Merge branch 'development'

This commit is contained in:
2022-10-06 20:05:20 +02:00
3 changed files with 66 additions and 10 deletions

View File

@@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ GID = 0
BRANCH = $(shell git describe --all | cut -d/ -f2)
COMMIT = $(shell git rev-parse --short=8 HEAD)
BUILD = $(shell date +%Y.%m.%d.%H%M%S)
VERSION:= $(if $(filter $(BRANCH), development),$(version)-$(BRANCH)-$(COMMIT)-$(BUILD))
VERSION:= $(if $(filter $(BRANCH), development),$(version)-$(BRANCH)-$(COMMIT)-$(BUILD),$(version))
all: $(tool).1 cmd/$(tool).go buildlocal

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@@ -24,10 +24,10 @@ SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
Many programs generate tabular output. But sometimes you need to
post-process these tables, you may need to remove one or more columns or
you may want to filter for some pattern or you may need the output in
another program and need to parse it somehow. Standard unix tools such
as awk(1), grep(1) or column(1) may help, but sometimes it's a tedious
business.
you may want to filter for some pattern (See PATTERNS) or you may need
the output in another program and need to parse it somehow. Standard
unix tools such as awk(1), grep(1) or column(1) may help, but sometimes
it's a tedious business.
Let's take the output of the tool kubectl. It contains cells with
withespace and they do not separate columns by TAB characters. This is
@@ -73,6 +73,30 @@ DESCRIPTION
Finally the -d option enables debugging output which is mostly usefull
for the developer.
PATTERNS
You can reduce the rows being displayed by using a regular expression
pattern. The regexp is PCRE compatible, refer to the syntax cheat sheet
here: <https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Syntax>. If you want to read a
more comprehensive documentation about the topic and have perl installed
you can read it with:
perldoc perlre
Or read it online: <https://perldoc.perl.org/perlre>.
A note on modifiers: the regexp engine used in tablizer uses another
modifier syntax:
(?MODIFIER)
The most important modifiers are:
"i" ignore case "m" multiline mode "s" single line mode
Example for a case insensitve search:
kubectl get pods -A | tablizer "(?i)account"
OUTPUT MODES
There might be cases when the tabular output of a program is way too
large for your current terminal but you still need to see every column.

View File

@@ -162,12 +162,12 @@ tablizer \- Manipulate tabular output of other programs
.Ve
.SH "DESCRIPTION"
.IX Header "DESCRIPTION"
Many programs generate tabular output. But sometimes you need to
Many programs generate tabular output. But sometimes you need to
post-process these tables, you may need to remove one or more columns
or you may want to filter for some pattern or you may need the output
in another program and need to parse it somehow. Standard unix tools
such as \fBawk\fR\|(1), \fBgrep\fR\|(1) or \fBcolumn\fR\|(1) may help, but sometimes it's a
tedious business.
or you may want to filter for some pattern (See \s-1PATTERNS\s0) or you
may need the output in another program and need to parse it somehow.
Standard unix tools such as \fBawk\fR\|(1), \fBgrep\fR\|(1) or \fBcolumn\fR\|(1) may help, but
sometimes it's a tedious business.
.PP
Let's take the output of the tool kubectl. It contains cells with
withespace and they do not separate columns by \s-1TAB\s0 characters. This is
@@ -220,6 +220,38 @@ The numbering can be suppressed by using the \fB\-n\fR option.
.PP
Finally the \fB\-d\fR option enables debugging output which is mostly
usefull for the developer.
.SS "\s-1PATTERNS\s0"
.IX Subsection "PATTERNS"
You can reduce the rows being displayed by using a regular expression
pattern. The regexp is \s-1PCRE\s0 compatible, refer to the syntax cheat
sheet here: <https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Syntax>. If you want
to read a more comprehensive documentation about the topic and have
perl installed you can read it with:
.PP
.Vb 1
\& perldoc perlre
.Ve
.PP
Or read it online: <https://perldoc.perl.org/perlre>.
.PP
A note on modifiers: the regexp engine used in tablizer uses another
modifier syntax:
.PP
.Vb 1
\& (?MODIFIER)
.Ve
.PP
The most important modifiers are:
.PP
\&\f(CW\*(C`i\*(C'\fR ignore case
\&\f(CW\*(C`m\*(C'\fR multiline mode
\&\f(CW\*(C`s\*(C'\fR single line mode
.PP
Example for a case insensitve search:
.PP
.Vb 1
\& kubectl get pods \-A | tablizer "(?i)account"
.Ve
.SS "\s-1OUTPUT MODES\s0"
.IX Subsection "OUTPUT MODES"
There might be cases when the tabular output of a program is way too