Provided by: tracker_1.6.2-0ubuntu1.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       tracker-info - Retrieve all information available for a certain file.

SYNOPSIS

       tracker info [options...] <file1> [[file2] ...]

DESCRIPTION

       tracker info asks for all the known metadata available for the given file.

       Multiple file arguments can be provided to retrieve information about multiple files.

       The  file  argument  can  be  either a local path or a URI. It also does not have to be an
       absolute path.

OPTIONS

       -f, --full-namespaces
              By default, all keys and values reported about  any  given  file  are  returned  in
              shortened     form,    for    example,    nie:title    is    shown    instead    of
              http://www.semanticdesktop.org/ontologies/2007/01/19/nie#title.  This makes  things
              much easier to see generally and the output is less cluttered. This option reverses
              that so FULL namespaces are shown instead.

       -c, --plain-text-content
              If the resource being displayed has nie:PlainTextContent (i.e.   information  about
              the  content  of  the resource, which could be the contents of a file on the disk),
              then this option displays that in the output.

       -i, --resource-is-iri
              In most cases, the file argument supplied points to a URL or PATH which is  queried
              for  according  to  the  resource  associated with it by nie:url. However, in cases
              where the file specified turns out to be the actual URN itself,  this  argument  is
              required  to  tell  "tracker  info"  not to do the extra step of looking up the URN
              related by nie:url.

              For example, consider that you store URNs by the actual  URL  itself  and  use  the
              unique nie:url in another resource (which is quite reasonable when using containers
              and multi-resource conditions), you would need this argument to tell "tracker info"
              that the file supplied is actually a URN not URL.

       -t, --turtle
              Output  results  as Turtle RDF. If -f is enabled, full URIs are shown for subjects,
              predicates and objects; otherwise, shortened URIs are used, and  all  the  prefixes
              Tracker knows about are printed at the top of the output.

ENVIRONMENT

       TRACKER_SPARQL_BACKEND
              This  option  allows  you  to  choose  which  backend you use for connecting to the
              database. This choice can limit your functionality. There are three settings.

              With "direct" the connection to the database is made directly to the file itself on
              the  disk,  there  is  no  intermediary daemon or process. The "direct" approach is
              purely read-only.

              With "bus" the tracker-store process is used to liase with the database queuing all
              requests  and  managing  the  connections  via  an  IPC  / D-Bus. This adds a small
              overhead BUT this is the only approach you can use if you  want  to  write  to  the
              database.

              With  "auto"  the  backend  is  decided  for  you,  much  like  it would be if this
              environment variable was undefined.

       TRACKER_PRAGMAS_FILE
              Tracker has a fixed set of PRAGMA settings  for  creating  its  SQLite  connection.
              With  this  environment  variable  pointing  to  a text file you can override these
              settings. The file is a \n separated list of SQLite queries to execute on any newly
              created SQLite connection in tracker-store.

SEE ALSO

       tracker-store(1), tracker-sparql(1).

       http://nepomuk.semanticdesktop.org/

       http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/