Provided by: fdupes_2.3.0-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       fdupes-help - fdupes interactive mode reference

INTRODUCTION

       When  run  interactively  (as fdupes --delete), fdupes will show a list of duplicates and prompt the user
       for further action.

       The user can tell fdupes which files to keep or delete by tagging them accordingly. Once tagged, the user
       can  instruct  fdupes  to  delete  any  files  that  have  been  tagged  for  deletion.  This can be done
       incrementally, if desired, successively tagging and deleting a limited number of files at a time until no
       more duplicates remain to be processed.

       There  are  several  ways  to  tag files in fdupes: individually using the cursor, by providing a list of
       files to keep, or by selecting files that match particular search criteria and tagging those as  desired.
       Each of these approaches is discussed in detail in the sections below.

SCROLLING THE LIST

       The list of duplicates can be scrolled as follows:

       PAGE DOWN
              Scroll down to the next page.

       PAGE UP
              Scroll up to preceding page.

       SHIFT + DOWN
              Scroll down by one line. Not supported on some terminals.

       SHIFT + UP
              Scroll up by one line. Not supported on some terminals.

MOVING THE CURSOR

       The  cursor tells fdupes which file and/or set of duplicates to act on, as described in the next section.
       The cursor's position can be changed as follows:

       DOWN   Advance cursor to the next file on the list.

       UP     Move cursor back to the previous file.

       TAB    Advance cursor to the next set of duplicates.

       BACKSPACE
              Move cursor back to the previous set.

       F3     Advance cursor to the next selected set, if any.

       F2     Move cursor back to the previous selected set, if any.

       It is also possible to jump directly to a particular set:

       'goto <index>'
              Move cursor to the top of the set indicated by index.

TAGGING FILES USING THE CURSOR

       Individual files can be tagged using the keys  below.  These  keys  all  act  on  the  current  file,  as
       identified by the cursor.

       SHIFT + RIGHT
              Tag current file for keeping.

       SHIFT + LEFT
              Tag current file for deletion.

       '?'    Remove tag from current file.

       Entire sets of files can be tagged by providing a list of indices in a comma-separated list. Files in the
       current set whose indices appear on the list will be tagged for keeping, while any other  files  in  that
       set will be tagged for deletion. As with individual files, the current set is identified by the cursor.

       As an example, given the following list of duplicates:

              Set 1 of 5:

                1 [ ] path/to/file_a
                2 [ ] path/to/file_b
                3 [ ] path/to/file_c

       Typing '1, 3' at the prompt and pressing ENTER will tell fdupes to tag file_a and file_c for keeping, and
       file_b for deletion. The special command 'all' will tag all files for keeping.

       There is one more command to deal with files in the current set:

       'rg'   Remove tags from all files in current set.

FILE SELECTION COMMANDS

       Another way to tag files is to first select them according to particular search criteria  and  then  tell
       fdupes what to do with them. The following commands can be used to select files for tagging:

       'sel <text>'
              Select any files whose paths contain the given text.

       'selb <text>'
              Select any files whose paths begin with the given text.

       'sele <text>'
              Select any files whose paths end with the given text.

       'selm <text>'
              Select any file whose path matches the given text exactly.

       'selr <expression>'
              Select any files whose paths match the given regular expression (see below).

       'dsel <text>'
              Deselect any files whose paths contain the given text.

       'dselb <text>'
              Deselect any files whose paths begin with the given text.

       'dsele <text>'
              Deselect any files whose paths end with the given text.

       'dselm <text>'
              Deselect any file whose path matches the given text exactly.

       'dselr <expression>'
              Deselect any files whose paths match the given regular expression (see below).

       'csel' Clear all selections.

       'isel' Invert  selections within selected sets. For example, if files 1 and 4 in a set of 5 are selected,
              isel will deselect files 1 and 4, and select files 2, 3, and 5.  Immediately  repeating  the  same
              command  will  deselect files 2, 3, and 5, and select files 1 and 4, restoring selections to their
              previous state.

TAGGING SELECTED FILES

       Once some files have been selected using the commands described above, the following commands can be used
       to tag selected files as desired:

       'ks'   Tag selected files for keeping.

       'ds'   Tag selected files for deletion.

       'rs'   Remove all tags from selected files.

DELETING DUPLICATES

       Once  tagged  for  deletion, files can be deleted by pressing DELETE or using the 'prune' command. Fdupes
       will delete any files that are tagged for deletion and delist any sets whose remaining  files  have  been
       tagged  for  keeping.  For safety, fdupes will refuse to act on sets for which all files have been tagged
       for deletion. To handle these cases, tag at least one file for keeping and run the delete command again.

OTHER COMMANDS

       'exit', 'quit'
              Exit the program.

       'help' Display this help text.

REGULAR EXPRESSIONS

       A regular expression is a sequence of characters defining a search pattern against which other  character
       sequences  can  be  compared.  Strings of characters that follow the pattern defined by an expression are
       said to match the expression, whereas strings that break the pattern do not.

       The syntax for regular expressions used by fdupes is known as  the  Perl  Compatible  Regular  Expression
       syntax.  A  detailed  description  of regular expression syntax is beyond the scope of this document. For
       detailed information the user is encouraged to consult the PCRE2 documentation:

              https://www.pcre.org/current/doc/html/pcre2syntax.html

       Briefly, here are some examples of regular expressions:

       abc123 Will match any string containing the sequence  abc123,  such  as  abc123,  abc123x,  xabc123,  and
              xabc123x.

       ^abc123
              Will  match  any  string  beginning  with  abc123,  such as abc123 and abc123x, but not xabc123 or
              xabc123x.  The character '^' has special meaning, telling the program to match only those  strings
              that begin with the pattern that follows.

       abc123$
              Will  match  any  string  that  ends  with  abc123, such as abc123 and xabc123, but not abc123x or
              xabc123x.  The character '$' has special meaning, telling the program to match only those  strings
              that end with the preceding pattern.

       ^abc123$
              Will match the string abc123 and no other.

       ab.123 Will  match  any  string containing abc123 as in the first example, but it will also match strings
              containing abz123, ab0123, ab_123, etc. The  character  '.'  has  special  meaning,  acting  as  a
              placeholder that will match any character in that position.

       ^a.*3$ Will  match  any  string beginning with the letter a and ending with the number 3, such as abc123,
              a3, and a0b1c2d3.  Here the character '*' tells the program to accept any  number  of  appearances
              (including  none)  for  the preceding item (here, any character matching the placeholder character
              '.'). The characters '^' and '$' have the same meaning as in previous examples.

       abc\d+ Will match any string containing the characters abc followed immediately by one  or  more  decimal
              digits,  such  as  abc123  and  abc3210, but not abcd123 or abc 123 (note the space). Here \d is a
              placeholder for any decimal digit, while the character '+' tells the program to match one or  more
              appearances of the preceding character or placeholder (here, \d).

       \w+\d+ Will match any string containing one or more "word" characters followed immediately by one or more
              decimal digits, such as abc123 and abcd3210, but not abc 123  (note  the  space).  Here  \w  is  a
              placeholder  for  a  "word"  character,  and  \d and '+' have the same meaning as in the preceding
              example.

       This is just scratching the surface of what can be done  with  regular  expressions.  Consult  the  PCRE2
       documentation for a complete reference.

SEE ALSO

       The fdupes man page, fdupes(1).

                                                                                                  FDUPES-HELP(7)