# ouch (_work in progress_) `ouch` is the Obvious Unified Compression (and decompression) Helper. | Supported formats | .tar | .zip | .tar.{.lz,.gz, .bz} | .zip.{.lz, .gz, .bz, .bz2} | .bz | .gz | .lz, .lzma | |-------------------|------|------|------------------------------|------------------------------|-----|-----|------------| | Decompression | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | | Compression | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ## How does it work? `ouch` infers commands from the extensions of its command-line options. ``` ouch 0.1.1 Vinícius R. Miguel ouch is a unified compression & decompression utility USAGE: ouch [OPTIONS] --input ... FLAGS: -h, --help Displays this message and exits -V, --version Prints version information OPTIONS: -i, --input ... The input files or directories. -o, --output The output directory or compressed file. ``` ### Examples #### Decompressing a bunch of files ```bash $ ouch -i file{1..5}.zip another_file.tar.gz yet_another_file.tar.bz ``` When no output file is supplied, `ouch` infers that it must decompress all of its input files. This will error if any of the input files are not decompressible. #### Decompressing a bunch of files into a folder ```bash $ ouch -i file{1..5}.tar.gz -o some-folder # Decompresses file1.tar.gz, file2.tar.gz, file3.tar.gz, file4.tar.gz and file5.tar.gz to some-folder # The folder `ouch` saves to will be created if it doesn't already exist ``` When the output file is not a compressed file, `ouch` will check if all input files are decompressible and infer that it must decompress them into the output file. #### Compressing files ```bash $ ouch -i file{1..20} -o archive.tar ``` ### Error scenarios #### No clear decompression algorithm ```bash $ ouch -i some-file -o some-folder error: file 'some-file' is not decompressible. ``` `ouch` cannot infer `some-file`'s compression format since it lacks an extension. Likewise, `ouch` cannot infer that the output file given is a compressed file, so it shows the user an error. ## Installation ### Runtime dependencies `ouch` depends on a few widespread libraries: * libbz2 * liblzma Both should be already installed in any mainstream Linux distribution. If they're not, then: * On Debian-based distros `sudo apt install liblzma-dev libbz2-dev` * On Arch-based distros `sudo pacman -S xz bzip2` The last dependency is a recent [Rust](https://www.rust-lang.org/) toolchain. If you don't have one installed, follow the instructions at [rustup.rs](https://rustup.rs/). ### Build process Once the dependency requirements are met: * Installing from [Crates.io](https://crates.io) ```bash cargo install ouch ``` * Cloning and building ```bash git clone https://github.com/vrmiguel/ouch cargo install --path ouch # or cd ouch && cargo run --release ``` I also recommend stripping the release binary. `ouch`'s release binary (at the time of writing) only takes up a megabyte in space when stripped.