAP environment variable to point to it. You should add something like this to your `.profile': TERMCAP=`/home/mike/.termcap' The interactive programs in the `GNUIT' package can run without such a file, but on systems with huge `termcap' databases, copying the definitions of the most used terminals in a local `.termcap' file will lead to a faster start. The `.gnuitrc.TERM' is first searched for in the home directory then, if not found, in the directory `/usr/share/gnuit/'). (without the leading "."). The configuration file is structured in sections, each section containing variables in the following format: `variable-name' = `first-field';`second-field'; ... After the `variable-name' at least one space or tab is required. All characters after a `#' are ignored and if you comment a section name, the whole section is ignored. Section names are enclosed in rectangular brackets (`[' and `]'). Note that this manual don't include them while refering to section names. The `GNUIT' package contains three major programs: `gitfm', `gitps' and `gitview'. Each one has its own sections in the configuration files. There is also a global setup section called `Setup' that is used by all these programs. Note that now `git' has been renamed to `gitfm', the corresponding sections have been renamed to `GITFM', however for backwards compatibility, the old name (`GIT') is still checked if the `GITFM' section is not found. 4.2.1 Writing key sequences --------------------------- `GNUIT' contains three interactive programs. Their names are: `gitfm' (this is the file system browser), `gitps' (this is the process viewer/killer and `gitview' (this is the ASCII/HEX file viewer). Each one of these programs has its own set of key bindings. The convention used in describing key bindings are very simple. Here there are some examples that will help you to understand them. The corresponding `Emacs' conventions will help you even more. `^A' means keeping the Ctrl key down and pressing the `a' key (`C-a'). The `ESC' character is represented as `^[' so that you can use the meta character (`M-' ) where available (or the `ESC' key): `^[a' corresponds to `M-a' (pressing the `ESC' key and then `a'). The `^' character is represented as `^^'. The `backspace' character is represented as `^_'. The `Ctrl-SPACE' character (`C-SPC') is represented as `^$'. The space (`SPC') character is represented as `^@'. Note that the key bindings notation described here is only used in the configuration files. For the sake of readability this manual uses `ESC' for the `ESC' key, `SPC' for the `SPACE' key and `RET' for the `RETURN' (`ENTER') key. 4.2.2 The global setup section ------------------------------ In this section the variables have only one field. `AnsiColors' This variable should be set to `ON' if the terminal supports standard `ANSI' color sequences. Otherwise it should be `OFF'. If `AnsiColors' is `ON', `GITxxx-Color' sections will be used in the configuration files `gnuitrc.TERM'. Otherwise, `GNUIT' interactive programs will use the `GITxxx-Monochrome' sections. `UseLastScreenChar' This variable is used for terminals that can't write on the last character of the screen without scrolling the entire screen. If your terminal has no problem writing there (`Linux' console, vt100, vt102, xterm, ...) set it to `ON'. Otherwise (hpterm), it should be `OFF'. `StartupScrollStep' This variable specifies the scroll step initial value for both panels. 4.2.3 gitfm Sections -------------------- 4.2.3.1 gitfm Setup ................... In this section the variables have only one field. `StartupFileDisplayMode' This variable specifies the file specific information displayed at startup. It can be any of `OwnerGroup', `DateTime', `Size', `AbbrevSize', `Mode' or `FullName'. Its value initially affects both panels but it can be changed separately afterward. `StartupFileSortMethod' This variable specifies the startup sort method. It can be any of `Name', `Extension', `Size', `Date', `Mode', `OwnerId', `GroupId', `OwnerName' or `GroupName'. Its value initially affects both panels but it can be changed separately afterward. `MaxUnscaledDigits' Maximum number of digits a number may be before being scaled (e.g. to `123M'). If you want number to always be scaled, either set this to `0', or set `StartupFileDisplayMode' to `AbbrevSize'. Note that scaling may happen anyway if the number is too large for the display field. `GroupDigits' If this variable is `ON', digits of file sizes will be grouped according to your locale, (e.g. `123,456,789'). `ConfirmOnExit' If this variable is `ON', the user is prompted for confirmation at exit. `HistoryFile' This variable specifies the history file name. The default value is `~/.githistory'. `InfoDisplay' If this variable is `OFF', auxiliary file informations are not displayed. This can be useful if you are using a very slow terminal. `LeadingDotMatch' If this variable is `OFF' when matching files for select-files-matching-pattern / unselect-files-matching-pattern then the leading '.' in the file name is matched only explicitly. `TypeSensitivity' If this variable is `OFF', colors are not used when displaying files. Normally, the information in the `GITFM-FTI' section is used to display files with different colors, depending on their types. Note that `TypeSensitivity' is automatically set to `OFF' when `AnsiColors' is `OFF'. *Note GITFM-FTI::, for mor information. `NormalModeHelp' `CommandLineModeHelp' These variables describe the status bar contents for each `gitfm' mode when no errors occurred. `gitfm' can display on the status bar a help string and/or some system information (system type, hostname, machine type and the current date) using escape characters: \s -> the system type \h -> the host name \m -> the machine type \d -> the current date *Note Modes::, for more information. 4.2.3.2 Using gitfm on color displays ..................................... In this sections the variables have only one field. These section allows you to customize the colors of `gitfm'. Reading the `gnuitrc.TERM' configuration file is self explanatory. 4.2.3.3 Using gitfm on monochrome displays .......................................... In this sections the variables have only one field. These section allows you to customize the appearance of `gitfm' on monochrome displays. Reading the `gnuitrc.TERM' configuration file is self explanatory. 4.2.3.4 Defining keys ..................... These section describes the actions `gitfm' takes when a specified key is pressed. A variable can have up to 6 fields separated by ';'. Each line in this section looks like: `key-sequence' = `command-name';`formatted-command';`new-dir'; `save-screen';`pause';`hide' Note that you can't continue the variable fields description on the next line. 4.2.3.5 The key-sequence field .............................. `key-sequence' is the key sequence associated with the given command. You can use any key sequence that doesn't start with an ascii character (0x20 to 0x7e). Symbolic key names (`F0', `F1', `F2', ... `F10', `UP', `DOWN', `RIGHT', `LEFT', `INS', `DEL', `HOME', `END', `PGUP' and `PGDOWN') can be used instead of the key sequence. If some keys don't have a `termcap'/ `terminfo' description (like the `F11'/`F12' keys on the `Linux' console) you can specify the key sequence in the usual way. 4.2.3.6 The command-name field .............................. `command-name' is a command generic name. Even if it is not always used, the `command-name' must be present (if a command is associated with a `key-sequence'). If it is not, no action will be taken when pressing `key-sequence'. There are two types of commands in `gitfm': built-in commands and user defined commands. If the `command-name' section contains a built-in command specification, the other fields are ignored. Note that by convention built-in command names contain only lower case letters while user defined command names contain only upper case letters. 4.2.3.7 The formatted-command field ................................... `formatted-command' is a shell command which can contain some scanf(3)-like format specifiers. They are used to get the current entry name, owner, group, mode, etc. Note that using uppercase `format specifiers' you will be able to access the other panel path, file and directory names, etc. These are the available `format specifiers': 4.2.3.8 The %s format specifier ............................... The format of %s is: %s{question,default_answer}. When `gitfm' encounters a %s in the `formatted-command' it asks the user the question `question' whose default answer is `default_answer' and replaces the `%s{ , }' with the user's answer. Both `question' and `default_answer' can contain any other `format specifiers' except %s. Note that there should be no spaces between %s and '{'. 