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-rw-r--r--.gitignore1
-rw-r--r--Makefile12
-rw-r--r--[-rwxr-xr-x]bin/han.bash (renamed from bin/han)1
-rwxr-xr-xcheck/bash2
-rw-r--r--man/man7/dotfiles.7df730
5 files changed, 11 insertions, 735 deletions
diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore
index 7b4a8107..8951ef18 100644
--- a/.gitignore
+++ b/.gitignore
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
+bin/han
bin/rfct
bin/rndi
bin/sd2u
diff --git a/Makefile b/Makefile
index d5a3858a..b89d5076 100644
--- a/Makefile
+++ b/Makefile
@@ -56,14 +56,15 @@
lint-sh \
lint-urxvt
-.SUFFIXES: .awk .sed
+.SUFFIXES: .awk .bash .sed
NAME := Tom Ryder
EMAIL := tom@sanctum.geek.nz
KEY := 0xC14286EA77BB8872
SENDMAIL := /usr/bin/msmtp
-all : bin/rfct \
+all : bin/han \
+ bin/rfct \
bin/rndi \
bin/sd2u \
bin/slsf \
@@ -74,6 +75,7 @@ all : bin/rfct \
clean distclean :
rm -f \
+ bin/han \
bin/rfct \
bin/rndi \
bin/sd2u \
@@ -120,6 +122,10 @@ tmux/tmux.conf : tmux/tmux.conf.m4
bin/shb "$<" awk -f > "$@"
chmod +x "$@"
+.bash :
+ bin/shb "$<" bash > "$@"
+ chmod +x "$@"
+
.sed :
bin/shb "$<" sed -f > "$@"
chmod +x "$@"
@@ -154,7 +160,7 @@ install-bash-completion : install-bash
install -pm 0644 -- bash/bash_completion "$(HOME)"/.config/bash_completion
install -pm 0644 -- bash/bash_completion.d/* "$(HOME)"/.bash_completion.d
-install-bin : bin/sd2u bin/su2d bin/unf check-bin install-bin-man
+install-bin : bin/han bin/sd2u bin/su2d bin/unf check-bin install-bin-man
install -m 0755 -d -- "$(HOME)"/.local/bin
for name in bin/* ; do \
[ -x "$$name" ] || continue ; \
diff --git a/bin/han b/bin/han.bash
index 20aed9c9..8536b61b 100755..100644
--- a/bin/han
+++ b/bin/han.bash
@@ -1,4 +1,3 @@
-#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Abstract calls to Bash help vs man(1)
self=han
diff --git a/check/bash b/check/bash
index 525bec34..859c75a5 100755
--- a/check/bash
+++ b/check/bash
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
#!/bin/sh
-for bash in bash/* bash/bashrc.d/* ; do
+for bash in bash/* bash/bashrc.d/* bin/han ; do
[ -f "$bash" ] || continue
bash -n "$bash" || exit
done
diff --git a/man/man7/dotfiles.7df b/man/man7/dotfiles.7df
deleted file mode 100644
index cf8e9389..00000000
--- a/man/man7/dotfiles.7df
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,730 +0,0 @@
-.TH "DOTFILES(7df)" "" "June 2016" "" ""
-.SH Dotfiles (Tom Ryder)
-.PP
-This is my personal repository of configuration files and scripts for
-\f[C]$HOME\f[], including most of the settings that migrate well between
-machines.
-.SS Installation
-.IP
-.nf
-\f[C]
-$\ git\ clone\ https://sanctum.geek.nz/code/dotfiles.git\ ~/.dotfiles
-$\ cd\ ~/.dotfiles
-$\ git\ submodule\ init
-$\ git\ submodule\ update
-$\ make
-$\ make\ \-n\ install
-$\ make\ install
-\f[]
-.fi
-.PP
-For the default \f[C]all\f[] target, you'll need \f[C]bash(1)\f[],
-\f[C]git(1)\f[], \f[C]install(1)\f[], \f[C]make(1)\f[], and
-\f[C]m4(1)\f[].
