xref: /freebsd/usr.bin/dpv/dpv.1 (revision 123af6ec70016f5556da5972d4d63c7d175c06d3)
1.\" Copyright (c) 2013-2016 Devin Teske
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25.\" $FreeBSD$
26.\"
27.Dd January 26, 2016
28.Dt DPV 1
29.Os
30.Sh NAME
31.Nm dpv
32.Nd stream data from stdin or multiple paths with dialog progress view
33.Sh SYNOPSIS
34.Nm
35.Op options
36.Ar [bytes:]label
37.Nm
38.Op options
39.Fl m
40.Ar [bytes1:]label1
41.Ar path1
42.Op Ar [bytes2:]label2 path2 ...
43.Sh DESCRIPTION
44.Nm
45provides a dialog progress view, allowing a user to see current throughput rate
46and total data transferred for one or more streams.
47.Pp
48The
49.Nm
50utility has two main modes for processing input.
51.Pp
52The default input mode, without
53.Ql Fl m ,
54.Nm
55reads bytes from standard input.
56A label for the data must be provided.
57.Pp
58The secondary input mode, with
59.Ql Fl m ,
60.Nm
61reads multiple paths
62.Pq up to 2047 or Dq ARG_MAX/2-1 ,
63sequentially.
64.Pp
65Data read in either mode is either thrown away
66.Pq default ,
67sent to a spawned instance of the program specified via
68.Ql Fl x Ar cmd ,
69or sent to a unique file specified by
70.Ql Fl o Ar file .
71.Pp
72With or without
73.Ql Fl m ,
74progress is displayed using one of
75.Xr dialog 3
76.Pq default ,
77.Xr dialog 1
78.Pq see Ql Fl D ,
79or instead
80.Xr Xdialog 1
81.Pq see Ql Fl X .
82.Pp
83The following options are available:
84.Bl -tag -width ".Fl b Ar backtitle"
85.It Fl a Ar text
86Display
87.Ar text
88below the file progress indicator(s).
89.It Fl b Ar backtitle
90Display
91.Ar backtitle
92on the backdrop, at top-left, behind the dialog widget.
93When using
94.Xr Xdialog 1 ,
95this is displayed inside the window
96.Pq at the top
97followed by a separator line.
98.It Fl d
99Debug mode.
100Print dialog prompt data to standard out and provide additional debugging on
101standard error.
102.It Fl D
103Do not use the default interface of
104.Xr dialog 3 ,
105but instead spawn an instance of
106.Xr dialog 1 .
107The path to
108.Xr dialog 1
109is taken from the
110.Ev DIALOG
111environment variable or simply
112.Dq Li dialog
113if unset or NULL.
114.It Fl h
115Produce a short syntax usage with brief option descriptions and exit.
116Output is produced on standard error.
117.It Fl i Ar format
118Customize the single-file format string used to update the status line.
119Ignored when using either
120.Ql Fl D
121or
122.Ql Fl X
123which lack the ability to display the status line
124.Pq containing bytes/rate/thread information .
125Default value
126is
127.Dq Li %'10lli bytes read @ %'9.1f bytes/sec. .
128This format is used when handling one file.
129.It Fl I Ar format
130Customize the multi-file format string used to update the status line.
131Ignored when using either
132.Ql Fl D
133or
134.Ql Fl X
135which lack the ability to display the status line
136.Pq containing bytes/rate/thread information .
137Default value
138is
139.Dq Li %'10lli bytes read @ %'9.1f bytes/sec. [%i/%i busy/wait] .
140This format is used when handling more than one file.
141.It Fl k
142Keep tite.
143Prevent visually distracting initialization/exit routines for scripts running
144.Xr dialog 1
145several times.
146.It Fl l
147Line mode. Read lines from input instead of bytes.
148.It Fl L Ar size
149Label size.
150If negative, shrink to longest label width.
151.It Fl m
152Multi-input mode.
153Instead of reading bytes from standard input, read from a set of paths
154.Pq one for each label .