4.2.3.9 The %f format specifier ............................... `gitfm' will replace %f with the current directory entry name only if it is a file (not a directory). 4.2.3.10 The %d format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will replace %d with the current directory entry name only if it is a directory (not a file). 4.2.3.11 The %l format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will replace %l with the current directory entry name only if it is a symbolic link with no target. 4.2.3.12 The %t format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will replace %t with the current directory entry name only if it is a named pipe. 4.2.3.13 The %z format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will replace %z with the current directory entry name only if it is a socket. 4.2.3.14 The %a format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will always replace %a with the current directory entry name. 4.2.3.15 The %m format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will always replace %m with the current file mode. 4.2.3.16 The %g format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will always replace %g with the current file group. 4.2.3.17 The %o format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will always replace %o with the current file owner. 4.2.3.18 The %p format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will always replace %p with the current panel path. 4.2.3.19 The %b format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will always replace %b with the current panel directory name. 4.2.3.20 The %i format specifier ................................ `gitfm' will always replace %i with all the current panel selected entry names. 4.2.3.21 The %? format specifier ................................ The format of %? is: %?{confirmation}. `gitfm' uses this format specifier only to ask for confirmation before expanding / executing the current command. The `confirmation' string is displayed and, if the user doesn't confirm, the command is aborted. Otherwise, %?{confirmation} expands to a null string and the command is expanded / executed normally. 4.2.3.22 The new-dir field .......................... If the `formatted-command' successfully exits (exit code = 0) or it has no body and this field is present then `new-dir' will become the current panel directory. The character '~' used at the beginning of the `new-dir' field is replaced by the user's home directory. 4.2.3.23 The save-screen field .............................. This field is a character (usually 'y' or 'n') that tells `gitfm' to save ('y') or not to save ('n') the terminal's screen after executing the `formatted-command'. Saving the screen is not necessary while editing or viewing a file because the information left after the editor or the viewer exits is not important. Saving the screen means that that screen will be restored before the execution of the next command. Currently this field is used only if you are working as a super user under `Linux' on a virtual console. Its default value is 'y'. 4.2.3.24 The pause field ........................ Users may wish to read the result of some commands before repainting the panels. If this field is present gitfm will wait for a key to be pressed before restoring the panels. Its default value is 'n'. 4.2.3.25 The hide field ....................... Some commands that don't displaying any useful information if successfully complete their execution: `mount', `chmod', `chown', `chgrp', `sync' ... and, if an error occurs, a line or two are sent to stderr. If this option is 'y', the stdout and stderr will be redirected to some files (`git.1.pid' and `git.2.pid', where pid is `gitfm''s pid) and only if the command's exit code is not 0, the `git.2.pid' file will be displayed, line by line, onto the status bar. This way the panels will not be deleted and then repainted and the command appears to be built-in. `git.1.pid' and `git.2.pid' are created in the temporary directory specified in the `TMPDIR' environment variable (or "/tmp" if `TMPDIR' is not defined). The default value of the `hide' field is 'n'. 4.2.4 Setting up colors for different file types ------------------------------------------------ This sections contains entries of the form: `pattern' = `foreground'; `background'; `brightness' where `pattern' is a file name matching pattern, `foreground', `background' and `brightness' are the color specification to be used when a file whose name match the given `pattern' is displayed in a panel. Colors can be turned off using the `TypeSensitivity' variable in the `GITFM-Setup' section. 4.2.5 gitps Sections -------------------- 4.2.5.1 gitps Setup ................... In this section the variables have only one field. `Help' This variable describe `gitps''s status bar contents. 4.2.5.2 Using gitps on color displays ..................................... In this sections the variables have only one field. These section allows you to customize the colors of `gitps'. Reading the `gnuitrc.TERM' configuration file is self explanatory. 4.2.5.3 Using gitps on monochrome displays .......................................... In this sections the variables have only one field. These section allows you to customize the appearance of `gitps' on monochrome displays. Reading the `gnuitrc.TERM' configuration file is self explanatory. 4.2.5.4 Defining keys ..................... 4.2.6 gitview Sections ---------------------- 4.2.6.1 gitview Setup ..................... In this section the variables have only one field. `Help' This variable describe `gitps''s status bar contents. 4.2.6.2 Using gitview on color displays ....................................... In this sections the variables have only one field. These section allows you to customize the colors of `gitview'. Reading the `gnuitrc.TERM' configuration file is self explanatory. 4.2.6.3 Using gitview on monochrome displays ............................................ In this sections the variables have only one field. These section allows you to customize the appearance of `gitview' on monochrome displays. Reading the `gnuitrc.TERM' configuration file is self explanatory. 4.2.6.4 Defining keys ..................... 5 GNU Interactive Tools limitations *********************************** Background commands (& terminated)can be specified in the configuration file but their result (stdout and stderr redirection), will be overwritten by the result of newer commands and, if an error occurs, it will not be seen. When `gitfm' is compiled for `Linux', the default built-in color descriptions are for color monitors, so you can't (decently) run `gitfm' on a b/w monitor without the `gnuitrc.TERM' file correctly configured. `gnuitrc.TERM' should be configured with `AnsiColors' = OFF. However, if your system knows about the linux-m terminal type, using that may be a better solution. Job support is implemented only in `gitfm'. Due to the fact that the ';' character is used as a field separator in the configuration files, you can't write something like that in the `gnuitrc.TERM' files: ^AAA = SHOW-USERS-AND-GROUPS; more /etc/passwd; more /etc/group because 'more /etc/group' will be considered as a directory to switch to. You must write a small script instead: #! /bin/sh more /etc/passwd more /etc/group Supposing the script name is `show_ug', the `gnuitrc.TERM' line will look like this: ^AAA = SHOW-USERS-AND-GROUPS; show_ug There is no support for appearance modes on magic-cookie terminals. 6 GNU Interactive Tools bugs **************************** Any questions, comments, or bug reports, should be emailed to `gnuit-dev@gnu.org'. Please include the version number. Appendix A Copying This Manual ****************************** Version 1.3, 3 November 2008 Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc. `http://fsf.org/' Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. 