-.PP
-The installation \f[C]Makefile\f[] will overwrite things standing in the
-way of its installed files without backing them up, so read the output
-of \f[C]make\ \-n\ install\f[] before running \f[C]make\ install\f[] to
-make sure you aren't going to lose anything unexpected.
-If you're still not sure, install it in a temporary directory so you can
-explore:
-.IP
-.nf
-\f[C]
-$\ tmpdir=$(mktemp\ \-d)
-$\ make\ install\ HOME="$tmpdir"
-$\ env\ \-i\ HOME="$tmpdir"\ TERM="$TERM"\ bash\ \-l
-\f[]
-.fi
-.PP
-The default target will install the core terminal\-only files: cURL,
-Git, GnuPG, Vim, shell scripts and functions, and shell and terminal
-setup files.
-The remaining dotfiles can be installed with the other targets.
-Take a look at the \f[C]Makefile\f[] to see what's available.
-.SS Tools
-.PP
-Configuration is included for:
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Abook (http://abook.sourceforge.net/) \[en] curses address book program
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Bash (https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/) \[en] GNU Bourne\-Again Shell,
-including a \f[C]~/.profile\f[] configured to work with most
-Bourne\-compatible shells
-.IP \[bu] 2
-cURL (https://curl.haxx.se/) \[en] Command\-line tool for transferring
-data with URL syntax
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Dunst (http://knopwob.org/dunst/) \[en] A lightweight X11 notification
-daemon that works with \f[C]libnotify\f[]
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]finger(1)\f[] \[en] User information lookup program
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Git (https://git-scm.com/) \[en] Distributed version control system
-.IP \[bu] 2
-GnuPG (https://www.gnupg.org/) \[en] GNU Privacy Guard, for private
-communication and file encryption
-.IP \[bu] 2
-GTK+ (http://www.gtk.org/) \[en] GIMP Toolkit, for graphical user
-interface elements
-.IP \[bu] 2
-i3 (https://i3wm.org/) \[en] Tiling window manager
-.IP \[bu] 2
-less (https://www.gnu.org/software/less/) \[en] Terminal pager
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Mutt (http://www.mutt.org/) \[en] Terminal mail user agent
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]mysql(1)\f[] (http://linux.die.net/man/1/mysql) \[en] Command\-line
-MySQL client
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Ncmpcpp (https://rybczak.net/ncmpcpp/) \[en] ncurses music player client
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Newsbeuter (https://www.newsbeuter.org/) \[en] Terminal RSS/Atom feed
-reader
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]pdksh(1)\f[] (http://www.cs.mun.ca/~michael/pdksh/) \[en] public
-domain fork of the Korn shell
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]psql(1)\f[] (http://linux.die.net/man/1/psql) \[en] Command\-line
-PostgreSQL client
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Perl::Critic (http://perlcritic.com/) \[en] static source code analysis
-engine for Perl
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Perl::Tidy (http://perltidy.sourceforge.net/) \[en] Perl indenter and
-reformatter
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Readline (https://cnswww.cns.cwru.edu/php/chet/readline/rltop.html)
-\[en] GNU library for user input used by Bash, MySQL, and others
-.IP \[bu] 2
-rxvt\-unicode (http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/rxvt-unicode.html) \[en]
-Fork of the rxvt terminal emulator with Unicode support
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Subversion (https://subversion.apache.org/) \[en] Apache Subversion, a
-version control system
-.IP \[bu] 2
-tmux (https://tmux.github.io/) \[en] Terminal multiplexer similar to GNU
-Screen
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Vim (http://www.vim.org/) \[en] Vi IMproved, a text editor
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Wyrd (https://packages.debian.org/sid/wyrd) \[en] a \f[C]curses\f[]
-calendar frontend for
-Remind (https://www.roaringpenguin.com/products/remind)
-.IP \[bu] 2
-X11 (https://www.x.org/wiki/) \[en] Windowing system with network
-transparency for Unix
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Zsh (https://www.zsh.org/) \[en] Bourne\-style shell designed for
-interactive use
-.PP
-The configurations for Bash, GnuPG, Mutt, tmux, and Vim are the most
-expansive and most likely to be of interest.
