Provided by: mmv_2.5.1-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       mmv - move/copy/link multiple files by wildcard patterns

SYNOPSIS

       mmv [-m|-x|-r|-c|-o|-a|-l|-s] [-h] [-d|-p] [-g|-t] [-v|-n] FROM TO

DESCRIPTION

       move/copy/link multiple files by wildcard patterns

       The FROM pattern is a shell glob pattern, in which `*' stands for any number of characters and `?' stands
       for a single character.

       Use  #[l|u]N  in  the  TO  pattern  to  get  the  string  matched  by  the  Nth  FROM  pattern   wildcard
       [lowercased|uppercased].

       Patterns should be quoted on the command line.

       --help Print help and exit

       -V, --version
              Print version and exit

       -h, --hidden
              treat dot files normally  (default=off)

       -D, --makedirs
              create non-existent directories  (default=off)

       -m, --move
              move source file to target name

       -x, --copydel
              copy source to target, then delete source

       -r, --rename
              rename source to target in same directory

       -c, --copy
              copy source to target, preserving source permissions

       -o, --overwrite
              overwrite target with source, preserving target permissions

       -l, --hardlink
              link target name to source file

       -s, --symlink
              symlink target name to source file

       -d, --force
              perform file deletes and overwrites without confirmation

       -p, --protect
              treat file deletes and overwrites as errors

       -g, --go
              skip any erroneous actions

       -t, --terminate
              erroneous actions are treated as errors

       -v, --verbose
              report all actions performed

       -n, --dryrun
              only report which actions would be performed

       Mmv  moves (or copies or links, as specified) each source file matching a from pattern to the target name
       specified by the to pattern.  This multiple action is  performed  safely,  i.e.  without  any  unexpected
       deletion  of  files due to collisions of target names with existing filenames or with other target names.
       Furthermore, before doing anything, mmv attempts to detect any errors that would result from  the  entire
       set  of  actions  specified  and gives the user the choice of either proceeding by avoiding the offending
       parts or aborting.  mmv does support large files (LFS) but it does not  support  sparse  files  (i.e.  it
       explodes them).

       Older  versions  of  mmv supported interactive editing of the rename etc. operations, but using a fragile
       system that could not cope with certain characters, such as spaces, in filenames. Users who require  this
       functionality can use qmv(1) and friends (in the renameutils package).

                                                   The Task Options

       Whether  mmv  moves,  copies,  or  links is governed by the first set of options given above.  If none of
       these are specified, the task is given by the command name under which mmv was invoked:

               command name     default task

               mmv              --copydel
               mcp              --copy
               mln              --hardlink

       The task option choices are:

       --move:
              move source file to target name.  Both must be on the same  device.   If  the  source  file  is  a
              symbolic  link,  moves  the  link  without checking if the link's target from the new directory is
              different than the old.

       --copydel:
              same as --move, except cross-device moves  are  done  by  copying,  then  deleting  source.   When
              copying,  sets  the  permission  bits and file modification time of the target file to that of the
              source file.

       --rename:
              rename source file or directory to target name.  The target name must not include a path: the file
              remains in the same directory in all cases.

       --copy:
              copy  source  file  to  target  name.   Sets the file modification time and permission bits of the
              target file to that of the source file, regardless of whether  the  target  file  already  exists.
              Chains and cycles (to be explained below) are not allowed.

       --overwrite:
              overwrite  target  name  with  source file.  If target file exists, it is overwritten, keeping its
              original owner and permission bits.  If  it  does  not  exist,  it  is  created,  with  read-write
              permission  bits set according to umask(1), and the execute permission bits copied from the source
              file.  In either case, the file modification time is set to the current time.

       --hardlink:
              link target name to source file.  Both must be on the same device, and the source must  not  be  a
              directory.  Chains and cycles are not allowed.

       --symlink:
              same  as  --hardlink, but use symbolic links instead of hard links.  For the resulting link to aim
              back at the source, either the source name must begin with a '/', or the  target  must  reside  in
              either  the  current  or  the  source directory.  If none of these conditions are met, the link is
              refused.  However, source and target can reside on different devices, and  the  source  can  be  a
              directory.

       Only one of these options may be given, and it applies to all matching files.