155By default, each path is processed sequentially in the order given.
156.It Fl n Ar num
157Display at-most
158.Ar num
159progress indicators per screen.
160If zero, display as many as possible.
161If negative, only display the main progress indicator.
162Default is 0.
163Maximum value is 10.
164.It Fl N
165No overrun.
166If enabled, stop reading known-length inputs when input reaches stated length.
167.It Fl o Ar file
168Output data to
169.Ar file .
170The first occurrence of
171.Ql %s
172.Pq if any
173in
174.Ql Ar file
175will be replaced with the
176.Ar label
177text.
178.It Fl p Ar text
179Display
180.Ar text
181above the file progress indicator(s).
182.It Fl P Ar size
183Mini-progressbar size.
184If negative, don't display mini-progressbars
185.Pq only the large overall progress indicator is shown .
186If zero, auto-adjust based on number of files to read.
187When zero and only one file to read, defaults to -1.
188When zero and more than one file to read, defaults to 17.
189.It Fl t Ar title
190Display
191.Ar title
192atop the dialog box.
193Note that if you use this option at the same time as
194.Ql Fl X
195and
196.Ql Fl b Ar backtitle ,
197the
198.Ar backtitle
199and
200.Ar title
201are effectively switched
202.Pq see BUGS section below .
203.It Fl T
204Test mode.
205Simulate reading a number of bytes, divided evenly across the number of files,
206while stepping through each percent value of each file to process.
207Appends
208.Dq Li [TEST MODE]
209to the status line
210.Pq to override, use Ql Fl u Ar format .
211No data is actually read.
212.It Fl U Ar num
213Update status line
214.Ar num
215times per-second.
216Default value is
217.Ql Li 2 .
218A value of
219.Ql Li 0
220disables status line updates.
221If negative, update the status line as fast as possible.
222Ignored when using either
223.Ql Fl D
224or
225.Ql Fl X
226which lack the ability to display the status line
227.Pq containing bytes/rate/thread information .
228.It Fl w
229Wide mode.
230Allows long
231.Ar text
232arguments used with
233.Ql Fl p
234and
235.Ql Fl a
236to bump the dialog width.
237Prompts wider than the maximum width will wrap
238.Pq unless using Xr Xdialog 1 ; see BUGS section below .
239.It Fl x Ar cmd
240Execute
241.Ar cmd
242.Pq via Xr sh 1
243and send it data that has been read.
244Data is available to
245.Ar cmd
246on standard input.
247With
248.Ql Fl m ,
249.Ar cmd
250is executed once for each
251.Ar path
252argument.
253The first occurrence of
254.Ql %s
255.Pq if any
256in
257.Ql Ar cmd
258will be replaced with the
259.Ar label
260text.
261.It Fl X
262Enable X11 mode by using
263.Xr Xdialog 1
264instead of
265.Xr dialog 1
266or
267.Xr dialog 3 .
268.El
269.Sh ENVIRONMENT
270The following environment variables are referenced by
271.Nm :
272.Bl -tag -width ".Ev USE_COLOR"
273.It Ev DIALOG
274Override command string used to launch
275.Xr dialog 1
276.Pq requires Ql Fl D
277or
278.Xr Xdialog 1
279.Pq requires Ql Fl X ;
280default is either
281.Ql dialog
282.Pq for Ql Fl D
283or
284.Ql Xdialog
285.Pq for Ql Fl X .
286.It Ev DIALOGRC
287If set and non-NULL, path to
288.Ql .dialogrc
289file.
290.It Ev HOME
291If
292.Ql Ev $DIALOGRC
293is either not set or NULL, used as a prefix to
294.Ql .dialogrc
295.Pq i.e., Ql $HOME/.dialogrc .
296.It Ev USE_COLOR
297If set and NULL, disables the use of color when using
298.Xr dialog 1
299.Pq does not apply to Xr Xdialog 1 .
300.El
301.Sh DEPENDENCIES
302If using
303.Ql Fl D ,
304.Xr dialog 1
305is required.