0. PREAMBLE The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other functional and useful document "free" in the sense of freedom: to assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it, with or without modifying it, either commercially or noncommercially. Secondarily, this License preserves for the author and publisher a way to get credit for their work, while not being considered responsible for modifications made by others. This License is a kind of "copyleft", which means that derivative works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense. It complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft license designed for free software. We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for free software, because free software needs free documentation: a free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms that the software does. But this License is not limited to software manuals; it can be used for any textual work, regardless of subject matter or whether it is published as a printed book. We recommend this License principally for works whose purpose is instruction or reference. 1. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium, that contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can be distributed under the terms of this License. Such a notice grants a world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration, to use that work under the conditions stated herein. The "Document", below, refers to any such manual or work. Any member of the public is a licensee, and is addressed as "you". 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If the Document specifies that a particular numbered version of this License "or any later version" applies to it, you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that specified version or of any later version that has been published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the Document does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published (not as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the Document specifies that a proxy can decide which future versions of this License can be used, that proxy's public statement of acceptance of a version permanently authorizes you to choose that version for the Document. 11. RELICENSING "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site" (or "MMC Site") means any World Wide Web server that publishes copyrightable works and also provides prominent facilities for anybody to edit those works. A public wiki that anybody can edit is an example of such a server. A "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration" (or "MMC") contained in the site means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC site. "CC-BY-SA" means the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license published by Creative Commons Corporation, a not-for-profit corporation with a principal place of business in San Francisco, California, as well as future copyleft versions of that license published by that same organization. "Incorporate" means to publish or republish a Document, in whole or in part, as part of another Document. An MMC is "eligible for relicensing" if it is licensed under this License, and if all works that were first published under this License somewhere other than this MMC, and subsequently incorporated in whole or in part into the MMC, (1) had no cover texts or invariant sections, and (2) were thus incorporated prior to November 1, 2008. The operator of an MMC Site may republish an MMC contained in the site under CC-BY-SA on the same site at any time before August 1, 2009, provided the MMC is eligible for relicensing. ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents ==================================================== To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of the License in the document and put the following copyright and license notices just after the title page: Copyright (C) YEAR YOUR NAME. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover Texts, replace the "with...Texts." line with this: with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with the Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts being LIST. If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the situation. If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of free software license, such as the GNU General Public License, to permit their use in free software. Key Index ********* ^[]: See 3.1.3. (line 244) ^]: See 3.1.3. (line 244) ^A: See 3.1.8.2. (line 445) ^B, LEFT: See 3.1.8.2. (line 433) ^C -: See 3.1.9.20. (line 932) ^C .: See 3.1.9.12. (line 794) ^C /: See 3.1.9.7. (line 645) ^C 2 a: See 3.1.12. (line 1354) ^C 2 b: See 3.1.12. (line 1362) ^C 2 m: See 3.1.12. (line 1371) ^C =: See 3.1.9.15. (line 854) ^C ^D A: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1001) ^C ^D c: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1014) ^C ^D C: See 3.1.9.21. (line 988) ^C ^D f: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1020) ^C ^D h: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1010) ^C ^D I: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1024) ^C ^D i: See 3.1.9.21. (line 972) ^C ^D L: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1036) ^C ^D l: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1028) ^C ^D p: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1044) ^C ^D P: See 3.1.9.21. (line 996) ^C ^D r: See 3.1.9.21. (line 992) ^C ^D R A: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1006) ^C ^D R i: See 3.1.9.21. (line 976) ^C ^D R u: See 3.1.9.21. (line 984) ^C ^D S: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1040) ^C ^D s: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1032) ^C ^D u: See 3.1.9.21. (line 980) ^C a: See 3.1.9.20. (line 915) ^C B: See 3.1.9.15. (line 863) ^C b -: See 3.1.9.20. (line 937) ^C b .: See 3.1.9.12. (line 798) ^C b /: See 3.1.9.7. (line 650) ^C b 2 a: See 3.1.12. (line 1358) ^C b 2 b: See 3.1.12. (line 1366) ^C b 2 m: See 3.1.12. (line 1375) ^C b a: See 3.1.9.20. (line 919) ^C b C: See 3.1.9.1. (line 572) ^C b C (for directories): See 3.1.10.2. (line 1198) ^C b d: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1261) ^C b D: See 3.1.9.4. (line 600) ^C b D (for directories): See 3.1.10.3. (line 1209) ^C b E: See 3.1.9.13. (line 823) ^C b e: See 3.1.9.13. (line 816) ^C b f Z: See 3.1.9.12. (line 790) ^C b G: See 3.1.9.9. (line 716) ^C b H: See 3.1.9.5. (line 611) ^C b i: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1069) ^C b I: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1061) ^C b K: See 3.1.9.13. (line 837) ^C b k: See 3.1.9.13. (line 830) ^C b M: See 3.1.9.9. (line 685) ^C b m D: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1120) ^C b m F: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1130) ^C b m G: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1113) ^C b m K: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1146) ^C b m M: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1137) ^C b m P: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1104) ^C b m R: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1154) ^C b N: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1077) ^C b o: See 3.1.9.12. (line 806) ^C b O: See 3.1.9.9. (line 700) ^C b R: See 3.1.9.6. (line 630) ^C b R (for directories): See 3.1.10.5. (line 1232) ^C b r G: See 3.1.9.9. (line 725) ^C b r M: See 3.1.9.9. (line 693) ^C b r O: See 3.1.9.9. (line 709) ^C b S: See 3.1.9.5. (line 619) ^C b T: See 3.1.9.2. (line 583) ^C b T (for directories): See 3.1.10.4. (line 1221) ^C b V: See 3.1.9.20. (line 957) ^C b X: See 3.1.9.20. (line 947) ^C b x: See 3.1.9.20. (line 928) ^C b Z: See 3.1.9.12. (line 781) ^C b z: See 3.1.9.12. (line 773) ^C C (for directories): See 3.1.10.2. (line 1194) ^C c q: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1240) ^C c t: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1245) ^C d: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1255) ^C D (for directories): See 3.1.10.3. (line 1205) ^C E: See 3.1.9.13. (line 819) ^C e: See 3.1.9.13. (line 812) ^C ESC =: See 3.1.9.15. (line 859) ^C f d: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1250) ^C f Z: See 3.1.9.12. (line 785) ^C G: See 3.1.9.9. (line 712) ^C H: See 3.1.9.5. (line 607) ^C i: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1065) ^C I: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1057) ^C J: See 3.1.9.17. (line 882) ^C j: See 3.1.9.17. (line 877) ^C K: See 3.1.9.13. (line 833) ^C k: See 3.1.9.13. (line 826) ^C M: See 3.1.9.9. (line 681) ^C m D: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1116) ^C m d, ^C m ^D: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1096) ^C m