-The i3 configuration is mostly changed to make window switching behave
-like Vim windows and tmux panes do, and there's a fair few resources
-defined for rxvt\-unicode.
-Otherwise, the rest of the configuration isn't too distant from the
-defaults.
-.SS Shell
-.PP
-My \f[C]\&.profile\f[] and other files in \f[C]sh\f[] are written in
-POSIX shell script, so they should work in most \f[C]sh(1)\f[]
-implementations.
-Individual scripts called by \f[C]\&.profile\f[] are saved in
-\f[C]\&.profile.d\f[] and iterated on login for ease of management.
-All of these boil down to exporting variables appropriate to the system
-and the software it has available.
-.PP
-I make an effort to target POSIX for my functions and scripts where I
-can, but Bash is my interactive shell of choice.
-.PP
-My \f[C]\&.bash_profile\f[] calls \f[C]\&.profile\f[], and then
-\f[C]\&.bashrc\f[], which only applies for interactive shells.
-Subscripts for \f[C]\&.bashrc\f[] are loaded from \f[C]\&.bashrc.d\f[].
-The contents of the \f[C]*.d\f[] directories changes depending on the
-host, so only specific scripts in it are versioned.
-.PP
-As I occasionally have work on very old internal systems, my Bash is
-written to work with any version 2.05a or
-newer (http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/scripting/bashchanges).
-This is why I use older syntax for certain things such as appending
-items to arrays:
-.IP
-.nf
-\f[C]
-array[${#array[\@]}]=$item
-\f[]
-.fi
-.PP
-Compare this to the much nicer syntax available since 3.1\-alpha1, which
-actually works for arrays with sparse indexes, unlike the above syntax:
-.IP
-.nf
-\f[C]
-array+=("$item")
-\f[]
-.fi
-.PP
-Where I do use features that are only available in versions of Bash
-newer than 2.05a, such as newer \f[C]shopt\f[] options or
-\f[C]PROMPT_DIRTRIM\f[], they are only run after testing
-\f[C]BASH_VERSINFO\f[] appropriately.
-.SS Prompt
-.PP
-When I use any other Bourne\-compatible shell, I'm generally happy to
-accept its defaults for interactive behavior.
-.PP
-A terminal session with my prompt looks something like this:
-.IP
-.nf
-\f[C]
-~$\ ssh\ remote
-tom\@remote:~$\ cd\ .dotfiles
-tom\@remote:~/.dotfiles(master+!)$\ git\ status
-\ M\ README.markdown
-M\ \ bash/bashrc.d/prompt.bash
-A\ \ init
-tom\@remote:~/.dotfiles(master+!)$\ foobar
-foobar:\ command\ not\ found
-tom\@remote:~/.dotfiles(master+!)<127>$\ sleep\ 5\ &
-[1]\ 28937
-tom\@remote:~/.dotfiles(master+!){1}$
-\f[]
-.fi
-.PP
-The username and hostname are skipped if not connected via SSH.
-The right side of the prompt expands based on context to include these
-elements in this order:
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Whether in a Git repository if applicable, and punctuation to show
-repository status including reference to upstreams at a glance.
-Subversion support can also be enabled (I need it at work), in which
-case a \f[C]git:\f[] or \f[C]svn:\f[] prefix is added appropriately
-.IP \[bu] 2
-The number of running background jobs, if non\-zero
-.IP \[bu] 2
-The exit status of the last command, if non\-zero
-.PP
-You can set \f[C]PROMPT_COLOR\f[], \f[C]PROMPT_PREFIX\f[], and
-\f[C]PROMPT_SUFFIX\f[] too, which all do about what you'd expect.
-.PP
-This is all managed within the \f[C]prompt\f[] function.
-There's some mildly hacky logic on \f[C]tput\f[] codes included such
-that it should work correctly for most common terminals using both
-\f[C]termcap(5)\f[] and \f[C]terminfo(5)\f[], including *BSD systems.
-It's also designed to degrade gracefully for eight\-color and no\-color
-terminals.
-.SS Functions
-.PP
-If a function can be written in POSIX \f[C]sh\f[] without too much
-hackery, I put it in \f[C]sh/shrc.d\f[] to be loaded by any POSIX
-interactive shell.
