Provided by: darktable_3.0.1-0ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       darktable - a digital photography workflow application

SYNOPSIS

           darktable [options] [IMG_1234.{RAW,...}|image_folder/]

       Options:

           --cachedir <user cache directory>
           --conf <key>=<value>
           --configdir <user config directory>
           -d {all,cache,camctl,camsupport,control,dev,fswatch, input,lighttable,
               lua,masks,memory,nan,opencl, perf,pwstorage,print,sql}
           --datadir <data directory>
           --disable-opencl
           -h, --help
           --library <library file>
           --localedir <locale directory>
           --luacmd <lua command>
           --moduledir <module directory>
           --noiseprofiles <noiseprofiles json file>
           -t <num openmp threads>
           --tmpdir <tmp directory>
           --version

DESCRIPTION

       darktable is a digital photography workflow application for Linux, Mac OS X and several other Unices.

       The application is designed to ease editing and consistent processing of large photo sessions and
       provides an easy to use digital lighttable and a set of sophisticated post-processing tools.

       Most processing is done in 32-bit floating point per channel mode in device independent CIE L*a*b* color
       space.  darktable is also fully color managed, which gives you full control over the look of the photos.

       The application relies on a modern plugin architecture thus making it easy for 3rd party developers to
       extend the existing capabilities of the application.  All lighttable and darkroom features are
       implemented as plugins, so you can create your plugins reusing existing code.  Most workflow specific
       things can also be scripted in Lua.

OPTIONS

       IMG_1234.RAW or image_folder/
           You may optionally supply the filename of an image or the name of a folder containing image files.
           If a filename is given darktable starts in darkroom view with that file opened.  If a folder is given
           darktable starts in lighttable view with the content of that folder as the current collection.  If
           there is already an instance of darktable running (using the same library) the image or folder will
           be opened there, using D-Bus to communicate between the two processes.

       --cachedir <cache directory>
           darktable keeps a cache of image thumbnails for fast image preview and of precompiled OpenCL binaries
           for fast startup.  By default the cache is located in "$HOME/.cache/darktable/".  There may exist
           multiple thumbnail caches in parallel - one for each library file.

       --conf <key>=<value>
           darktable supports a rich set of configuration parameters which the user defines in "darktablerc" -
           darktable's configuration file in the user config directory.  You may temporarily overwrite
           individual settings on the command line with this option - however, these settings will not be stored
           in "darktablerc".

       --configdir <config directory>
           This option defines the directory where darktable stores the user specific configuration.  The
           default place is "$HOME/.config/darktable/".

       -d <debug option>
           This option enables debug output to the terminal.  There are several subsystems of darktable and
           debugging of each of them can be activated separately.  You can use this option multiple times if you
           want debugging output of more than one subsystem.

           A few of those debug options are:

           control
               Enable job queue debugging.  If you redirect darktable's output to control.log and call
               ./tools/create_control_svg.sh control.log, you will get a nice control.svg with a visualization
               of the threads' work.

           cache
               This will give you a lot of debugging info about the thumbnail cache for lighttable mode.  If
               compiled in debug mode, this will also tell you where in the code a certain buffer has last been
               locked.

           perf
               Use this for performance tweaking your darkroom modules.  It will rdtsc-measure the runtimes of
               all plugins and print them to stdout.

           all Enable all debugging output. In general this is not very useful.

       --datadir <data directory>
           This option defines the directory where darktable finds its runtime data.  The default place depends
           on your installation.  Typical places are "/opt/darktable/share/darktable/" and
           "/usr/share/darktable/".

       --disable-opencl
           Prevent darktable from initializing the OpenCL subsystem.  Use this option in case darktable crashes
           at startup due to a defective OpenCL implementation.

       -h, --help
           Show the available command line options and exit.

       --library <library file>
           darktable keeps image information in an sqlite database for fast access.  The default location of
           that database file is "$HOME/.config/darktable/library.db".  You may give an alternative location,
           e.g. if you want to do some experiments without compromising your original library.db.  If the
           database file does not exist, darktable creates it for you.  You may also give ":memory:" as a
           library file in which case the database is kept in system memory - all changes are discarded when
           darktable terminates.