F: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1126) ^C m G: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1108) ^C m K: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1141) ^C m L: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1123) ^C m M: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1133) ^C m P: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1100) ^C m R: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1150) ^C m T: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1158) ^C N: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1073) ^C n d: See 3.1.9.6. (line 634) ^C n u: See 3.1.9.6. (line 638) ^C o: See 3.1.9.12. (line 802) ^C O: See 3.1.9.9. (line 696) ^C P: See 3.1.9.14. (line 846) ^C p: See 3.1.9.14. (line 843) ^C q: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1082) ^C R: See 3.1.9.6. (line 626) ^C R (for directories): See 3.1.10.5. (line 1228) ^C r G: See 3.1.9.9. (line 720) ^C r M: See 3.1.9.9. (line 689) ^C r O: See 3.1.9.9. (line 704) ^C S: See 3.1.9.5. (line 615) ^C s: See 3.1.6. (line 352) ^C t: See 3.1.9.23. (line 1089) ^C T (for directories): See 3.1.10.4. (line 1217) ^C U: See 3.1.10.7. (line 1268) ^C u: See 3.1.6. (line 359) ^C V: See 3.1.9.20. (line 952) ^C W: See 3.1.9.18. (line 889) ^C X: See 3.1.9.20. (line 942) ^C x: See 3.1.9.20. (line 923) ^C Z: See 3.1.9.12. (line 777) ^C z: See 3.1.9.12. (line 769) ^C ~: See 3.1.9.8. (line 675) ^E: See 3.1.8.2. (line 448) ^F, RIGHT: See 3.1.8.2. (line 436) ^H, BKSPC: See 3.1.8.3. (line 457) ^K: See 3.1.8.3. (line 474) ^L: See 3.1.16. (line 1430) ^O, ESC o: See 3.1.3. (line 205) ^R, ^Xr: See 3.1.7. (line 395) ^S, ^Xs: See 3.1.7. (line 388) ^SPC: See 3.1.8.6. (line 529) ^U: See 3.1.8.3. (line 470) ^W: See 3.1.8.3. (line 487) ^X 0: See 3.1.3. (line 194) ^X 1: See 3.1.3. (line 199) ^X 2: See 3.1.3. (line 202) ^X 4 a: See 3.1.9.10. (line 744) ^X ^A: See 3.1.23. (line 1648) ^X ^F: See 3.1.9.10. (line 740) ^X ^I: See 3.1.8.1. (line 427) ^X ^L: See 3.1.17. (line 1437) ^X ^P: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1306) ^X ^R: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1311) ^X ^X: See 3.1.8.6. (line 533) ^X b m: See 3.1.11. (line 1346) ^X d, ^X ^D: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1276) ^X E: See 3.1.20. (line 1567) ^X e: See 3.1.9.10. (line 736) ^X G: See 3.1.14. (line 1401) ^X g: See 3.1.14. (line 1397) ^X h: See 3.1.23. (line 1644) ^X H: See 3.1.20. (line 1571) ^X I: See 3.1.9.16. (line 870) ^X k: See 3.1.21. (line 1619) ^X N: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1302) ^X p: See 3.1.15. (line 1412) ^X P: See 3.1.5. (line 338) ^X q: See 3.1.23. (line 1632) ^X S: See 3.1.22. (line 1626) ^X T: See 3.1.19. (line 1526) ^X v: See 3.1.9.11. (line 762) ^X W: See 3.1.9.19. (line 908) ^X w: See 3.1.9.19. (line 905) ^X z: See 3.1.13. (line 1389) ^Y: See 3.1.8.7. (line 540) DEL, ^D: See 3.1.8.3. (line 454) DOWN, ^N: See 3.1.5. (line 305) END, ESC >: See 3.1.5. (line 312) ESC %: See 3.1.9.19. (line 897) ESC &: See 3.1.9.19. (line 901) ESC +: See 3.1.6. (line 364) ESC -: See 3.1.6. (line 369) ESC .: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1323) ESC /: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1320) ESC 5 (for directories): See 3.1.10.2. (line 1194) ESC 6 (for directories): See 3.1.10.4. (line 1217) ESC 8 (for directories): See 3.1.10.3. (line 1205) ESC \: See 3.1.8.3. (line 482) ESC a c: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1281) ESC a o: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1285) ESC b: See 3.1.8.2. (line 439) ESC BKSPC: See 3.1.8.3. (line 460) ESC c: See 3.1.8.4. (line 506) ESC d: See 3.1.8.3. (line 463) ESC e a: See 3.1.3. (line 239) ESC e d: See 3.1.3. (line 221) ESC e f: See 3.1.3. (line 233) ESC e m: See 3.1.3. (line 230) ESC e o: See 3.1.3. (line 218) ESC e S: See 3.1.3. (line 227) ESC e s: See 3.1.3. (line 224) ESC ESC 1: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1332) ESC ESC 2: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1335) ESC ESC RET: See 3.1.8.1. (line 423) ESC f: See 3.1.8.2. (line 442) ESC g: See 3.1.5. (line 321) ESC h: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1326) ESC i: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1329) ESC j: See 3.1.5. (line 324) ESC k: See 3.1.8.3. (line 466) ESC l: See 3.1.8.4. (line 498) ESC m a: See 3.1.18. (line 1461) ESC m b: See 3.1.18. (line 1465) ESC m c: See 3.1.18. (line 1469) ESC m f: See 3.1.18. (line 1473) ESC m j: See 3.1.18. (line 1481) ESC m t: See 3.1.18. (line 1487) ESC m z: See 3.1.18. (line 1477) ESC n: See 3.1.8.5. (line 523) ESC p: See 3.1.8.5. (line 519) ESC P a, ESC P l, ESC P u: See 3.1.21. (line 1611) ESC P b, ESC P c, ESC P e: See 3.1.21. (line 1604) ESC P T: See 3.1.21. (line 1615) ESC P x, ESC P y: See 3.1.21. (line 1611) ESC r a: See 3.1.18. (line 1491) ESC r b: See 3.1.18. (line 1495) ESC r c: See 3.1.18. (line 1499) ESC r f: See 3.1.18. (line 1504) ESC r j: See 3.1.18. (line 1512) ESC r t: See 3.1.18. (line 1519) ESC r z: See 3.1.18. (line 1508) ESC RET: See 3.1.8.1. (line 419) ESC s d: See 3.1.4. (line 266) ESC s e: See 3.1.4. (line 258) ESC S f: See 3.1.19. (line 1530) ESC s g i: See 3.1.4. (line 278) ESC s g n: See 3.1.4. (line 286) ESC S m: See 3.1.19. (line 1534) ESC s m: See 3.1.4. (line 270) ESC s n: See 3.1.4. (line 254) ESC s o i: See 3.1.4. (line 274) ESC s o n: See 3.1.4. (line 282) ESC S q: See 3.1.19. (line 1538) ESC S s: See 3.1.19. (line 1542) ESC s s: See 3.1.4. (line 262) ESC S u: See 3.1.19. (line 1546) ESC s u: See 3.1.4. (line 291) ESC S v: See 3.1.19. (line 1555) ESC S w: See 3.1.19. (line 1560) ESC SPC: See 3.1.8.3. (line 478) ESC u: See 3.1.8.4. (line 502) ESC w: See 3.1.8.3. (line 491) ESC x r m: See 3.1.12. (line 1379) F1, ESC 1, ^X i: See 3.1.23. (line 1636) F10, ESC 0, ^X ^C, ^X c: See 3.1.24. (line 1654) F2, ESC 2, ^X a: See 3.1.9.25. (line 1176) F3, ESC 3: See 3.1.9.11. (line 758) F4, ESC 4: See 3.1.9.10. (line 732) F5 (for directories): See 3.1.10.2. (line 1194) F5, ESC 5, ^C C: See 3.1.9.1. (line 568) F6 (for directories): See 3.1.10.4. (line 1217) F6, ESC 6, ^C T: See 3.1.9.2. (line 579) F7, ESC 7, ^X M: See 3.1.10.1. (line 1186) F8 (for directories): See 3.1.10.3. (line 1205) F8, ESC 8, ^C D: See 3.1.9.4. (line 596) F9, ESC 9, ^X m: See 3.1.11. (line 1342) HOME, ESC <: See 3.1.5. (line 309) INS, ^T, ^X \, ^\: See 3.1.6. (line 345) PGDOWN, ^V: See 3.1.5. (line 318) PGUP, ESC v: See 3.1.5. (line 315) TAB, ^I, ^X o: See 3.1.5. (line 334) UP, ^P: See 3.1.5. (line 302) Command Index ************* adapt-current-directory: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1281) Adapt-other-directory: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1285) apropos: See 3.1.23. (line 1648) ASCII-MAIL: See 3.1.12. (line 1354) B-ASCII-MAIL: See 3.1.12. (line 1358) B-BINARY-MAIL: See 3.1.12. (line 1366) B-BZIP2-COMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 798) B-BZIP2-UNCOMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 806) B-CHGRP: See 3.1.9.9. (line 716) B-CHMOD: See 3.1.9.9. (line 685) B-CHOWN: See 3.1.9.9. (line 700) B-COMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 773) B-COPY: See 3.1.9.1. (line 572) B-COPY (for directories): See 3.1.10.2. (line 1198) B-DELETE: See 3.1.9.4. (line 600) B-DELETE (for directories): See 3.1.10.3. (line 1209) B-DIRR-DIFF: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1261) B-GENERIC-UNPACK: See 3.1.9.20. (line 947) B-GENERIC-UNPACK-INTO: See 3.1.9.20. (line 957) B-LINK: See 3.1.9.5. (line 611) B-MAKE: See 3.1.11. (line 1346) B-MIME-MAIL: See 3.1.12. (line 1375) B-MIME-PACK: See 3.1.9.13. (line 830) B-MIME-UNPACK: See 3.1.9.13. (line 837) B-MOVE: See 3.1.9.2. (line 583) B-MOVE (for directories): See 3.1.10.4. (line 1221) B-MTOOLS-DELETE: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1120) B-MTOOLS-FORMAT: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1130) B-MTOOLS-GET: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1113) B-MTOOLS-MKDIR: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1137) B-MTOOLS-PUT: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1104) B-MTOOLS-RENAME: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1154) B-MTOOLS-RMDIR: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1146) B-R-CHGRP: See 3.1.9.9. (line 725) B-R-CHMOD: See 3.1.9.9. (line 693) B-R-CHOWN: See 3.1.9.9. (line 709) B-RENAME: See 3.1.9.6. (line 630) B-RENAME (for directories): See 3.1.10.5. (line 