Provided by: serdi_0.32.2-1_amd64 bug

NAME

     serdi — read and write RDF syntax

SYNOPSIS

     serdi [-abefhlqv] [-c prefix] [-i syntax] [-o syntax] [-p prefix] [-r root] [-s string] input [base_uri]

DESCRIPTION

     serdi is a fast command-line utility for streaming and processing RDF data.  It reads an RDF document and
     writes the data to stdout, possibly transformed and/or in a different syntax.  By default, the input syntax
     is guessed from the file extension, and output is written in NTriples or NQuads.

     serdi can be used to check for syntax errors, convert from one syntax to another, pretty-print documents,
     or transform URIs and blank node IDs.

     The options are as follows:

     -a   Write ASCII output.  If this is enabled, all non-ASCII characters will be escaped, even if the output
          syntax allows them to be written in UTF-8.

     -b   Bulk output writing.  If this is enabled, output will be written a page at a time, rather than a byte
          at a time.

     -c prefix
          Chop prefix from matching blank node IDs.  This is typically used to revert the effects of -p.  For
          example, with prefix “doc01”, the blank node _:doc01b42 will be emitted as _:b42.

     -e   Eat input one character at a time, rather than a page at a time which is the default.  This is useful
          when reading from a pipe since output will be generated immediately as input arrives, rather than
          waiting until an entire page of input has arrived.  With this option serdi uses one page less memory,
          but will likely be significantly slower.

     -f   Fast and loose URI mode: preserve full URIs (without qualifying or making relative), and pass prefixed
          names through as-is.

     -h   Print the command line options.

     -i syntax
          Read input as syntax.  Case is ignored, valid values are: “NQuads”, “NTriples”, “TriG”, “Turtle”.

     -l   Lax (non-strict) parsing.  If this is enabled, recoverable syntax errors will print a warning, but
          parsing will proceed starting at the next statement if possible.  Note that data may be lost when
          using this option.

     -o syntax
          Write output as syntax.  Case is ignored, valid values are: “NQuads”, “NTriples”, “TriG”, “Turtle”.

     -p prefix
          Add prefix to blank node IDs.  This can be used to avoid clashes between blank node IDs in input
          documents.  The effects can be reversed in a later run with -c.  For example, with prefix “doc01”, the
          blank node _:b42 will be emitted as _:doc01b42.

     -q   Suppress all output except data.

     -r root
          Keep relative URIs within a root URI.  This will avoid creating any relative URI references with
          leading path segments like ../ that enter a parent of root.

          For example, if /home/you/file.ttl is written to the file /home/me/output.ttl using the destination's
          base URI, then it could be written as <../you/file.ttl>.  Setting -r file:///home/me/ would prevent
          references from “escaping” like this, so the above would instead be written as
          <file:///home/you/file.ttl>, since it can't be expressed relative to the root URI.

          This is useful for keeping relative references within some directory.

     -s string
          Parse string input instead of a file (terminates options).

     -v   Display version information and exit.

EXIT STATUS

     serdi exits with a status of 0, or non-zero if an error occurred.

EXAMPLES

     Pretty-print a document:
          serdi -o turtle file.ttl > out.ttl

     Print any errors:
          serdi file.ttl > /dev/null

SEE ALSO

     http://drobilla.net/software/serd/
     http://gitlab.com/drobilla/serd/

STANDARDS

     W3C, RDF 1.1 NQuads, February 2014.  https://www.w3.org/TR/n-quads/

     W3C, RDF 1.1 NTriples, February 2014.  https://www.w3.org/TR/n-triples/

     W3C, RDF 1.1 TriG, February 2014.  https://www.w3.org/TR/trig/

     W3C, RDF 1.1 Turtle, February 2014.  https://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/

AUTHORS

     serdi is a part of serd, by David Robillard d@drobilla.net.