       --localedir <locale directory>
           The place where darktable finds its language specific text strings.  The default place depends on
           your installation.  Typical places are "/opt/darktable/share/locale/" and "/usr/share/locale/".

       --luacmd <lua command>
           A string containing lua commands to execute after lua initialization.  These commands will be run
           after your "luarc" file.

           If lua is not compiled in, this option will be accepted but won't do anything.

       --moduledir <module directory>
           darktable has a modular structure and organizes its modules as shared libraries for loading at
           runtime.  With this option you tell darktable where to look for its shared libraries.  The default
           place depends on your installation; typical places are "/opt/darktable/lib/darktable/" and
           "/usr/lib/darktable/".

       --noiseprofiles <noiseprofiles json file>
           darktable's profiled denoise module uses camera specific profile data that gets loaded from an
           external JSON file.  With this option the file to be loaded can be changed to allow testing
           alternative profiles.  The default profile file is "noiseprofiles.json" and is typically found in
           "/opt/darktable/share/darktable/" or "/usr/share/darktable/".

       -t <num openmp threads>
           darktable uses OpenMP to parallelize many computation steps and make use of all the available CPU
           cores.  With this option you can specify the number of threads to use. Valid values are between 1 and
           100.

       --tmpdir <tmp directory>
           The place where darktable stores its temporary files.  If this option is not supplied darktable uses
           the system default.

       --version
           Show the darktable version along with some important build options and exit.

DEFAULT KEYBINDINGS

       All modes

       l   Switch to lighttable view

       d   Switch to darkroom view

       t   Switch to tethered capture view

       m   Switch to map view

       s   Switch to slideshow view

       p   Switch to print view

       .   Switch between lighttable and darkroom views

       Ctrl-q
           Quit

       F11 Switch between fullscreen and normal modes of the application's window

       Esc Leave fullscreen mode

       Ctrl-h
           Show/hide header

       Tab Show/hide sidebars

       Lighttable mode

       g, Shift-g
           Navigate to top, bottom row

       PageUp, PageDown
           Navigate one page up, down

       '   Scroll center

       Down, Left, Right, Up
           Scroll down, left, right, up

       z   Preview image

       Ctrl-z
           Preview image with focus detection

       F1, F2, F3, F4, F5
           Color labels: toggle red, yellow, green, blue and purple

       1, 2, 3, 4, 5
           Star rating

       0   Strip all stars

       r   Mark as rejected

       l   Realign images to the grid

       Alt-1
           Zoom in on first visible image

       Alt-2, 3
           Adjust zoom

       Alt-4
           Zoom out completely

       Ctrl-a
           Select all images

       Ctrl-Shift-a
           Select no images

       Ctrl-i
           Invert selection

       Ctrl-d
           Duplicate image

       Ctrl-g, Ctrl-Shift-g
           Group/ungroup selected images

       Delete
           Remove image from collection

       Ctrl-c, Ctrl-Shift-c
           Copy all, selected history

       Ctrl-v, Ctrl-Shift-v
           Paste all, selected history

       Space
           Toggle selection of an image

       Return
           Select an image

       Ctrl-e
           Export currently selected images

       Ctrl-k
           Jump back to the previous collection

       Ctrl-t
           Open a popup to quickly tag an image

       Ctrl-Shift-i
           Import a folder

       Ctrl-j
           Jump to the filmroll of an image

       Darkroom mode

       Alt-1, 2, 3
           Zoom to 1:1, fill, and fit, respectively

       Ctrl-f
           Show/hide filmstrip

       Space, Backspace
           Step to next, previous image

       Ctrl-e
           Export current image

       Ctrl-c, Ctrl-Shift-c
           Copy all, selected history

       Ctrl-v, Ctrl-Shift-v
           Paste all, selected history

       o   Toggle show of over- and under-exposure

       Ctrl-g
           Toggle gamut check

       Ctrl-s
           Toggle softproofing

       Enter
           In Crop & Rotate module, commit the crop

       [, ]
           In Flip module, rotate 90 degrees ccw, cw

       <, >
           When drawing masks, decrease, increase brush opacity, respectively

       {, }
           When drawing masks, decrease, increase brush hardness, respectively