-Those include:
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]bc()\f[] silences startup messages from GNU \f[C]bc(1)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]bd()\f[] changes into a named ancestor of the current directory.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]diff()\f[] forces the unified format for \f[C]diff(1)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]ed()\f[] tries to get verbose error messages, a prompt, and a
-Readline environment for \f[C]ed(1)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]env()\f[] sorts the output of \f[C]env(1)\f[] if it was invoked
-with no arguments, because the various shells have different ways of
-listing exported variables.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]gdb()\f[] silences startup messages from \f[C]gdb(1)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]gpg()\f[] quietens \f[C]gpg(1)\f[] down for most commands.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]grep()\f[] tries to apply color and other options good for
-interactive use, depending on the capabilities of the system
-\f[C]grep(1)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]hgrep()\f[] allows searching \f[C]$HISTFILE\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]keychain()\f[] keeps \f[C]$GPG_TTY\f[] up to date if a GnuPG agent
-is available.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]lhn()\f[] gets the history number of the last command, if the POSIX
-\f[C]fc\f[] builtin is available.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]ls()\f[] tries to apply color to \f[C]ls(1)\f[] for interactive use
-if available.
-.RS 2
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]la()\f[] runs \f[C]ls\ \-A\f[] if it can, or \f[C]ls\ \-a\f[]
-otherwise.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]ll()\f[] runs \f[C]ls\ \-Al\f[] if it can, or \f[C]ls\ \-al\f[]
-otherwise.
-through your pager, using color if it can.
-.RE
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]mkcd()\f[] creates a directory and changes into it.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]mysql()\f[] allows shortcuts to MySQL configuration files stored in
-\f[C]~/.mysql\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]path()\f[] manages the contents of \f[C]PATH\f[] conveniently.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]pd()\f[] changes to the argument's parent directory.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]pwgen()\f[] generates just one decent password with
-\f[C]pwgen(1)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rcsdiff()\f[] forces a unified format for \f[C]rcsdiff(1)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rd()\f[] replaces the first instance of its first argument with its
-second argument in \f[C]$PWD\f[], emulating a feature of the Zsh
-\f[C]cd\f[] builtin that I like.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]scp()\f[] tries to detect forgotten hostnames in \f[C]scp(1)\f[]
-command calls.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]scr()\f[] creates a temporary directory and changes into it.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]sd()\f[] changes into a sibling of the current directory.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]sudo()\f[] forces \f[C]\-H\f[] for \f[C]sudo(8)\f[] calls so that
-\f[C]$HOME\f[] is never preserved; I hate having \f[C]root\f[]\-owned
-files in my home directory.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]tmux()\f[] changes the default command for \f[C]tmux(1)\f[] to
-\f[C]attach\-session\ \-d\f[] if a session exists, or creates a new
-session if one doesn't.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]ud()\f[] changes into an indexed ancestor of a directory.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]vim()\f[] defines three functions to always use \f[C]vim(1)\f[] as
-my \f[C]ex(1)\f[], \f[C]vi(1)\f[] and \f[C]view(1)\f[] implementation if
-it's available.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]vr()\f[] tries to change to the root directory of a source control
-repository.
-.PP
-There are a few other little tricks defined for other shells, mostly in
-\f[C]bash/bashrc.d\f[]:
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]keep()\f[] stores ad\-hoc shell functions and variables.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]prompt()\f[] sets up my interactive prompt.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]pushd()\f[] adds a default destination of \f[C]$HOME\f[] to the
-\f[C]pushd\f[] builtin.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]vared()\f[] allows interactively editing a variable with Readline,
-emulating a Zsh function I like by the same name.
-.SS Completion
-.PP
-I find the \f[C]bash\-completion\f[] package a bit too heavy for my
-tastes, and turn it off using a stub file installed in
-\f[C]\&.config/bash_completion\f[].
-The majority of the time I just want to complete paths anyway, and this
-makes for a quicker startup without a lot of junk functions in my Bash
-namespace.
