From: david-sarah Date: Sun, 9 Jan 2011 01:01:19 +0000 (-0800) Subject: docs/frontends/CLI.rst: discuss commandline/output quoting issues and wildcards.... X-Git-Tag: allmydata-tahoe-1.8.2b1~77 X-Git-Url: https://git.rkrishnan.org/components/%22news.html//%22?a=commitdiff_plain;h=6ce3ec6d0d363e68c203f9546186f5163392febe;p=tahoe-lafs%2Ftahoe-lafs.git docs/frontends/CLI.rst: discuss commandline/output quoting issues and wildcards. refs #1135 --- diff --git a/docs/frontends/CLI.rst b/docs/frontends/CLI.rst index 7bb2d7fa..382e972f 100644 --- a/docs/frontends/CLI.rst +++ b/docs/frontends/CLI.rst @@ -4,6 +4,9 @@ The Tahoe-LAFS CLI commands 1. `Overview`_ 2. `CLI Command Overview`_ + + 1. `Unicode Support`_ + 3. `Node Management`_ 4. `Filesystem Manipulation`_ @@ -50,7 +53,33 @@ arguments. "``tahoe --help``" might also provide something useful. Running "``tahoe --version``" will display a list of version strings, starting with the "allmydata" module (which contains the majority of the Tahoe-LAFS functionality) and including versions for a number of dependent libraries, -like Twisted, Foolscap, pycryptopp, and zfec. +like Twisted, Foolscap, pycryptopp, and zfec. "``tahoe --version-and-path``" +will also show the path from which each library was imported. + +On Unix systems, the shell expands filename wildcards (``*`` and ``?``) +before the program is able to read them, which may produce unexpected +results for many ``tahoe`` comands. We recommend that you avoid using them. +On Windows, wildcards cannot be used to specify multiple filenames to +``tahoe``. + +Unicode Support +--------------- + +As of Tahoe-LAFS v1.7.0 (v1.8.0 on Windows), the ``tahoe`` tool supports +non-ASCII characters in command lines and output. On Unix, the command-line +arguments are assumed to use the character encoding specified by the +current locale (usually given by the ``LANG`` environment variable). + +If a name to be output contains control characters or characters that +cannot be represented in the encoding used on your terminal, it will be +quoted. The quoting scheme used is similar to `POSIX shell quoting`_: in +a "double-quoted" string, backslashes introduce escape sequences (like +those in Python strings), but in a 'single-quoted' string all characters +stand for themselves. This quoting is only used for output, on all +operating systems. Your shell interprets any quoting or escapes used on +the command line. + +.. _`POSIX shell quoting`: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/utilities/xcu_chap02.html Node Management @@ -120,10 +149,6 @@ contact that node instead of a local one. These commands also use a table of "aliases" to figure out which directory they ought to use a starting point. This is explained in more detail below. -As of Tahoe-LAFS v1.7.0 (v1.8.0 on Windows), passing non-ASCII characters to -the CLI should work. On Unix, the command-line arguments are assumed to use -the character encoding specified by the current locale. - Starting Directories --------------------