Provided by: rust-coreutils_0.0.20-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       coreutils

SYNOPSIS

       coreutils [-h|--help] [subcommands]

DESCRIPTION

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Print help

SUBCOMMANDS

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Checksum and count the blocks in a file.

              With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print  the last 10 lines of each FILE to standard output.  With more than one FILE,
              precede each with a header giving the file name.  With no FILE, or when FILE is  -,
              read standard input.

              Mandatory arguments to long flags are mandatory for short flags too.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Estimate file space usage

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Check whether file names are valid or portable

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Create the given DIRECTORY(ies) if they do not exist

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Number lines of files

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Shuffle  the  input by outputting a random permutation of input lines.  Each output
              permutation is equally likely.  With no FILE, or when  FILE  is  -,  read  standard
              input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Run COMMAND ignoring hangup signals.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print value of a symbolic link or canonical file name.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display  the current time, the length of time the system has been up, the number of
              users on the system, and the average number of jobs in the run queue over the  last
              1, 5 and 15 minutes.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Change the group of each FILE to GROUP.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Copy SOURCE to DEST, or multiple SOURCE(s) to DIRECTORY.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Create output files containing consecutive or interleaved sections of input

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print  the  prime factors of the given NUMBER(s).  If none are specified, read from
              standard input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              encode/decode data and print to standard output With no FILE, or when  FILE  is  -,
              read standard input.

              The  data  are  encoded  as  described  for  the base32 alphabet in RFC 4648.  When
              decoding, the input may contain newlines in addition to the  bytes  of  the  formal
              base32  alphabet.  Use  --ignore-garbage  to  attempt  to  recover  from  any other
              non-alphabet bytes in the encoded stream.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display file or file system status.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              List directory contents.  Ignore files and  directories  starting  with  a  '.'  by
              default

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print the value of `EXPRESSION` to standard output

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Copy, and optionally convert, a file system resource

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Write  content  of  given file or standard input to standard output with pagination
              filter

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Convert numbers from/to human-readable strings

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Prints specified byte or field columns from each line of stdin or the input files

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Topological sort the strings in FILE.  Strings  are  defined  as  any  sequence  of
              tokens  separated  by  whitespace  (tab, space, or newline), ordering them based on
              dependencies in  a  directed  acyclic  graph  (DAG).   Useful  for  scheduling  and
              determining execution order.  If FILE is not passed in, stdin is used instead.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print CRC and size for each file

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Remove (unlink) the FILE(s)

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Synchronize cached writes to persistent storage

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Write  lines  consisting  of the sequentially corresponding lines from each `FILE`,
              separated by `TAB`s, to standard output.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print  the  number  of  cores  available  to   the   current   process.    If   the
              `OMP_NUM_THREADS`  or  `OMP_THREAD_LIMIT`  environment variables are set, then they
              will determine the minimum and maximum returned value respectively.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print the numeric identifier (in hexadecimal) for the current host

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Check file types and compare values.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              List directory contents.  Ignore files and  directories  starting  with  a  '.'  by
              default

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print the resolved path

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print certain system information.  With no OPTION, same as -s.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Output commands to set the LS_COLORS environment variable.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print output based off of the format string and proceeding arguments.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Move `SOURCE` to `DEST`, or multiple `SOURCE`(s) to `DIRECTORY`.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Convert tabs in each `FILE` to spaces, writing to standard output.  With no `FILE`,
              or when `FILE` is `-`, read standard input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print group memberships for each `USERNAME` or, if no `USERNAME` is specified,  for
              the current process (which may differ if the groups data‐base has changed).

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print the file name of the terminal connected to standard input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Create a temporary file or directory.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Convert  TO  destination  to  the relative path from the FROM dir.  If FROM path is
              omitted, current working dir will be used.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display sorted concatenation of all FILE(s). With no FILE, or when FILE is -,  read
              standard input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compare two sorted files line by line.

              When FILE1 or FILE2 (not both) is -, read standard input.

              With  no  options, produce three-column output. Column one contains lines unique to
              FILE1, column two contains lines unique to FILE2, and column three  contains  lines
              common to both files.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display the full filename of the current working directory.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Overwrite  the  specified  FILE(s)  repeatedly, in order to make it harder for even
              very expensive hardware probing to recover the data.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display newline, word, and byte counts for each FILE, and a total line if more than
              one FILE is specified. With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Run `COMMAND` with an adjusted niceness, which affects process scheduling.  With no
              `COMMAND`, print the current niceness.  Niceness values range  from  at  least  -20
              (most favorable to the process) to 19 (least favorable to the process).

