Skip to content

Programs that display the contents of many kinds of archives and metadata about many kinds of files.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

dfandrich/fileviewinfo

Repository files navigation

File View Info

File View Info is a project for extracting metadata about structured files. It consists of the programs fv, fvi, autodescribe and automtime which display a list of contents of archives, metadata about files, file descriptions and file modification times, respectively.

fv is a wrapper around the file list functions of most common (and uncommon) kinds of archivers and packagers available on *NIX systems. It provides a fast, easy way to look inside archives without having to remember the arcane options required by many archiving programs.

fvi is a wrapper around many file metadata display programs available on *NIX systems. It provides a quick way to display metadata about a file without without having to remember which program is the right one to use for each type.

autodescribe extracts file titles or descriptions embedded in many types of structured files. It can be used to build a descriptive index of files or to help search for specific files.

automtime extracts file modification times embedded in many types of structured files (separate from the modification times stored in the filesystem). It can be used to update the filesystem modification time to match that of the file contents.

Want to see what files are in a bzip2-compressed tarball? You could run tar tvjf file.tar.bz2 or you could run fv file.tar.bz2. Want to see the expiry date of an X.509 PEM certificate? You could use openssl x509 -text -in cert.pem or you could use fvi cert.pem. Want to see what an oddly-named PDF is all about? You could run pdfinfo P003141F.pdf" | grep "^Title:" or you could run autodescribe W0005833X.pdf. Want your downloaded files to be listed in your file browser in order of original modification times and not time of download? Just run automtime -m * and see.

Read their respective man pages for more information about each program, including a list of the hundreds of supported file types. Most file types can only be handled using an external program. If you don't have the right one installed, you'll see a "command not found" (or similar) error message. View the source code for pointers to the package you'll need to install to handle that file type.

Installation

The latest release is available for download from https://github.com/dfandrich/fileviewinfo/releases/latest

The programs are written in portable Bourne shell and do not require compilation, but a makefile is included for easier installation. The makefile relies on some GNUisms, however, and requires the use of GNU make (sometimes called "gmake"). Most file formats also require an external helper program to parse each file type. Systems without GNU date installed will use a fallback date parsing utility that requires the Python dateutil and pytz modules.

Install the scripts and documentation by running this command as root:

make install

You can execute a simple regression test suite with:

env LC_ALL=C make check -k

Any differences between the expected and generated output will be displayed. If a needed external program is missing, the test will fail. Some test runs show "Not a known file type" or "No comment found" which is normal, since not all file types are supported by all programs being tested. The test suite is sensitive to the locale and will fail in some non-English locales due to some language-specific output, hence the LC_ALL setting above. The programs themselves should run fine in any locale, however.

Development

The project home is at https://github.com/dfandrich/fileviewinfo/ Report bugs or issues there, or submit pull requests to support new file types.

Download License Github Actions Build Status

Author

Copyright © 2003–2024 Dan Fandrich [email protected] Licensed under the MIT license (see the file LICENSE for details) with the exception of the files in testfiles/ which are hereby dedicated to the public domain in jurisdictions where such a dedication is legally permitted.