From 9ffbc67bd83770e6f253c4210f214e5510c4a758 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "B. Watson" Date: Wed, 16 Mar 2022 11:58:19 -0400 Subject: system/trashy: Clean up build. Signed-off-by: B. Watson --- system/trashy/trashy.8 | 108 ------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 108 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 system/trashy/trashy.8 (limited to 'system/trashy/trashy.8') diff --git a/system/trashy/trashy.8 b/system/trashy/trashy.8 deleted file mode 100644 index 76bc857651d58..0000000000000 --- a/system/trashy/trashy.8 +++ /dev/null @@ -1,108 +0,0 @@ -.\" trashy - an rm intermediary -.TH "trashy" "8" "" "Klaatu" "" -.SH "NAME" -trashy \- trash in the shell -.SH "SYNOPSIS" -\fBtrash\fP file1 file2... -.nf -\fBempty\fP [option] -.SH "DESCRIPTION" -.PP -There is an unhealthy habit that arises with many a POSIX user: the -careless and wreckless use of the dreaded \fBrm\fP command. \fBTrashy\fP -is a helpful intermediary that intervenes when you would otherwise use -\fBrm\fP. -.PP -\fBtrashy\fP attempts to be compliant with the Free Desktop specification for -desktop trash, meaning that you can use \fBtrashy\fP in conjunction -with a desktop environment and find your files in your desktop trash -just as if you had dragged and dropped them there yourself. You can -also restore the files by right-clicking and selecting `restore`, or -whatever method your desktop defines for that process. -.PP -.SH "USAGE" -.TP -Issue this command: -.PP -\fBtrash\fP foo -.PP -and foo will be moved to the system trash. -.PP -At this point, you have not yet removed the file from your system, so -if you wish to recover it, go and fetch it from your trash. There, now -isn't that nicer than \fBrm\fP? -.PP -When you're really really sure that everything in -your Trash wants to be nuked out of existance, then you can -issue the command: -.PP -trask --empty -.PP -and your Trash will be emptied. -.PP -If there are spaces in your filenames, first of all stop using spaces -in your filenames. Secondly, you must escape the space when you trash -it: -.PP -\fBtrash\fP foo\\ bar -.PP -If you issue \fBtrash\fP without any arguments, it tells you the -current size of your system trash. -.SH OPTIONS -.PP -.TP -.B -l, --list -Lists the contents of your trash can. -.TP -.B -v, --verbose -Makes \fBtrashy\fP verbose. -.TP -.B -w, --version, --which -Returns the version of trashy you are currently running. -w because -v -was already taken by verbose :-) -.TP -.B -d, --dry-run, --dryrun -Does not actually move or remove files, just shows what will happen if -you really did. The --empty process is verbose by default. -.PP -.SH "SYSTEM TRASH LOCATIONS" -.PP -On Linux, BSD, Ilumos, and Solaris, the system trash, by default, is -that defined by the Free Desktop specification: ~/.local/share/Trash -.PP -If you do not use an environment that plays nice with the Free Desktop -spec (ie, Mac OS) then trashy will attempt to detect and use -your actual system trash. -.PP -If all else fails, a ~/.trash directory is created and used. -.PP -.SH "BUGS AND ISSUES" -.PP -Things can get a little messy when you're trashing files from an -external drive because \fBtrash\fP currently moves the file from your external -drive to your system harddrive. It works, but it's not as graceful as, -say, creating a .trash folder on that external drive and hiding stuff -there until later. -.PP -.SH "ALTERNATIVES" -.PP -\fBTrashy\fP depends on BASH. There is a similar application called -trash-cli, which is Python-based. At this point, they do mostly the -same thing, but obviously if you do not run BASH or ZSH or similar, -then you might prefer a Python-based solution. -.SH "SEE ALSO" -.nf -.I rm (1) -.I mv (1) -.URL http://slackermedia.info/trashy -.URL https://github.com/andreafrancia/trash-cli -.fi -.PP -.SH "AUTHORS" -.nf -Klaatu (klaatu@member.fsf.org) -.fi -.PP -.SH "BUGS" -Email bugs reports or fixes to klaatu@member.fsf.org -.fi -- cgit v1.2.3