-.PP
-I do make some exceptions with completions defined in
-\f[C]\&.bash_completion.d\f[] files for things I really do get tired of
-typing repeatedly:
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Builtins, commands, help topics, shell options, and variables
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]ftp(1)\f[] hostnames from \f[C]~/.netrc\f[]
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]git(1)\f[] branch names
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]gpg(1)\f[] long options
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]make(1)\f[] targets read from a \f[C]Makefile\f[]
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]man(1)\f[] page titles
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]mysql(1)\f[] databases from \f[C]~/.mysql/*.cnf\f[]
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]pass(1)\f[] entries
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]ssh(1)\f[] hostnames from \f[C]~/.ssh/config\f[]
-.PP
-I also add completions for my own scripts and functions where useful.
-The completions are dynamically loaded if Bash is version 4.0 or
-greater.
-Otherwise, they're all loaded on startup.
-.SS pdksh
-.PP
-The pdksh configuration files and functions are not nearly as featureful
-as the Bash ones.
-They're tested on OpenBSD and FreeBSD pdksh implementations, but the
-former is the primary system for which I'm maintaining them, and there
-are some feature differences.
-.SS Zsh
-.PP
-These are experimental; I do not like Zsh much at the moment.
-The files started as a joke (\f[C]exec\ bash\f[]).
-.SS GnuPG
-.PP
-The configuration for GnuPG is intended to follow RiseUp's OpenPGP best
-practices (https://riseup.net/en/security/message-security/openpgp/best-practices).
-The configuration file is rebuilt using \f[C]m4(1)\f[] and
-\f[C]make(1)\f[] because it requires hard\-coding a path to the SKS
-keyserver certificate authority, and neither tilde nor \f[C]$HOME\f[]
-expansion works for this.
-.SS Mutt
-.PP
-My mail is kept in individual Maildirs under \f[C]~/Mail\f[], with
-\f[C]inbox\f[] being where most unfiltered mail is sent.
-I use Getmail (http://pyropus.ca/software/getmail/),
-maildrop (http://www.courier-mta.org/maildrop/), and
-MSMTP (http://msmtp.sourceforge.net/); the configurations for these are
-not included here.
-I sign whenever I have some indication that the recipient might be using
-a PGP implementation, and I encrypt whenever I have a public key
-available for them.
-The GnuPG interfacing is done with
-GPGme (https://www.gnupg.org/related_software/gpgme/), rather than
-defining commands for each crypto operation.
-I wrote an article about this
-setup (https://sanctum.geek.nz/arabesque/linux-crypto-email/) if it
-sounds appealing.
-.PP
-You'll need Abook (http://abook.sourceforge.net/) installed if you want
-to use the \f[C]query_command\f[] I have defined, and
-msmtp (http://msmtp.sourceforge.net/) for the \f[C]sendmail\f[] command.
-.SS rxvt\-unicode
-.PP
-I've butchered the URxvt Perl extensions
-\f[C]selection\-to\-clipboard\f[] and \f[C]selection\f[] into a single
-\f[C]select\f[] extension in \f[C]~/.urxvt/ext\f[], which is the only
-extension I define in \f[C]~/.Xresources\f[].
-.PP
-The included \f[C]\&.Xresources\f[] file assumes that \f[C]urxvt\f[] can
-use 256 colors and Perl extensions.
-If you're missing functionality, try changing \f[C]perl\-ext\-common\f[]
-to \f[C]default\f[].
-.PP
-My choice of font is Ubuntu Mono (http://font.ubuntu.com/), but the file
-should allow falling back to the more common Deja Vu Sans
-Mono (http://dejavu-fonts.org/wiki/Main_Page).
-I've found Terminus (http://terminus-font.sourceforge.net/) works well
-too, but bitmap fonts are not really my cup of tea.
-The Lohit Kannada font bit is purely to make ಠ_ಠ work correctly.
-( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°) seems to work out of the box.
-.SS tmux
-.PP
-These are just generally vi\-friendly settings, not much out of the
-ordinary.
-Note that the configuration presently uses a hard\-coded 256\-color
-colorscheme, and uses non\-login shells, with an attempt to control the
-environment to stop shells thinking they have access to an X display.