       [, ]
           When drawing masks, decrease, increase brush size, respectively

       Tethered mode

       Ctrl-f
           Show/hide filmstrip

       v   Toggle live view

       Map mode

       Ctrl-f
           Show/hide filmstrip

       Ctrl-z
           Undo

       Ctrl-r
           Redo

       Filmstrip (when the cursor is on top of the filmstrip)

       F1, F2, F3, F4, F5
           Color labels: toggle red, yellow, green, blue and purple

       1, 2, 3, 4, 5
           Star rating

       0   Strip all stars

       r   Mark as rejected

       Ctrl-d
           Duplicate image

       Ctrl-a
           Select all images

       Ctrl-Shift-a
           Select no images

       Ctrl-i
           Invert selection

       Ctrl-c, Ctrl-Shift-c
           Copy all, selected history

       Ctrl-v, Ctrl-Shift-v
           Paste all, selected history

       Slideshow mode

       Space
           Start/stop playback

SEE ALSO

       darktable-cli(1)

OTHER INFO

       Please visit darktable's website for news, blog and bug tracker: <https://www.darktable.org/>

       <https://www.darktable.org/usermanual/> The complete darktable usermanual.

       darktablerc.html An overview over all default config settings.  The default place depends on your
       installation.  Typical places are "/opt/darktable/share/doc/darktable/" and "/usr/share/doc/darktable/".

REPORTING BUGS

       Please use the bug tracker on <https://github.com/darktable-org/darktable/issues> to report bugs, feature
       requests and so on.

AUTHORS

       The principal developer of darktable is Johannes Hanika.  The (hopefully) complete list of contributors
       to the project is:

       * developers: Pascal Obry Aldric Renaudin Roman Lebedev Tobias Ellinghaus Ulrich Pegelow parafin Pascal
       de Bruijn Stefan Schöfegger Peter Budai johannes hanika Edouard Gomez

       * translators: Pascal Obry EdgarLux Ger Siemerink Timur I. Davletshin Michel Leblond Nicolas Auffray
       Timur Davletshin Jakub Filipowicz Matjaž Jeran Josep V. Moragues mepi0011 Heiko Bauke Maurizio Paglia
       Milan Knížek Novy Sawai Tomasz Golinski maruncz Báthory Péter Jacques Le Clerc Ragnar Wisloff Thomas
       Pryds Timur Irikovich Davletshin Tobias Ellinghaus shlomi braitbart Denis Dyakov Edgar De la Luz Shlomi
       Alon-Braitbart Simon Raffeiner Tomasz Goliński Ulrich Pegelow archont00 chri igmerti johannes hanika
       lkarcz

       * contributors (at least 4 commits): Aurélien PIERRE Andreas Schneider edgardoh rawfiner Philippe Weyland
       Heiko Bauke Nicolas Auffray EdgarLux Ger Siemerink hanno@schwalm-bremen.de Jakub Filipowicz Dan Torop
       Jacques Le Clerc Timur I. Davletshin phweyland Bill Ferguson Diederik ter Rahe Michel Leblond Sam Smith
       Timur Davletshin U-DESKTOP-HQME86Jmarco mepi0011 Alexis Mousset Matjaž Jeran Matthieu Moy Rikard Öxler
       junkyardsparkle Hanno Schwalm Denis Dyakov luzpaz Josep V. Moragues Marcello Mamino Mark-64 Wolfgang
       Goetz Robert Bridge maruncz mondoman712

       * Sub-module rawspeed contributors (at least 1 commit): Roman Lebedev Robert Bridge bobobo1618 luz.paz
       parafin Bastian Bechtold Martijn Courteaux Pascal de Bruijn chrunchyjesus dllu hanno@schwalm-bremen.de
       junkyardsparkle

       And all those of you that made previous releases possible

       This man page was written by Alexandre Prokoudine <alexandre.prokoudine@gmail.com> and Richard Levitte
       <richard@levittr.org>.  Additions were made by Tobias Ellinghaus <me@houz.org>.

HISTORY

       The project was started by Johannes Hanika in early 2009 to fill the gap (or, rather, a black hole) of a
       digital photography workflow tool on Linux.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (C) 2009-2017 by Authors.

       darktable is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GPL v3 or (at
       your option) any later version.