1232) B-RPM-INSTALL: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1061) B-RPM-UNINSTALL: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1069) B-RPM-UPGRADE: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1077) B-SPLIT: See 3.1.9.7. (line 650) B-SYMLINK: See 3.1.9.5. (line 619) B-TAR: See 3.1.9.20. (line 919) B-TAR-BZIP2: See 3.1.9.20. (line 937) B-TAR-COMPRESS: See 3.1.9.20. (line 928) B-UNCOMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 781) B-UUDECODE: See 3.1.9.13. (line 823) B-UUENCODE: See 3.1.9.13. (line 816) backward-char: See 3.1.8.2. (line 433) backward-delete-char: See 3.1.8.3. (line 457) backward-kill-word: See 3.1.8.3. (line 460) backward-word: See 3.1.8.2. (line 439) beginning-of-line: See 3.1.8.2. (line 445) beginning-of-panel: See 3.1.5. (line 309) BF-UNCOMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 790) bin-packing: See 3.1.9.8. (line 675) BINARY-MAIL: See 3.1.12. (line 1362) BZIP2-COMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 794) BZIP2-UNCOMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 802) capitalize-word: See 3.1.8.4. (line 506) change-directory: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1276) CHANGE-LOG: See 3.1.9.10. (line 744) CHGRP: See 3.1.9.9. (line 712) CHMOD: See 3.1.9.9. (line 681) CHOWN: See 3.1.9.9. (line 696) compare: See 3.1.9.15. (line 863) COMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 769) copy: See 3.1.9.1. (line 568) copy (for directories): See 3.1.10.2. (line 1194) DATE: See 3.1.19. (line 1526) DECRYPT: See 3.1.9.14. (line 846) delete: See 3.1.9.4. (line 596) delete (for directories): See 3.1.10.3. (line 1205) delete-char: See 3.1.8.3. (line 454) delete-horizontal-space: See 3.1.8.3. (line 482) DIFF: See 3.1.9.15. (line 854) DIRECTORY-USAGE: See 3.1.10.7. (line 1268) DIRR-DIFF: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1255) DISK-FREE-SPACE: See 3.1.19. (line 1542) downcase-word: See 3.1.8.4. (line 498) DPKG-CONFIGURE: See 3.1.9.21. (line 988) DPKG-CONTENTS: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1014) DPKG-FIELD: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1020) DPKG-HELP: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1010) DPKG-INFO: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1024) DPKG-INSTALL: See 3.1.9.21. (line 972) DPKG-LISTFILES: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1036) DPKG-LISTPKGS: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1028) DPKG-PRINTAVAIL: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1044) DPKG-PURGE: See 3.1.9.21. (line 996) DPKG-RECORDAVAIL: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1001) DPKG-REMOVE: See 3.1.9.21. (line 992) DPKG-SEARCH: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1040) DPKG-STATUS: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1032) DPKG-UNPACK: See 3.1.9.21. (line 980) EDIT: See 3.1.9.10. (line 732) ENCRYPT: See 3.1.9.14. (line 843) end-of-line: See 3.1.8.2. (line 448) end-of-panel: See 3.1.5. (line 312) enlarge-other-panel: See 3.1.3. (line 194) enlarge-panel: See 3.1.3. (line 199) entry-to-input-line: See 3.1.8.1. (line 419) ENV: See 3.1.20. (line 1567) exchange-point-and-mark: See 3.1.8.6. (line 533) exit: See 3.1.24. (line 1654) F-UNCOMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 785) FAST-DIFF: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1250) FILE-ACTION: See 3.1.9.25. (line 1176) FILE-CREATE: See 3.1.9.10. (line 740) FILE-TYPE: See 3.1.9.23. (line 1089) FIND: See 3.1.9.19. (line 897) FINGER: See 3.1.19. (line 1530) FIRST-FLOPPY-DIR: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1332) forward-char: See 3.1.8.2. (line 436) forward-word: See 3.1.8.2. (line 442) GENERIC-UNPACK: See 3.1.9.20. (line 942) GENERIC-UNPACK-INTO: See 3.1.9.20. (line 952) GITPS, PS: See 3.1.21. (line 1604) GREP: See 3.1.14. (line 1397) HOME-DIR: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1326) horizontal-scroll-left: See 3.1.5. (line 321) horizontal-scroll-right: See 3.1.5. (line 324) HTML: See 3.1.23. (line 1644) INCLUDE-DIR: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1329) INFO: See 3.1.23. (line 1636) isearch-backward: See 3.1.7. (line 395) isearch-forward: See 3.1.7. (line 388) ISPELL: See 3.1.9.16. (line 870) just-one-space: See 3.1.8.3. (line 478) KILL: See 3.1.21. (line 1619) kill-line: See 3.1.8.3. (line 466) kill-region: See 3.1.8.3. (line 487) kill-ring-save: See 3.1.8.3. (line 491) kill-to-beginning-of-line: See 3.1.8.3. (line 470) kill-to-end-of-line: See 3.1.8.3. (line 474) kill-word: See 3.1.8.3. (line 463) LAST-BACKUP-DIFF: See 3.1.9.15. (line 859) LINK: See 3.1.9.5. (line 607) LOCATE: See 3.1.9.19. (line 901) lock: See 3.1.15. (line 1412) MAKE: See 3.1.11. (line 1342) make-directory: See 3.1.10.1. (line 1186) MAN: See 3.1.23. (line 1632) MIME-MAIL: See 3.1.12. (line 1371) MOUNT-A: See 3.1.18. (line 1461) MOUNT-B: See 3.1.18. (line 1465) MOUNT-CDROM: See 3.1.18. (line 1469) MOUNT-FLOPPY: See 3.1.18. (line 1473) MOUNT-JAZ: See 3.1.18. (line 1481) MOUNT-THESE: See 3.1.18. (line 1487) MOUNT-ZIP: See 3.1.18. (line 1477) MOUNTED-FILE-SYSTEMS: See 3.1.19. (line 1534) move: See 3.1.9.2. (line 579) move (for directories): See 3.1.10.4. (line 1217) MPACK: See 3.1.9.13. (line 826) MTOOLS-CHDIR: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1096) MTOOLS-DELETE: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1116) MTOOLS-DIR: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1123) MTOOLS-FORMAT: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1126) MTOOLS-GET: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1108) MTOOLS-MKDIR: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1133) MTOOLS-PUT: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1100) MTOOLS-RENAME: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1150) MTOOLS-RMDIR: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1141) MTOOLS-TYPE: See 3.1.9.24. (line 1158) MULTIPLE-EDIT: See 3.1.9.10. (line 736) MULTIPLE-VIEW: See 3.1.9.11. (line 762) MUNPACK: See 3.1.9.13. (line 833) name-downcase: See 3.1.9.6. (line 634) name-upcase: See 3.1.9.6. (line 638) next-directory: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1302) next-history-element: See 3.1.8.5. (line 523) next-line: See 3.1.5. (line 305) other-panel: See 3.1.5. (line 334) other-path-to-input-line: See 3.1.8.1. (line 423) panel-enable-abbrevsize: See 3.1.3. (line 227) panel-enable-all: See 3.1.3. (line 239) panel-enable-date-time: See 3.1.3. (line 221) panel-enable-full-name: See 3.1.3. (line 233) panel-enable-mode: See 3.1.3. (line 230) panel-enable-next-mode: See 3.1.3. (line 244) panel-enable-owner-group: See 3.1.3. (line 218) panel-enable-size: See 3.1.3. (line 224) panel-sort-by-date: See 3.1.4. (line 266) panel-sort-by-extension: See 3.1.4. (line 258) panel-sort-by-group-id: See 3.1.4. (line 278) panel-sort-by-group-name: See 3.1.4. (line 286) panel-sort-by-mode: See 3.1.4. (line 270) panel-sort-by-name: See 3.1.4. (line 254) panel-sort-by-owner-id: See 3.1.4. (line 274) panel-sort-by-owner-name: See 3.1.4. (line 282) panel-sort-by-size: See 3.1.4. (line 262) panel-sort-next-method: See 3.1.4. (line 291) previous-directory: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1306) previous-history-element: See 3.1.8.5. (line 519) previous-line: See 3.1.5. (line 302) PRINT-JOB: See 3.1.9.17. (line 877) PRINT-JOB-LIST: See 3.1.9.17. (line 882) PSTREE: See 3.1.21. (line 1615) quick-compare-panels: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1240) QUOTA: See 3.1.19. (line 1538) R-CHGRP: See 3.1.9.9. (line 720) R-CHMOD: See 3.1.9.9. (line 689) R-CHOWN: See 3.1.9.9. (line 704) R-DPKG-INSTALL: See 3.1.9.21. (line 976) R-DPKG-RECORDAVAIL: See 3.1.9.21. (line 1006) R-DPKG-UNPACK: See 3.1.9.21. (line 984) READ-MAIL: See 3.1.12. (line 1379) RECURSIVE-GREP: See 3.1.14. (line 1401) refresh: See 3.1.16. (line 1430) RENAME: See 3.1.9.6. (line 626) RENAME (for directories): See 3.1.10.5. (line 1228) reset-directory-history: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1311) ROOT-DIR: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1320) RPM-INSTALL: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1057) RPM-QUERY: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1082) RPM-UNINSTALL: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1065) RPM-UPGRADE: See 3.1.9.22. (line 1073) scroll-down: See 3.1.5. (line 315) scroll-up: See 3.1.5. (line 318) SECOND-FLOPPY-DIR: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1335) select-entry: See 3.1.6. (line 345) select-extension: See 3.1.6. (line 