-.PP
-The configuration file is created with \f[C]m4(1)\f[] to allow
-specifying a color theme.
-This is just because I use a different color for my work session.
-The default is a dark grey.
-.PP
-The configuration for Bash includes a \f[C]tmux\f[] function designed to
-make \f[C]attach\f[] into the default command if no arguments are given
-and sessions do already exist.
-The default command is normally \f[C]new\-session\f[].
-.SS Vim
-.PP
-The majority of the \f[C]\&.vimrc\f[] file is just setting options, with
-a few mappings.
-I try not to deviate too much from the Vim defaults behaviour in terms
-of interactive behavior and keybindings.
-.PP
-The configuration is extensively commented, mostly because I was reading
-through it one day and realised I'd forgotten what half of it did.
-Plugins are loaded using \@tpope's
-pathogen.vim (https://github.com/tpope/vim-pathogen).
-.SS Scripts
-.PP
-Where practical, I make short scripts into POSIX (but not Bourne)
-\f[C]sh(1)\f[], \f[C]awk(1)\f[], or \f[C]sed(1)\f[] scripts in
-\f[C]~/.local/bin\f[].
-A few of them still have Bashisms for various reasons.
-I try to use shell functions only when I actually need to, which tends
-to be when I need to tinker with the namespace of the user's current
-shell.
-.PP
-Installed by the \f[C]install\-bin\f[] target:
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Three SSH\-related scripts:
-.RS 2
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]sls(1df)\f[] prints hostnames read from a \f[C]ssh_config(5)\f[]
-file.
-It uses \f[C]slsf(1df)\f[] to read each one.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]sra(1df)\f[] runs a command on multiple hosts read from
-\f[C]sls(1df)\f[] and prints output.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]sta(1df)\f[] runs a command on multiple hosts read from
-\f[C]sls(1df)\f[] and prints the hostname if the command returns zero.
-.RE
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Five URL\-related shortcut scripts:
-.RS 2
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]hurl(1df)\f[] extracts values of \f[C]href\f[] attributes of
-\f[C]<a>\f[] tags, sorts them uniquely, and writes them to
-\f[C]stdout\f[]; it requires pup (https://github.com/ericchiang/pup).
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]murl(1df)\f[] converts Markdown documents to HTML with
-\f[C]pandoc(1)\f[] and runs the output through \f[C]hurl(1df)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]urlc(1df)\f[] accepts a list of URLs on \f[C]stdin\f[] and writes
-error messages to \f[C]stderr\f[] if any of the URLs are broken,
-redirecting, or are insecure and have working secure versions; requires
-\f[C]curl(1)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]urlh(1df)\f[] prints the values for a given HTTP header from a HEAD
-response.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]urlmt(1df)\f[] prints the MIME type from the \f[C]Content\-Type\f[]
-header as retrieved by \f[C]urlh(1df)\f[].
-.RE
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Three RFC\-related shortcut scripts:
-.RS 2
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rfcf(1df)\f[] fetches ASCII RFCs from the IETF website.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rfct(1df)\f[] formats ASCII RFCs.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rfcr(1df)\f[] does both, displaying in a pager if appropriate, like
-a \f[C]man(1)\f[] reader for RFCs.
-.RE
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Five toy random\-number scripts (not for sensitive/dead\-serious use):
-.RS 2
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rndi(1df)\f[] gets a random integer within two bounds.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rnds(1df)\f[] attempts to get an optional random seed for
-\f[C]rndi(1df)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rnda(1df)\f[] uses \f[C]rndi(1df)\f[] to choose a random argument.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rndf(1df)\f[] uses \f[C]rnda(1df)\f[] to choose a random file from
-a directory.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rndl(1df)\f[] uses \f[C]rndi(1df)\f[] to choose a random line from
-files.
-.RE
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Four file formatting scripts:
-.RS 2
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]d2u(1df)\f[] converts DOS line endings in files to UNIX ones.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]u2d(1df)\f[] converts UNIX line endings in files to DOS ones.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]stbl(1df)\f[] strips a trailing blank line from the files in its
-arguments.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]stws(1df)\f[] strips trailing spaces from the ends of lines of the
-files in its arguments.