                                                   The From Pattern

       The  from  pattern  is a filename with embedded wildcards: '*', '?', '['...']', and ';'.  The first three
       have their usual sh(1) meanings of, respectively, matching any string of characters, matching any  single
       character, and matching any one of a set of characters.

       Between  the  '[' and ']', a range from character 'a' through character 'z' is specified with "a-z".  The
       set of matching characters can be negated by inserting a '^' after  the  '['.   Thus,  "[^b-e2-5_]"  will
       match any character but 'b' through 'e', '2' through '5', and '_'.

       Note  that paths are allowed in the patterns, and wildcards may be intermingled with slashes arbitrarily.
       The ';' wildcard is useful for matching files at any depth in the directory tree.  It matches the same as
       "*/"  repeated  any  number  of  times, including zero, and can only occur either at the beginning of the
       pattern or following a '/'.  Thus ";*.c" will match all ".c" files in or  below  the  current  directory,
       while "/;*.c" will match them anywhere on the file system.

       In  addition, if the from pattern (or the to pattern) begins with "~/", the '~' is replaced with the home
       directory name.  (Note that the "~user" feature of csh(1) is not implemented.)  However, the '~'  is  not
       treated as a wildcard, in the sense that it is not assigned a wildcard index (see below).

       The  directories  "."  and  ".."  are  only  matched  against completely explicit from patterns (i.e. not
       containing wildcards).

       Files beginning with '.' are only matched  against  from  patterns  that  begin  with  an  explicit  '.'.
       However, if -h is specified, they are matched normally.

       Warning:  since the shell normally expands wildcards before passing the command-line arguments to mmv, it
       is usually necessary to enclose the command-line from and to patterns in quotes.

                                                    The To Pattern

       The to pattern is a filename with embedded wildcard indexes, where an index consists of the character '#'
       followed by a string of digits.  When a source file matches a from pattern, a target name for the file is
       constructed out of the to pattern by replacing the wildcard indexes by the actual characters that matched
       the referenced wildcards in the source name.  Thus, if the from pattern is "abc*.*" and the to pattern is
       "xyz#2.#1", then "abc.txt" is targeted to "xyztxt.".  (The first '*' matched "", and the  second  matched
       "txt".)   Similarly,  for  the  pattern  pair  ";*.[clp]" -> "#1#3/#2", "foo1/foo2/prog.c" is targeted to
       "foo1/foo2/c/prog".  Note that there is no '/' following the "#1" in the to  pattern,  since  the  string
       matched by any ';' is always either empty or ends in a '/'.  In this case, it matches "foo1/foo2/".

       To  convert  the string matched by a wildcard to either lowercase or uppercase before embedding it in the
       target name, insert 'l' or 'u', respectively, between the '#' and the string of digits.

       The to pattern, like the from pattern, can begin with a "~/" (see  above).   This  does  not  necessitate
       enclosing  the  to  pattern  in quotes on the command line since csh(1) expands the '~' in the exact same
       manner as mmv (or, in the case of sh(1), does not expand it at all).

       For all task options other than -r, if the target name is a directory, the real target name is formed  by
       appending  a  '/' followed by the last component of the source file name.  For example, "mmv dir1/a dir2"
       will, if "dir2" is indeed a directory, actually move "dir1/a" to "dir2/a".  However, if "dir2/a"  already
       exists and is itself a directory, this is considered an error.

       To  strip  any  character  (e.g.  '*',  '?',  or  '#')  of its special meaning to mmv, as when the actual
       replacement name must contain the character '#', precede the special character with a  '\'  (and  enclose
       the  argument in quotes because of the shell).  This also works to terminate a wildcard index when it has
       to be followed by a digit in the filename, e.g. "a#1\1".

                                                   Chains and Cycles

       A chain is a sequence of specified actions where the target name of one action refers to the source  file
       of another action.  For example,

       mmv
       a b
       b c

       specifies  the chain "a" -> "b" -> "c".  A cycle is a chain where the last target name refers back to the
       first source file, e.g. "mmv a a".  Mmv detects chains and cycles regardless of the order in which  their
       constituent  actions  are  actually  given.  Where allowed, i.e. in moving and renaming files, chains and
       cycles are handled gracefully, by performing them in the  proper  order.   Cycles  are  broken  by  first
       renaming one of the files to a temporary name.