364) select-files-matching-pattern: See 3.1.6. (line 352) selected-entries-to-input-line: See 3.1.8.1. (line 427) set-mark: See 3.1.8.6. (line 529) set-scroll-step: See 3.1.5. (line 331) SPLIT: See 3.1.9.7. (line 645) SUB-SHELL: See 3.1.13. (line 1389) switch-panels: See 3.1.5. (line 338) SYMLINK: See 3.1.9.5. (line 615) SYNC: See 3.1.22. (line 1626) TAR: See 3.1.9.20. (line 915) TAR-BZIP2: See 3.1.9.20. (line 932) TAR-COMPRESS: See 3.1.9.20. (line 923) thoroughly-compare-panels: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1245) tty-mode: See 3.1.3. (line 205) TTY-RESET: See 3.1.17. (line 1437) two-panel-mode: See 3.1.3. (line 202) UMOUNT-A: See 3.1.18. (line 1491) UMOUNT-B: See 3.1.18. (line 1495) UMOUNT-FLOPPY: See 3.1.18. (line 1504) UMOUNT-JAZ: See 3.1.18. (line 1512) UMOUNT-THESE: See 3.1.18. (line 1519) UMOUNT-ZIP: See 3.1.18. (line 1508) UNCOMPRESS: See 3.1.9.12. (line 777) unselect-extension: See 3.1.6. (line 369) unselect-files-matching-pattern: See 3.1.6. (line 359) up-one-dir: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1323) upcase-word: See 3.1.8.4. (line 502) USERS: See 3.1.19. (line 1546) UUDECODE: See 3.1.9.13. (line 819) UUENCODE: See 3.1.9.13. (line 812) VIEW: See 3.1.9.11. (line 758) VIRTUAL-MEMORY-STATUS: See 3.1.19. (line 1555) WHEREIS: See 3.1.9.19. (line 905) WHICH: See 3.1.9.19. (line 908) WHO: See 3.1.19. (line 1560) WIPE: See 3.1.9.18. (line 889) XHOST: See 3.1.20. (line 1571) yank: See 3.1.8.7. (line 540) Variable Index ************** AnsiColors: See 4.2.2. (line 1967) CommandLineModeHelp: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2056) ConfirmOnExit: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2019) EDITOR: See 4.1. (line 1864) GNUIT_BROWSER: See 4.1. (line 1864) GNUIT_EDITOR: See 4.1. (line 1864) GNUIT_RMAIL: See 4.1. (line 1864) GNUIT_SHELL: See 4.1. (line 1864) GNUIT_VMSTAT: See 4.1. (line 1864) GroupDigits: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2014) HistoryFile: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2024) InfoDisplay: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2029) LeadingDotMatch: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2035) MaxUnscaledDigits: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2009) NormalModeHelp: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2056) SHELL: See 4.1. (line 1864) StartupFileDisplayMode: See 4.2.3.1. (line 1994) StartupFileSortMethod: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2001) StartupScrollStep: See 4.2.2. (line 1979) TERM: See 4.2. (line 1875) TypeSensitivity: See 4.2.3.1. (line 2043) UseLastScreenChar: See 4.2.2. (line 1974) Concept Index ************* Adapt directory: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1281) Adding and removing hosts: See 3.1.20. (line 1571) Archive: See 3.1.9.20. (line 915) Background directory copy: See 3.1.10.2. (line 1198) Background directory delete: See 3.1.10.3. (line 1209) Background directory diff: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1261) Background directory move: See 3.1.10.4. (line 1221) Background directory rename: See 3.1.10.5. (line 1232) Background file copy: See 3.1.9.1. (line 572) Background file delete: See 3.1.9.4. (line 600) Background file move: See 3.1.9.2. (line 583) Background file rename: See 3.1.9.6. (line 630) Background file split: See 3.1.9.7. (line 650) Background make: See 3.1.11. (line 1346) Backward char: See 3.1.8.2. (line 433) Backward delete char: See 3.1.8.3. (line 457) Backward kill word: See 3.1.8.3. (line 460) Backward word: See 3.1.8.2. (line 439) bash: See 3.1.13. (line 1389) Beginning of line: See 3.1.8.2. (line 445) Beginning of panel: See 3.1.5. (line 309) Binary comparison: See 3.1.9.15. (line 863) Binary files by mail: See 3.1.12. (line 1362) Browsing through the process list: See 3.1.21. (line 1604) bzip2: See 3.1.9.12. (line 794) Capitalize word: See 3.1.8.4. (line 506) Change the current panel directory: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1281) Change the other panel directory: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1285) Changing directory: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1276) Changing the current directory: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1276) Changing the directory: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1276) Changing the file's group: See 3.1.9.9. (line 712) Changing the file's mode: See 3.1.9.9. (line 681) Changing the file's owner: See 3.1.9.9. (line 696) Changing the group in background: See 3.1.9.9. (line 716) Changing the group recursively: See 3.1.9.9. (line 720) Changing the group recursively in background: See 3.1.9.9. (line 725) Changing the inode's group: See 3.1.9.9. (line 712) Changing the inode's mode: See 3.1.9.9. (line 681) Changing the inode's owner: See 3.1.9.9. (line 696) Changing the mode in background: See 3.1.9.9. (line 685) Changing the mode recursively: See 3.1.9.9. (line 689) Changing the mode recursively in background: See 3.1.9.9. (line 693) Changing the owner in background: See 3.1.9.9. (line 700) Changing the owner recursively: See 3.1.9.9. (line 704) Changing the owner recursively in background: See 3.1.9.9. (line 709) chdir: See 3.1.10.8. (line 1276) chgrp: See 3.1.9.9. (line 712) chmod: See 3.1.9.9. (line 681) chown: See 3.1.9.9. (line 696) Comparing directories quickly: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1240) Comparing directories thoroughly: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1245) Comparing panels quickly: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1240) Comparing panels thoroughly: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1245) Compile: See 3.1.11. (line 1342) Compiling programs: See 3.1.11. (line 1342) compress: See 3.1.9.12. (line 769) Compressing directories: See 3.1.9.12. (line 769) Compressing directories in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 773) Compressing files: See 3.1.9.12. (line 769) Compressing files in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 773) Console lock: See 3.1.15. (line 1412) Convert to lower case: See 3.1.8.4. (line 498) Convert to upper case: See 3.1.8.4. (line 502) Copy entry name to input line.: See 3.1.8.1. (line 419) Copying directories: See 3.1.10.2. (line 1194) Copying directories in background: See 3.1.10.2. (line 1198) Copying files: See 3.1.9.1. (line 568) Copying files in background: See 3.1.9.1. (line 572) Create directory: See 3.1.10.1. (line 1186) Create file: See 3.1.9.10. (line 740) Creating a directory: See 3.1.10.1. (line 1186) Creating bzip2 compressed tar archives: See 3.1.9.20. (line 932) Creating bzip2 compressed tar archives in background:See 3.1.9.20. (line 937) Creating compressed tar archives: See 3.1.9.20. (line 923) Creating compressed tar archives in background:See 3.1.9.20. (line 928) Creating tar archives: See 3.1.9.20. (line 915) Creating tar archives in background: See 3.1.9.20. (line 919) csh: See 3.1.13. (line 1389) Current disk quota: See 3.1.19. (line 1538) Cursor backward: See 3.1.8.2. (line 433) Cursor backward one word: See 3.1.8.2. (line 439) Cursor down one entry: See 3.1.5. (line 305) Cursor down one page: See 3.1.5. (line 315) Cursor end: See 3.1.5. (line 312) Cursor forward: See 3.1.8.2. (line 436) Cursor forward one word: See 3.1.8.2. (line 442) Cursor home: See 3.1.5. (line 309) Cursor to BOL: See 3.1.8.2. (line 445) Cursor to EOL: See 3.1.8.2. (line 448) Cursor to the other panel: See 3.1.5. (line 334) Cursor up one entry: See 3.1.5. (line 302) Cursor up one page: See 3.1.5. (line 318) date: See 3.1.19. (line 1526) Date and time: See 3.1.3. (line 221) Date, time: See 3.1.3. (line 221) Decoding files: See 3.1.9.13. (line 819) Decoding files in background: See 3.1.9.13. (line 823) Decompressing directories: See 3.1.9.12. (line 777) Decompressing directories in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 781) Decompressing directories/links: See 3.1.9.12. (line 785) Decompressing directories/links in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 790) Decompressing files: See 3.1.9.12. (line 777) Decompressing files in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 781) Decompressing files/links: See 3.1.9.12. (line 785) Decompressing files/links in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 790) Decrypting the current file: See 3.1.9.14. (line 846) Delete char: See 3.1.8.3. (line 454) Delete horizontal space: See 3.1.8.3. (line 482) Delete line: See 3.1.8.3. (line 466) Delete