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Change  the  mode  of each FILE to MODE.  With --reference, change the mode of each
              FILE to that of RFILE.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display the values of the specified environment VARIABLE(s), or (with no  VARIABLE)
              display name and value pairs for them all.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Copy  SOURCE to DEST or multiple SOURCE(s) to the existing DIRECTORY, while setting
              permission modes and owner/group

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print or set the system date and time

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Run COMMAND with root directory set to NEWROOT.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Change file owner and group

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Displays brief user information on Unix-based systems

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Repeatedly display a line with STRING (or 'y')

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print information about users who are currently logged in.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Create the special file NAME of the given TYPE.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Copy standard input to each FILE, and also to standard output.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print NAME with any leading directory components removed If specified, also  remove
              a trailing SUFFIX

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Encode/decode  data  and  print to standard output With no FILE, or when FILE is -,
              read standard input.

              When decoding, the input may contain newlines in  addition  to  the  bytes  of  the
              formal  alphabet.  Use  --ignore-garbage  to  attempt  to  recover  from  any other
              non-alphabet bytes in the encoded stream.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Shrink or extend the size of each file to the specified size.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print the first 10 lines of each `FILE` to standard output.   With  more  than  one
              `FILE`,  precede  each with a header giving the file name.  With no `FILE`, or when
              `FILE` is `-`, read standard input.

              Mandatory arguments to long flags are mandatory for short flags too.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Returns true, a successful exit status.

              Immediately returns with the exit status `0`, except when invoked with one  of  the
              recognized  options.  In those cases it will try to write the help or version text.
              Any IO error during this operation causes the program to return `1` instead.

       coreutils-uu_env(1)
              Set each NAME to VALUE in the environment and run COMMAND

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Pause for NUMBER seconds.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Remove the DIRECTORY(ies), if they are empty.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Check file types and compare values.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              For each pair of input lines with identical join fields, write a line  to  standard
              output. The default join field is the first, delimited by blanks.

              When `FILE1` or `FILE2` (not both) is `-`, read standard input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Concatenate  FILE(s),  or  standard input, to standard output With no FILE, or when
              FILE is -, read standard input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              encode/decode data and print to standard output With no FILE, or when  FILE  is  -,
              read standard input.

              The  data  are  encoded  as  described  for  the base32 alphabet in RFC 4648.  When
              decoding, the input may contain newlines in addition to the  bytes  of  the  formal
              base32  alphabet.  Use  --ignore-garbage  to  attempt  to  recover  from  any other
              non-alphabet bytes in the encoded stream.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Dump files in octal and other formats

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display the contents of a text file

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Report or omit repeated lines.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Translate or delete characters

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Send signal to processes or list information about signals.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print user's login name

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Show information about the file system on which each  FILE  resides,  or  all  file
              systems by default.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Reformat paragraphs from input files (or stdin) to stdout.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Produce  a  permuted  index  of  file  contents  Output a permuted index, including
              context, of the words in the input files.  Mandatory arguments to long options  are
              mandatory  for  short  options too.  With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard
              input. Default is '-F /'.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Run `COMMAND`, with modified buffering operations for its standard streams.

              Mandatory arguments to long options are mandatory for short options too.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Change file owner and group

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print user and group  information  for  each  specified  `USER`,  or  (when  `USER`
              omitted) for the current user.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display machine architecture

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Convert blanks in each `FILE` to tabs, writing to standard output.  With no `FILE`,
              or when `FILE` is `-`, read standard input.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print the user names of users currently logged in to the current host.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Update the access and modification times of each `FILE` to the current time.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Create a FIFO with the given name.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Split a file into sections determined by context lines

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Print the current username.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Returns false, an unsuccessful exit status.

              Immediately returns with the  exit  status  `1`.  When  invoked  with  one  of  the
              recognized  options  it  will  try  to write the help or version text. Any IO error
              during this operation is diagnosed, yet the program will also return `1`.

       coreutils-timeout(1)
              Start `COMMAND`, and kill it if still running after `DURATION`.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Change the SELinux security context of each FILE  to  CONTEXT.   With  --reference,
              change the security context of each FILE to that of RFILE.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display or set the system's host name.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Unlink the file at `FILE`.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Run command with specified security context under SELinux enabled systems.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Compute and check message digests.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Call the link function to create a link named FILE2 to an existing FILE1.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Strip last component from file name

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Write each file to standard output, last line first.

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              List  directory  contents.   Ignore  files  and  directories starting with a '.' by
              default

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Display a line of text

       coreutils-coreutils(1)
              Writes each file (or standard input if no  files  are  given)  to  standard  output
              whilst breaking long lines

       coreutils-help(1)
              Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)

                                            coreutils                                coreutils(1)