-.RE
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Five stream formatting scripts:
-.RS 2
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]sd2u(1df)\f[] converts DOS line endings in streams to UNIX ones.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]su2d(1df)\f[] converts UNIX line endings in streams to DOS ones.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]tl(1df)\f[] tags input lines with a prefix or suffix, basically a
-\f[C]sed(1)\f[] shortcut.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]tlcs(1df)\f[] executes a command and uses \f[C]tl(1df)\f[] to tag
-stdout and stderr lines, and color them if you want.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]unf(1df)\f[] joins lines with leading spaces to the previous line.
-Intended for unfolding HTTP headers, but it should work for most RFC 822
-formats.
-.RE
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]apf(1df)\f[] prepends arguments to a command with ones read from a
-file, intended as a framework for shell wrappers or functions.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]ax(1df)\f[] evaluates an awk expression given on the command line;
-this is intended as a quick way to test how Awk would interpret a given
-expression.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]bel(1df)\f[] prints a terminal bell character.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]br(1df)\f[] launches \f[C]$BROWSER\f[], or a more suitable
-application for an URL if it knows of one.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]ca(1df)\f[] prints a count of its given arguments.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]cf(1df)\f[] prints a count of entries in a given directory.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]clrd(1df)\f[] sets up a per\-line file read, clearing the screen
-first.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]clwr(1df)\f[] sets up a per\-line file write, clearing the screen
-before each line
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]dmp(1df)\f[] copies a pass(1) entry selected by \f[C]dmenu(1)\f[]
-to the X CLIPBOARD.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]dub(1df)\f[] lists the biggest entries in a directory.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]edda(1df)\f[] provides a means to run \f[C]ed(1)\f[] over a set of
-files preserving any options, mostly useful for scripts.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]eds(1df)\f[] edits executable script files in \f[C]EDSPATH\f[],
-defaulting to \f[C]~/.local/bin\f[], for personal scripting snippets.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]fgscr(1df)\f[] finds Git repositories in a directory root and
-scrubs them with \f[C]gscr(1df)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]fnl(1df)\f[] runs a command and saves its output and error into
-temporary files, printing their paths and line counts
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]gms(1df)\f[] runs a set of \f[C]getmailrc\f[] files; does much the
-same thing as the script \f[C]getmails\f[] in the \f[C]getmail\f[]
-suite, but runs the requests in parallel and does up to three silent
-retries using \f[C]try(1df)\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]grc(1df)\f[] quietly tests whether the given directory appears to
-be a Git repository with pending changes.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]gscr(1df)\f[] scrubs Git repositories.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]han(1df)\f[] provides a \f[C]keywordprg\f[] for Vim's Bash script
-filetype that will look for \f[C]help\f[] topics.
-You could use it from the shell too.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]igex(1df)\f[] wraps around a command to allow you to ignore error
-conditions that don't actually worry you, exiting with 0 anyway.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]isgr(1df)\f[] quietly tests whether the given directory appears to
-be a Git repository.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]jfc(1df)\f[] adds and commits lazily to a Git repository.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]jfcd(1df)\f[] watches a directory for changes and runs
-\f[C]jfc(1df)\f[] if it sees any.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]maybe(1df)\f[] is like \f[C]true(1)\f[] or \f[C]false(1)\f[]; given
-a probability of success, it exits with success or failure.
-Good for quick tests.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]mkcp(1df)\f[] creates a directory and copies preceding arguments
-into it.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]mkmv(1df)\f[] creates a directory and moves preceding arguments
-into it.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]motd(1df)\f[] shows the system MOTD.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]pa(1df)\f[] prints its arguments, one per line.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]paz(1df)\f[] print its arguments terminated by NULL chars.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]pit(1df)\f[] runs its input through a pager if its standard output
-looks like a terminal.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]plmu(1df)\f[] retrieves a list of installed modules from
-\f[C]plenv\f[] (https://github.com/tokuhirom/plenv), filters out any
-modules in \f[C]~/.plenv/non\-cpan\-modules\f[], and updates them all.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rmrej(1df)\f[] deletes rejected hunks from a failed
-\f[C]patch(1)\f[] run.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]shb(1df)\f[] attempts to build shebang lines for scripts from
-\f[C]$PATH\f[].