spaces: See 3.1.8.3. (line 482) Delete word backward: See 3.1.8.3. (line 460) Delete word forward: See 3.1.8.3. (line 463) Deleting directories: See 3.1.10.3. (line 1205) Deleting directories in background: See 3.1.10.3. (line 1209) Deleting files: See 3.1.9.4. (line 596) Deleting files in background: See 3.1.9.4. (line 600) diff: See 3.1.9.15. (line 854) Differences between ascii files: See 3.1.9.15. (line 854) Differences between directories: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1250) Differences between file and backup: See 3.1.9.15. (line 859) Differences between two directories: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1255) Directory copy: See 3.1.10.2. (line 1194) Directory delete: See 3.1.10.3. (line 1205) Directory diff: See 3.1.10.6. (line 1250) Directory history reset: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1311) Directory mode: See 3.1.3. (line 230) Directory move: See 3.1.10.4. (line 1217) Directory rename: See 3.1.10.5. (line 1228) Directory size: See 3.1.3. (line 224) Directory usage: See 3.1.10.7. (line 1268) Disk free space: See 3.1.19. (line 1542) Downcase file names: See 3.1.9.6. (line 634) Downcase word: See 3.1.8.4. (line 498) du: See 3.1.10.7. (line 1268) Editing a file: See 3.1.9.10. (line 732) Editing multiple files: See 3.1.9.10. (line 736) Editing the ChangeLog: See 3.1.9.10. (line 744) Emacs rmail: See 3.1.12. (line 1379) Enable all: See 3.1.3. (line 239) Enable next mode: See 3.1.3. (line 244) Encoding files: See 3.1.9.13. (line 812) Encoding files in background: See 3.1.9.13. (line 816) Encrypting the current file: See 3.1.9.14. (line 843) End of line: See 3.1.8.2. (line 448) End of panel: See 3.1.5. (line 312) Enlarge other panel: See 3.1.3. (line 194) Enlarge panel: See 3.1.3. (line 199) Entire screen: See 3.1.3. (line 188) env: See 3.1.20. (line 1567) Exchange point and mark: See 3.1.8.6. (line 533) Exiting: See 3.1.24. (line 1654) Extracting files from archives: See 3.1.9.20. (line 942) File action: See 3.1.9.25. (line 1176) File copy: See 3.1.9.1. (line 568) File create: See 3.1.9.10. (line 740) File delete: See 3.1.9.4. (line 596) File edit: See 3.1.9.10. (line 732) File mode: See 3.1.3. (line 230) File move: See 3.1.9.2. (line 579) File or directory mode: See 3.1.3. (line 230) File or directory size: See 3.1.3. (line 224) File rename: See 3.1.9.6. (line 626) File search: See 3.1.9.19. (line 897) File size: See 3.1.3. (line 224) File split: See 3.1.9.7. (line 645) File system status: See 3.1.19. (line 1542) File view: See 3.1.9.11. (line 758) File wipe: See 3.1.9.18. (line 889) find: See 3.1.9.19. (line 897) finger: See 3.1.19. (line 1530) First entry: See 3.1.5. (line 309) Forward char: See 3.1.8.2. (line 436) Forward word: See 3.1.8.2. (line 442) Free disk space: See 3.1.19. (line 1542) Full directory info: See 3.1.3. (line 239) Full directory name: See 3.1.3. (line 233) Full file info: See 3.1.3. (line 239) Full file name: See 3.1.3. (line 233) Full file or directory name: See 3.1.3. (line 233) Full info: See 3.1.3. (line 239) Full name: See 3.1.3. (line 233) gitaction: See 3.7. (line 1761) gitfm: See 3.1. (line 72) gitkeys: See 3.4. (line 1724) gitmount: See 3.6. (line 1746) gitps: See 3.2. (line 1658) gitregrep: See 3.9. (line 1810) gitrfgrep: See 3.9. (line 1810) gitrgrep: See 3.9. (line 1810) gitunpack: See 3.8. (line 1802) gitview: See 3.3. (line 1698) gitwipe: See 3.5. (line 1732) Go to ..: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1323) Go to /: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1320) Go to the $HOME directory: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1326) Go to the /usr/include directory: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1329) Go to the first floppy mount point: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1332) Go to the home directory: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1326) Go to the include directory: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1329) Go to the other panel: See 3.1.5. (line 334) Go to the parent directory: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1323) Go to the root directory: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1320) Go to the second floppy mount point: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1335) Go to the ~ directory: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1326) Go up one directory: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1323) grep: See 3.1.14. (line 1397) Group and owner: See 3.1.3. (line 218) Group, owner: See 3.1.3. (line 218) gunzip: See 3.1.9.12. (line 777) gzip: See 3.1.9.12. (line 769) Half screen: See 3.1.3. (line 188) Hard links to files: See 3.1.9.5. (line 607) Hot Keys: See 3.1.10.10. (line 1316) Incremental search backward: See 3.1.7. (line 395) Incremental search forward: See 3.1.7. (line 388) Isearch backward: See 3.1.7. (line 395) Isearch forward: See 3.1.7. (line 388) ispell: See 3.1.9.16. (line 870) Just one space: See 3.1.8.3. (line 478) Kill line: See 3.1.8.3. (line 466) Kill region: See 3.1.8.3. (line 487) Kill ring save: See 3.1.8.3. (line 491) Kill to beginning of line: See 3.1.8.3. (line 470) Kill to end of line: See 3.1.8.3. (line 474) kill word: See 3.1.8.3. (line 463) Killing processes: See 3.1.21. (line 1619) Last backup diff: See 3.1.9.15. (line 859) Last entry: See 3.1.5. (line 312) Linking files in background: See 3.1.9.5. (line 611) locate: See 3.1.9.19. (line 901) Locating files: See 3.1.9.19. (line 901) Locking the console: See 3.1.15. (line 1412) Logged in users: See 3.1.19. (line 1546) Looking at the environment: See 3.1.20. (line 1567) lpr: See 3.1.9.17. (line 877) Major modes: See 3.1.3. (line 188) make: See 3.1.11. (line 1342) Make directory: See 3.1.10.1. (line 1186) Making a directory: See 3.1.10.1. (line 1186) Mark entry: See 3.1.6. (line 345) Mime encoded files by mail: See 3.1.12. (line 1371) Minor modes: See 3.1.3. (line 214) mount: See 3.1.18. (line 1487) Mounted file systems list: See 3.1.19. (line 1534) Mounting subdirectories: See 3.1.18. (line 1487) Mounting the cdrom: See 3.1.18. (line 1469) Mounting the first floppy: See 3.1.18. (line 1461) Mounting the floppy: See 3.1.18. (line 1461) Mounting the jaz drive: See 3.1.18. (line 1481) Mounting the second floppy: See 3.1.18. (line 1465) Mounting the zip drive: See 3.1.18. (line 1477) Mounting these file systems: See 3.1.18. (line 1487) Moving directories: See 3.1.10.4. (line 1217) Moving directories in background: See 3.1.10.4. (line 1221) Moving files: See 3.1.9.2. (line 579) Moving files in background: See 3.1.9.2. (line 583) mpack: See 3.1.9.13. (line 826) Multiple edit: See 3.1.9.10. (line 736) munpack: See 3.1.9.13. (line 833) Next directory history entry: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1302) Next history element: See 3.1.8.5. (line 523) Next sort method: See 3.1.4. (line 291) No panels mode: See 3.1.3. (line 205) One panel: See 3.1.3. (line 194) Other panel path to input line: See 3.1.8.1. (line 423) Owner and group: See 3.1.3. (line 218) Owner, group: See 3.1.3. (line 218) Pack files into bins: See 3.1.9.8. (line 675) Previous directory history entry: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1306) Previous history element: See 3.1.8.5. (line 519) printing: See 3.1.9.17. (line 877) Printing files: See 3.1.9.17. (line 877) Program search: See 3.1.9.19. (line 905) Quota: See 3.1.19. (line 1538) Re-reading directories.: See 3.1.16. (line 1430) Reading mail: See 3.1.12. (line 1379) Reading the html documentation: See 3.1.23. (line 1644) Reading the info documentation: See 3.1.23. (line 1636) Reading the manual pages: See 3.1.23. (line 1632) Recursive grep: See 3.1.14. (line 1401) Refreshing the screen.: See 3.1.16. (line 1430) regexp: See 3.1.14. (line 1397) Renaming directories: See 3.1.10.5. (line 1228) Renaming directories in background: See 3.1.10.5. (line 1232) Renaming files: See 3.1.9.6. (line 626) Renaming files in background: See 3.1.9.6. (line 630) Reset the directory history: See 3.1.10.9. (line 1311) Resetting the terminal: See 3.1.17. (line 1437) Save and delete region: See 3.1.8.3. (line 487) Save into the kill ring: See 3.1.8.3. (line 491) Scroll left: See 3.1.5. (line 321) Scroll right: See 3.1.5. (line 324) Scroll step: See 3.1.5. (line 331) Searching binaries: See 3.1.9.19. (line 908) Searching files: See 3.1.9.19. (line 897) Searching for key-bindings: See 3.1.23. (line 1648) Searching patterns in files: See 3.1.14. (line 1397) Searching