                                               Collisions and Deletions

       When  any  two  or  more  matching  files  would  have  to be moved, copied, or linked to the same target
       filename, mmv detects the condition as an error before performing any actions.  Furthermore,  mmv  checks
       if  any  of  its  actions will result in the destruction of existing files.  If the -d (delete) option is
       specified, all file deletions or overwrites are done silently.  Under  -p  (protect),  all  deletions  or
       overwrites  (except  those  specified with "(*)" on the standard input, see below) are treated as errors.
       And if neither option is specified, the user is queried about  each  deletion  or  overwrite  separately.
       (The terminal is used for interactive queries, not standard input.)

                                                    Error Handling

       Whenever  any  error  in  the  user's action specifications is detected, an error message is given on the
       standard output, and mmv proceeds to check the rest of  the  specified  actions.   Once  all  errors  are
       detected, mmv asks the user whether to continue by avoiding the erroneous actions or to abort altogether.
       This and all other queries may be avoided by specifying either the -g (go) or -t (terminate) option.  The
       former  will resolve all difficulties by avoiding the erroneous actions; the latter will abort mmv if any
       errors are detected.  Specifying either of them defaults mmv to -p, unless -d is specified  (see  above).
       Thus, -g and -t are most useful when running mmv in the background or in a shell script, when interactive
       queries are undesirable.

                                                        Reports

       Once the actions to be performed are determined,  mmv  performs  them  silently,  unless  either  the  -v
       (verbose)  or -n (no-execute) option is specified.  The former causes mmv to report each performed action
       on the standard output as

       a -> b : done.

       Here, "a" and "b" would be replaced by the source and target names, respectively.  If the action  deletes
       the  old target, a "(*)" is inserted after the the target name.  Also, the "->" symbol is modified when a
       cycle has to be broken: the '>' is changed to a '^' on the action  prior  to  which  the  old  target  is
       renamed to a temporary, and the '-' is changed to a '=' on the action where the temporary is used.

       Under  -n,  none  of  the  actions are performed, but messages like the above are printed on the standard
       output with the ": done." omitted.

       Although mmv attempts to predict all mishaps prior to performing any  specified  actions,  accidents  may
       happen.   For  example,  mmv  does  not  check  for  adequate free space when copying.  Thus, despite all
       efforts, it is still possible for an action to fail after some others have already been  done.   To  make
       recovery  as easy as possible, mmv reports which actions have already been done and which are still to be
       performed after such a failure occurs.  It then aborts, not attempting to do anything else.

EXAMPLES

       Rename all *.jpeg files in the current directory to *.jpg:

          mmv '*.jpeg' '#1.jpg'

       Replace the first occurrence of abc with xyz in all files in the current directory:

          mmv '*abc*' '#1xyz#2'

       Rename files ending in .html.en, .html.de, etc. to ending in .en.html,  .de.html,  etc.  in  the  current
       directory:

          mmv '*.html.??' '#1.#2#3.html'

       Rename  music  files from <track no.> - <interpreter> - <song title>.ogg to <interpreter> - <track no.> -
       <song title>.ogg in the current directory:

          mmv '* - * - *.ogg' '#2 - #1 - #3.ogg'

EXIT STATUS

       Mmv exits with status 1 if it aborts before doing anything, with status 2 if it  aborts  due  to  failure
       after completing some of the actions, and with status 0 otherwise.

SEE ALSO

       mv(1), cp(1), ln(1), umask(1), qmv(1), qcp(1), imv(1), icp(1)

AUTHOR

       Written by Vladimir Lanin and Reuben Thomas.

BUGS

       If  the  search  pattern  is  not quoted, the shell expands the wildcards.  Mmv then (usually) gives some
       error message, but cannot determine that the lack of quotes is the cause.

       To avoid difficulties in semantics and error checking, mmv refuses to create directories.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 2023 Reuben Thomas <rrt@sc3d.org>.
       Copyright   ©   1990   Vladimir   Lanin.    Licence   GPLv3+:   GNU    GPL    version    3    or    later
       <https://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.
       This  is  free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.  There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent
       permitted by law.