Provided by: jc_1.17.3-1_all bug

NAME

       jc - JSONifies the output of many CLI tools and file-types

SYNOPSIS

       COMMAND | jc PARSER [OPTIONS]

       or "Magic" syntax:

       jc [OPTIONS] COMMAND

DESCRIPTION

       jc JSONifies the output of many CLI tools and file-types for easier parsing in scripts. jc
       accepts piped input from STDIN and outputs a JSON representation of the previous command's
       output  to  STDOUT.  Alternatively, the "Magic" syntax can be used by prepending jc to the
       command to be converted. Options can be passed to jc immediately  before  the  command  is
       given. (Note: "Magic" syntax does not support shell builtins or command aliases)

OPTIONS

       Parsers:

              --acpi `acpi` command parser

              --airport
                     `airport -I` command parser

              --airport-s
                     `airport -s` command parser

              --arp  `arp` command parser

              --blkid
                     `blkid` command parser

              --cksum
                     `cksum` and `sum` command parser

              --crontab
                     `crontab` command and file parser

              --crontab-u
                     `crontab` file parser with user support

              --csv  CSV file parser

              --csv-s
                     CSV file streaming parser

              --date `date` command parser

              --df   `df` command parser

              --dig  `dig` command parser

              --dir  `dir` command parser

              --dmidecode
                     `dmidecode` command parser

              --dpkg-l
                     `dpkg -l` command parser

              --du   `du` command parser

              --env  `env` command parser

              --file `file` command parser

              --finger
                     `finger` command parser

              --free `free` command parser

              --fstab
                     `/etc/fstab` file parser

              --group
                     `/etc/group` file parser

              --gshadow
                     `/etc/gshadow` file parser

              --hash `hash` command parser

              --hashsum
                     hashsum command parser (`md5sum`, `shasum`, etc.)

              --hciconfig
                     `hciconfig` command parser

              --history
                     `history` command parser

              --hosts
                     `/etc/hosts` file parser

              --id   `id` command parser

              --ifconfig
                     `ifconfig` command parser

              --ini  INI file parser

              --iostat
                     `iostat` command parser

              --iostat-s
                     `iostat` command streaming parser

              --iptables
                     `iptables` command parser

              --iw-scan
                     `iw dev [device] scan` command parser

              --jobs `jobs` command parser

              --kv   Key/Value file parser

              --last `last` and `lastb` command parser

              --ls   `ls` command parser

              --ls-s `ls` command streaming parser

              --lsblk
                     `lsblk` command parser

              --lsmod
                     `lsmod` command parser

              --lsof `lsof` command parser

              --lsusb
                     `lsusb` command parser

              --mount
                     `mount` command parser

              --netstat
                     `netstat` command parser

              --ntpq `ntpq -p` command parser

              --passwd
                     `/etc/passwd` file parser

              --ping `ping` and `ping6` command parser

              --ping-s
                     `ping` and `ping6` command streaming parser

              --pip-list
                     `pip list` command parser

              --pip-show
                     `pip show` command parser

              --ps   `ps` command parser

              --route
                     `route` command parser

              --rpm-qi
                     `rpm -qi` command parser

              --sfdisk
                     `sfdisk` command parser

              --shadow
                     `/etc/shadow` file parser

              --ss   `ss` command parser

              --stat `stat` command parser

              --sysctl
                     `sysctl` command parser

              --systemctl
                     `systemctl` command parser

              --systemctl-lj
                     `systemctl list-jobs` command parser

              --systemctl-ls
                     `systemctl list-sockets` command parser

              --systemctl-luf
                     `systemctl list-unit-files` command parser

              --systeminfo
                     `systeminfo` command parser

              --time `/usr/bin/time` command parser

              --timedatectl
                     `timedatectl status` command parser

              --tracepath
                     `tracepath` and `tracepath6` command parser

              --traceroute
                     `traceroute` and `traceroute6` command parser

              --ufw  `ufw status` command parser

              --ufw-appinfo
                     `ufw app info [application]` command parser

              --uname
                     `uname -a` command parser

              --upower
                     `upower` command parser

              --uptime
                     `uptime` command parser

              --vmstat
                     `vmstat` command parser

              --vmstat-s
                     `vmstat` command streaming parser

              --w    `w` command parser

              --wc   `wc` command parser

              --who  `who` command parser

              --xml  XML file parser

              --yaml YAML file parser

       Options:

              -a     about jc (JSON output)

              -d     debug - show traceback (use -dd for verbose traceback)

              -h     help (-h --parser_name for parser documentation)

              -m     monochrome output

              -p     pretty print output

              -q     quiet - suppress warnings (use -qq to ignore streaming parser errors)

              -r     raw JSON output

              -u     unbuffer output (useful for slow streaming data with streaming parsers)

              -v     version information

EXIT CODES

       Any fatal errors within jc will generate an exit code of 100, otherwise the exit code will
       be 0. When using the "Magic" syntax (e.g. jc ifconfig eth0), jc will store the  exit  code
       of  the  program  being  parsed  and add it to the  jc exit code. This way it is easier to
       determine if an error was from the parsed program or jc.