programs: See 3.1.9.19. (line 908) Searching regular expressions: See 3.1.14. (line 1397) Select entry: See 3.1.6. (line 345) Selected entries to input line: See 3.1.8.1. (line 427) Selects files matching extension: See 3.1.6. (line 364) Selects files matching pattern: See 3.1.6. (line 352) Sending ascii mail: See 3.1.12. (line 1354) Sending ascii mail in background: See 3.1.12. (line 1358) Sending binary mail: See 3.1.12. (line 1362) Sending binary mail in background: See 3.1.12. (line 1366) Sending files by mail: See 3.1.12. (line 1358) Sending mail: See 3.1.12. (line 1358) Sending mime mail: See 3.1.12. (line 1371) Sending mime mail in background: See 3.1.12. (line 1375) Sending text by mail: See 3.1.12. (line 1354) Set mark: See 3.1.8.6. (line 529) Set the mark: See 3.1.8.6. (line 529) sh: See 3.1.13. (line 1389) Shell: See 3.1.13. (line 1389) Sorted by date: See 3.1.4. (line 266) Sorted by extension: See 3.1.4. (line 258) Sorted by group id: See 3.1.4. (line 278) Sorted by group name: See 3.1.4. (line 286) Sorted by mode: See 3.1.4. (line 270) Sorted by name: See 3.1.4. (line 254) Sorted by owner id: See 3.1.4. (line 274) Sorted by owner name: See 3.1.4. (line 282) Sorted by size: See 3.1.4. (line 262) Sorting: See 3.1.4. (line 248) Sorting by date: See 3.1.4. (line 266) Sorting by extension: See 3.1.4. (line 258) Sorting by group id: See 3.1.4. (line 278) Sorting by group name: See 3.1.4. (line 286) Sorting by mode: See 3.1.4. (line 270) Sorting by name: See 3.1.4. (line 254) Sorting by owner id: See 3.1.4. (line 274) Sorting by owner name: See 3.1.4. (line 282) Sorting by size: See 3.1.4. (line 262) Spell checking: See 3.1.9.16. (line 870) Splitting files: See 3.1.9.7. (line 645) Splitting files in background: See 3.1.9.7. (line 650) Swapping: See 3.1.19. (line 1555) Switch panels: See 3.1.5. (line 338) Symbolic links to files: See 3.1.9.5. (line 615) sync: See 3.1.22. (line 1626) Synchronizing file systems: See 3.1.22. (line 1626) System users: See 3.1.19. (line 1546) Tar archive: See 3.1.9.20. (line 915) tcsh: See 3.1.13. (line 1389) Terminal reset: See 3.1.17. (line 1437) Time and date: See 3.1.3. (line 221) Time, date: See 3.1.3. (line 221) Toggle flag: See 3.1.6. (line 345) Toggle panels: See 3.1.5. (line 338) tty mode: See 3.1.3. (line 205) Two panel mode: See 3.1.3. (line 202) Two panels: See 3.1.3. (line 202) Type specific file action: See 3.1.9.25. (line 1176) umount: See 3.1.18. (line 1491) Uncompressing directories: See 3.1.9.12. (line 777) Uncompressing directories in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 781) Uncompressing directories/links: See 3.1.9.12. (line 785) Uncompressing directories/links in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 790) Uncompressing files: See 3.1.9.12. (line 777) Uncompressing files in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 781) Uncompressing files/links: See 3.1.9.12. (line 785) Uncompressing files/links in background: See 3.1.9.12. (line 790) Unmark entry: See 3.1.6. (line 345) Unmounting subdirectories: See 3.1.18. (line 1519) Unmounting the cdrom: See 3.1.18. (line 1499) Unmounting the first floppy: See 3.1.18. (line 1491) Unmounting the floppy: See 3.1.18. (line 1491) Unmounting the jaz drive: See 3.1.18. (line 1512) Unmounting the second floppy: See 3.1.18. (line 1495) Unmounting the zip drive: See 3.1.18. (line 1508) Unmounting these file systems: See 3.1.18. (line 1519) Unselects files matching extension: See 3.1.6. (line 369) Unselects files matching pattern: See 3.1.6. (line 359) Upcase file names: See 3.1.9.6. (line 638) Upcase word: See 3.1.8.4. (line 502) uudecode: See 3.1.9.13. (line 819) uuencode: See 3.1.9.13. (line 812) Viewing files: See 3.1.9.11. (line 758) Viewing multiple files: See 3.1.9.11. (line 762) Viewing processes: See 3.1.21. (line 1604) Viewing the process tree: See 3.1.21. (line 1615) Virtual memory status: See 3.1.19. (line 1555) whereis: See 3.1.9.19. (line 905) which: See 3.1.9.19. (line 908) who: See 3.1.19. (line 1560) Wiping files: See 3.1.9.18. (line 889) Wrapped incremental search: See 3.1.7. (line 380) Wrapped isearch: See 3.1.7. (line 380) Wrapped search: See 3.1.7. (line 380) xhost: See 3.1.20. (line 1571) Yanking, reinserting: See 3.1.8.7. (line 540) Short Contents ************** 1 Introduction 2 Distributing GNU Interactive Tools 3 Using GNU Interactive Tools 4 Customizing GNU Interactive Tools 5 GNU Interactive Tools limitations 6 GNU Interactive Tools bugs Appendix A Copying This Manual Key Index Command Index Variable Index Concept Index Table of Contents ***************** 1 Introduction 2 Distributing GNU Interactive Tools 3 Using GNU Interactive Tools 3.1 The GIT file system browser 3.1.1 Key binding conventions 3.1.2 Command line 3.1.3 Panel modes 3.1.4 Sorting methods 3.1.5 Moving the cursor in the panel 3.1.6 Selecting files 3.1.7 Incremental searching files in a panel 3.1.8 Using the input line 3.1.8.1 Inserting Text 3.1.8.2 Moving Point 3.1.8.3 Deleting and killing text 3.1.8.4 Case conversion of words. 3.1.8.5 Reusing recent input line arguments 3.1.8.6 Commands to set the mark 3.1.8.7 Reinserting recently killed text 3.1.8.8 Selecting files matching patterns 3.1.9 File operations 3.1.9.1 Copying Files 3.1.9.2 Moving Files 3.1.9.3 Creating Files 3.1.9.4 Deleting Files 3.1.9.5 Linking Files 3.1.9.6 Renaming Files 3.1.9.7 Splitting files into smaller parts 3.1.9.8 Packing files into the minimum number of bins 3.1.9.9 Changing a file's mode, owner and group 3.1.9.10 Editing Files 3.1.9.11 Viewing Files 3.1.9.12 Compressing Files 3.1.9.13 Encoding Files 3.1.9.14 Encrypting Files 3.1.9.15 Comparing Files 3.1.9.16 Spell Checking Files 3.1.9.17 Printing Files 3.1.9.18 Wiping Files 3.1.9.19 Searching Files 3.1.9.20 Managing tar based archive files 3.1.9.21 Working with DPKG 3.1.9.22 Installing and Uninstalling RPM packages 3.1.9.23 File Types 3.1.9.24 Accessing MSDOS Files 3.1.9.25 A different action for each file type 3.1.10 Directory operations 3.1.10.1 Creating directories 3.1.10.2 Copying directories 3.1.10.3 Deleting directories 3.1.10.4 Moving directories 3.1.10.5 Renaming directories 3.1.10.6 Comparing Directories 3.1.10.7 Summarize directory usage 3.1.10.8 Changing directories 3.1.10.9 Directory History 3.1.10.10 Hot Keys 3.1.11 Compiling programs 3.1.12 Sending/receiving ascii/binary mail 3.1.13 Starting a sub-shell 3.1.14 Using grep and recursive grep 3.1.15 Locking your console 3.1.16 Refreshing the screen contents 3.1.17 Resetting your terminal 3.1.18 Mounting/unmounting file systems 3.1.19 Getting some useful system information 3.1.20 How to look at the environment variables 3.1.21 Viewing/killing processes 3.1.22 Synchronizing the file systems 3.1.23 Reading the documentation 3.1.24 Exiting GNU Interactive Tools 3.2 The GNUIT process viewer/killer 3.3 The GNUIT ASCII/HEX file viewer 3.4 The GNUIT key sequences display utility 3.5 The GNUIT wipe file utility 3.6 The GNUIT mount utility 3.7 The GNUIT per file type action script 3.8 Unified archive unpacking 3.9 The GIT recursive grep script 4 Customizing GNU Interactive Tools 4.1 Environment Variables 4.2 Configuration Files 4.2.1 Writing key sequences 4.2.2 The global setup section 4.2.3 gitfm Sections 4.2.3.1 gitfm Setup 4.2.3.2 Using gitfm on color displays 4.2.3.3 Using gitfm on monochrome displays 4.2.3.4 Defining keys 4.2.3.5 The key-sequence field 4.2.3.6 The command-name field 4.2.3.7 The formatted-command field 4.2.3.8 The %s format specifier 4.2.3.9 The %f format specifier 4.2.3.10 The %d format specifier 4.2.3.11 The %l format specifier 4.2.3.12 The %t format specifier 4.2.3.13 The %z format specifier 4.2.3.14 The %a format specifier 4.2.3.15 The %m format specifier 4.2.3.16 The %g format specifier 4.2.3.17 The %o format specifier 4.2.3.18 The %p format specifier 4.2.3.19 The %b format specifier 4.2.3.20 The %i format specifier 4.2.3.21 The %? format specifier 4.2.3.22 The new-dir field 4.2.3.23 The save-screen field 4.2.3.24 The pause field 4.2.3.25 The hide field 4.2.4 Setting up colors for different file types 4.2.5 gitps Sections 4.2.5.1 gitps Setup 4.2.5.2 Using gitps on color displays 4.2.5.3 Using gitps on monochrome displays 4.2.5.4 Defining keys 4.2.6 gitview Sections 4.2.6.1 gitview Setup 4.2.6.2 Using gitview on color displays 4.2.6.3 Using gitview on monochrome displays 4.2.6.4 Defining keys 5 GNU Interactive Tools limitations 6 GNU Interactive Tools bugs Appendix A Copying This Manual Key Index Command Index Variable Index Concept Index