306.Pp
307If using
308.Ql Fl X ,
309.Xr Xdialog 1
310is required.
311.Sh FILES
312.Bl -tag -width ".Pa $HOME/.dialogrc" -compact
313.It Pa $HOME/.dialogrc
314.El
315.Sh EXAMPLES
316Simple example to show how fast
317.Xr yes 1
318produces lines
319.Pq usually about ten-million per-second; your results may vary :
320.Bd -literal -offset indent
321yes | dpv -l yes
322.Ed
323.Pp
324Display progress while timing how long it takes
325.Xr yes 1
326to produce a half-billion lines
327.Pq usually under one minute; your results may vary :
328.Bd -literal -offset indent
329time yes | dpv -Nl 500000000:yes
330.Ed
331.Pp
332An example to watch how quickly a file is transferred using
333.Xr nc 1 :
334.Bd -literal -offset indent
335dpv -x "nc -w 1 somewhere.com 3000" -m label file
336.Ed
337.Pp
338A similar example, transferring a file from another process and passing the
339expected size to
340.Nm :
341.Bd -literal -offset indent
342cat file | dpv -x "nc -w 1 somewhere.com 3000" 12345:label
343.Ed
344.Pp
345A more complicated example:
346.Bd -literal -offset indent
347tar cf - . | dpv -x "gzip -9 > out.tgz" \\
348	$( du -s . | awk '{print $1 * 1024}' ):label
349.Ed
350.Pp
351Taking an image of a disk:
352.Bd -literal -offset indent
353dpv -o disk-image.img -m label /dev/ada0
354.Ed
355.Pp
356Writing an image back to a disk:
357.Bd -literal -offset indent
358dpv -o /dev/ada0 -m label disk-image.img
359.Ed
360.Pp
361Zeroing a disk:
362.Bd -literal -offset indent
363dpv -o /dev/md42 < /dev/zero
364.Ed
365.Sh SEE ALSO
366.Xr dialog 1 ,
367.Xr sh 1 ,
368.Xr Xdialog 1 ,
369.Xr dialog 3
370.Sh HISTORY
371A
372.Nm
373utility first appeared in
374.Fx 10.2 .
375.Sh AUTHORS
376.An Devin Teske Aq dteske@FreeBSD.org
377.Sh BUGS
378.Xr Xdialog 1 ,
379when given both
380.Ql Fl -title Ar title
381.Pq see above Ql Fl t Ar title
382and
383.Ql Fl -backtitle Ar backtitle
384.Pq see above Ql Fl b Ar backtitle ,
385displays the backtitle in place of the title and vice-versa.
386.Pp
387.Xr Xdialog 1
388does not wrap long prompt texts received after initial launch.
389This is a known issue with the
390.Ql --gauge
391widget in
392.Xr Xdialog 1 .
393.Pp
394.Xr dialog 1
395does not display the first character after a series of escaped escape-sequences
396(e.g., ``\\\\n'' produces ``\\'' instead of ``\\n'').
397This is a known issue with
398.Xr dialog 1
399and does not affect
400.Xr dialog 3
401or
402.Xr Xdialog 1 .
403.Pp
404If your application ignores
405.Ev USE_COLOR
406when set and NULL before calling
407.Xr dpv 1
408with color escape sequences anyway,
409.Xr dialog 3
410and
411.Xr dialog 1
412may not render properly.
413Workaround is to detect when
414.Ev USE_COLOR
415is set and NULL and either not use color escape sequences at that time or use
416.Xr unset 1
417.Xr [ sh 1 ]
418or
419.Xr unsetenv 1
420.Xr [ csh 1 ]
421to unset
422.Ev USE_COLOR ,
423forcing interpretation of color sequences.
424This does not effect
425.Xr Xdialog 1 ,
426which renders the color escape sequences as plain text.
427See
428.Do
429embedded "\\Z" sequences
430.Dc
431in
432.Xr dialog 1
433for additional information.
434