       Consider the following examples using `ifconfig`:

              ifconfig exit code = 0, jc exit code = 0, combined exit code = 0 (no errors)

              ifconfig exit code = 1, jc exit code  =  0,  combined  exit  code  =  1  (error  in
              ifconfig)

              ifconfig exit code = 0, jc exit code = 100, combined exit code = 100 (error in jc)

              ifconfig exit code = 1, jc exit code = 100, combined exit code = 101 (error in both
              ifconfig and jc)

ENVIRONMENT

       You can specify custom colors  via  the  JC_COLORS  environment  variable.  The  JC_COLORS
       environment variable takes four comma separated string values in the following format:

       JC_COLORS=<keyname_color>,<keyword_color>,<number_color>,<string_color>

       Where  colors  are:  black,  red,  green,  yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, gray, brightblack,
       brightred, brightgreen, brightyellow, brightblue,  brightmagenta,  brightcyan,  white,  or
       default

       For example, to set to the default colors:

              JC_COLORS=blue,brightblack,magenta,green

              or

              JC_COLORS=default,default,default,default

STREAMING PARSERS

       Most  parsers  load  all  of  the  data  from STDIN, parse it, then output the entire JSON
       document  serially.  There  are  some  streaming  parsers  (e.g.  ls-s  and  ping-s)  that
       immediately  start  processing  and  outputing  the  data  line-by-line as JSON Lines (aka
       NDJSON) while it is being received from STDIN. This can significantly reduce the amount of
       memory required to parse large amounts of command output (e.g. ls -lR /) and can sometimes
       process the data more quickly. Streaming parsers have  slightly  different  behavior  than
       standard parsers as outlined below.

              Note: Streaming parsers cannot be used with the "magic" syntax

       Ignoring Errors

       You may want to ignore parsing errors when using streaming parsers since these may be used
       in long-lived processing pipelines and errors  can  break  the  pipe.  To  ignore  parsing
       errors,  use the -qq cli option. This will add a _jc_meta object to the JSON output with a
       success attribute. If success is true, then there were no  issues  parsing  the  line.  If
       success  is  false, then a parsing issue was found and error and line fields will be added
       to  include  a  short  error  description  and  the  contents  of  the  unparsable   line,
       respectively:

              Successfully parsed line with -qq option:
                     {

                       "command_data": "data",

                       "_jc_meta": {

                         "success": true

                       }

                     }

              Unsuccessfully parsed line with -qq option:
                     {

                       "_jc_meta": {

                         "success": false,

                         "error": "error message",

                         "line": "original line data"

                       }

                     }

       Unbuffering Output

       Most operating systems will buffer output that is being piped from process to process. The
       buffer is usually around 4KB. When viewing the output in the terminal the OS buffer is not
       engaged  so  output is immediately displayed on the screen. When piping multiple processes
       together, though, it may seem as if the output is hanging when the input data is very slow
       (e.g. ping):

              $ ping 1.1.1.1 | jc --ping-s | jq

              <slow output>

       This  is  because  the  OS  engages  the  4KB buffer between jc and jq in this example. To
       display the data on the terminal in realtime, you can  disable  the  buffer  with  the  -u
       (unbuffer) cli option:

              $ ping 1.1.1.1 | jc --ping-s -u | jq

              {"type":"reply","pattern":null,"timestamp":null,"bytes":"64","response_ip":"1.1.1.1","icmp_seq":"1","ttl":"128","time_ms":"24.6","duplicate":false}

              {"type":"reply","pattern":null,"timestamp":null,"bytes":"64","response_ip":"1.1.1.1","icmp_seq":"2","ttl":"128","time_ms":"26.8","duplicate":false}

              etc...

              Note: Unbuffered output can be slower for large data streams.

CUSTOM PARSERS

       Custom local parser plugins may be placed in a jc/jcparsers folder in your local "App data
       directory":

              - Linux/unix: $HOME/.local/share/jc/jcparsers

              - macOS: $HOME/Library/Application Support/jc/jcparsers

              - Windows: $LOCALAPPDATA\jc\jc\jcparsers

       Local parser plugins are standard python module files. Use the jc/parsers/foo.py parser as
       a template and simply place a .py file in the jcparsers subfolder.

       Local  plugin filenames must be valid python module names, therefore must consist entirely
       of alphanumerics and start with a letter. Local plugins may override default plugins.

       Note: The application data directory follows the XDG Base Directory Specification

CAVEATS

       Locale: For best results set the LANG locale environment variable to C or en_US.UTF-8. For
       example, either by setting directly on the command-line:

       $ LANG=C date | jc --date

       or by exporting to the environment before running commands:

       $ export LANG=C

       Timezones: Some parsers have calculated epoch timestamp fields added to the output. Unless
       a timestamp field name has a _utc suffix it is considered naive. (i.e. based on the  local
       timezone of the system the jc parser was run on).

       If a UTC timezone can be detected in the text of the command output, the timestamp will be
       timezone aware and have a _utc suffix on the key name. (e.g. epoch_utc) No other timezones
       are supported for aware timestamps.

EXAMPLES

       Standard Syntax:
              $ dig www.google.com | jc --dig -p

       Magic Syntax:
              $ jc -p dig www.google.com

       For parser documentation:
              $ jc -h --dig

AUTHOR

       Kelly Brazil (kellyjonbrazil@gmail.com)

       https://github.com/kellyjonbrazil/jc

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2019-2021 Kelly Brazil

       License:  MIT License