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tbl-dctrl(1)                      Debian administrator's manual                      tbl-dctrl(1)



NAME
       tbl-dctrl - generate tabular representations of data in dctrl format

SYNOPSIS
       tbl-dctrl [ options ] -c column-specification ...  [ filename ] ...

       tbl-dctrl --version

       tbl-dctrl --help

DESCRIPTION
       tbl-dctrl  creates tabular representations of data given to it in Debian control file for-
       mat.

       By default, tbl-dctrl reads the whole database, looking for  the  longest  entry  in  each
       requested column; it then outputs a table, with borders and column titles, where each col-
       umn is just wide enough to fit the longest entry.  Most of  this  behaviour  can  be  cus-
       tomized as described below.

       A  column is requested by specifying the -c (--column) switch with a column specification.
       The simplest kind of a column specification consists solely of the name of  a  field.   In
       such a case, tbl-dctrl will include in the output a column whose title is the literal col-
       umn specification and whose data is drawn from fields with that name.  At least one column
       must be requested.

       There  are  two  optional additions one can make to a column specification.  Prefixing the
       field name with some  text  followed  by  an  equality  sign  (for  example,  -c  'Package
       name=Package') modifies the column in such a way that the text before the equality sign is
       used as the column title, while the text after the equality sign is used as  the  name  of
       the  field  from  which data is drawn.  One can also append a colon followed by a positive
       whole number to the field name.  In such a case, the number after the colon specifies  the
       width  of  the  column.  These two additions can be used separately or together.  If there
       are more than one colon, the last one is significant.  If there are more than  one  equals
       sign,  the  first  one  is  significant.  Other colons and equals signs are used simply as
       data.  Note that the whole column specification must be given to tbl-dctrl  as  one  argu-
       ment, so if it contains spaces, it must be quoted for the shell.

       If  all  requested  columns  have a specified width, tbl-dctrl will produce output immedi-
       ately, not waiting for the whole input to be read in.

OPTIONS
       -d DELIMITER, --delimiter=DELIMITER
              Instead of drawing nice borders to the table, use the specified delimiter string to
              delimit columns in a row.

       -H, --no-heading
              Do not print a table heading (column titles).

       -l LEVEL, --errorlevel=LEVEL
              Set  debugging  level  to  LEVEL.   LEVEL is one of "fatal", "important", "informa-
              tional" and "debug", but the last may not be available, depending on  the  compile-
              time  options.   These  categories  are  given here in order; every message that is
              emitted when "fatal" is in effect, will be emitted in the "important" error  level,
              and so on.  The default is "important".

       -V, --version
              Print out version information.

       -C, --copying
              Print out the copyright license.  This produces much output; be sure to redirect or
              pipe it somewhere (such as your favourite pager).

       -h, --help
              Print out a help summary.

OPERANDS
       tbl-dctrl will read its input from the files named on the command line, in  the  specified
       order.   A  file called - represents the program's standard input stream.  If no files are
       named, the program behaves as if - alone had been named, that is, input is read  from  the
       standard input stream.

STDIN
       The standard input stream may be used as input as specified above in the OPERANDS section.

INPUT FILES
       All input to tbl-dctrl is in the format of a Debian control file.

       A Debian control (dctrl) file is  a  semistructured  single-table  database  stored  in  a
       machine-parseable text file.  Such a database consists of a set of records; each record is
       a mapping from field names to field content.  Textually, records are  separated  by  empty
       lines, while each field is encoded as one or more nonempty lines inside a record.  A field
       starts with its name, followed by a colon, followed by the field content.  The colon  must
       reside  on  the first line of the field, and the first line must start with no whitespace.
       Subsequent lines, in contrast, always start with linear whitespace (one or more  space  or
       tab characters).

       When  input  is read from multiple files, a record separator is implicit between two adja-
       cent files.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
       The standard locale environment, specifically  its  character  set  setting,  affects  the
       interpretation of input and output as character streams.

ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
       Standard Unix signals have their usual meaning.

STDOUT
       All  output is sent to the standard output stream.  The output is a tabular representation
       of the input database restricted to the specified fields.  Logically, the output is a  ta-
       ble; when the -d option is used, this table is represented simply by separating columns in
       each row by the specified delimiter; when the option is not used, a frame is drawn  around
       the table.  The order of the columns is the same as the order of the column specifications
       on the command line.

OUTPUT FILES
       There are no output files.

EXIT STATUS
       This utility exits with 0 when successful.  It uses a  nonzero  exit  code  inconsistently
       when an error is noticed (this is a bug).

CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
       In  case  of  errors in the input, the output will be partially or completely garbage.  In
       case of errors in invocation, the program will refuse to function.

EXAMPLES
       The following command line pipe outputs a table of all  packages,  with  their  maintainer
       data, sorted by the maintainer data, that have no content:
       % grep-available -FInstalled-Size --eq 0 | sort-dctrl -kMaintainer - |
         tbl-dctrl -cPackage -cMaintainer

SEE ALSO
       ara(1), apt-cache(1), dpkg(8), dpkg-awk(1), dpkg-query(1), grep-dctrl(1), sort-dctrl(1)

AUTHOR
       The tbl-dctrl program and this manual page were written by Antti-Juhani Kaijanaho.




Debian Project                              2006-04-02                               tbl-dctrl(1)

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