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]spr(1df)\f[] posts its input to the sprunge.us pastebin.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]sshi(1df)\f[] prints human\-readable SSH connection details.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]stex(1df)\f[] strips extensions from filenames.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]sue(8df)\f[] execs \f[C]sudoedit(8)\f[] as the owner of all the
-file arguments given, perhaps in cases where you may not necessarily
-have \f[C]root\f[] \f[C]sudo(8)\f[] privileges.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]td(1df)\f[] manages a to\-do file for you with \f[C]$EDITOR\f[] and
-\f[C]git(1)\f[]; I used to use Taskwarrior, but found it too complex and
-buggy.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]try(1df)\f[] repeats a command up to a given number of times until
-it succeeds, only printing error output if all three attempts failed.
-Good for tolerating blips or temporary failures in \f[C]cron(8)\f[]
-scripts.
-.PP
-There's some silly stuff in \f[C]install\-games\f[]:
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]aaf(6df)\f[] gets a random ASCII Art
-Farts (http://www.asciiartfarts.com/) comic.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]acq(6df)\f[] allows you to interrogate AC, the interplanetary
-computer.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]kvlt(6df)\f[] translates input to emulate a style of typing unique
-to black metal communities on the internet.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]rndn(6df)\f[] implements an esoteric random number generation
-algorithm.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]xyzzy(6df)\f[] teleports to a marked location on the filesystem.
-.IP \[bu] 2
-\f[C]zs(6df)\f[] prepends \[lq]z\[rq] case\-appropriately to every
-occurrence of \[lq]s\[rq] in the text on its standard input.
-.SS Manuals
-.PP
-The \f[C]install\-bin\f[] and \f[C]install\-games\f[] targets install
-manuals for each script they install.
-There's also an \f[C]install\-dotfiles\-man\f[] target that uses
-\f[C]pandoc(1)\f[] to reformat this document as a manual page for
-section 7 (\f[C]dotfiles(7)\f[]) if you want that.
-I haven't made that install by default, because \f[C]pandoc(1)\f[] is a
-bit heavy.
-.PP
-If you want to use the manuals, you may need to add
-\f[C]~/.local/share/man\f[] to your \f[C]/etc/manpath\f[] configuration,
-depending on your system.
-.SS Testing
-.PP
-You can check that both sets of shell scripts are syntactically correct
-with \f[C]make\ check\-bash\f[], \f[C]make\ check\-sh\f[], or
-\f[C]make\ check\f[] for everything including the scripts in
-\f[C]bin\f[] and \f[C]games\f[].
-There's no proper test suite for the actual functionality (yet).
-.PP
-If you have ShellCheck (https://www.shellcheck.net/) and/or
-Perl::Critic (http://perlcritic.com/), there's a \f[C]lint\f[] target
-for the shell script files and Perl files respectively.
-The files don't need to pass that check to be installed.
-.SS Known issues
-.PP
-See ISSUES.markdown.
-.SS Note for previous visitors
-.PP
-Most of this repository's five\-year history was rewritten shortly after
-I moved it from GitHub to cgit, taking advantage of the upheaval to
-reduce its size and remove useless binary blobs and third\-party stuff
-that I never should have versioned anyway.
-If you've checked this out before, you'll probably need to do it again,
-and per\-commit links are likely to be broken.
-Sorry about that.
-.SS License
-.PP
-Public domain; see the included \f[C]UNLICENSE\f[] file.
-It's just configuration and simple scripts, so do whatever you like with
-it if any of it's useful to you.
-If you're feeling generous, please join and/or donate to a free software
-advocacy group, and let me know you did it because of this project:
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Free Software Foundation (https://www.fsf.org/)
-.IP \[bu] 2
-Software in the Public Interest (http://www.spi-inc.org/)
-.IP \[bu] 2
-OpenBSD Foundation (http://www.openbsdfoundation.org/)
-.SH AUTHORS
-Tom Ryder.