test workflow

o-o

Enables commands that assume the standard input and output to read and write to files specified in the command line.

What? Why?

Have you ever had trouble with interference between command-invoking command and redirect?

For example, a command line:

sh ls *.txt | xargs -I {} head -n 3 {} > {}-head.out

does NOT create *-head.out file for each of the *.txt files but creates one file {}-head.out containing outputs of all head command executions.

The command o-o is here to help!

You can now run as follows:

sh ls *.txt | xargs -I {} o-o - {}-head.out - head -3 {}

Usage

The o-o arguments are the standard input, standard output, and standard error output of the child process, and the subsequent arguments are the command line to start the child process.

If you specify - as the file name for standard input, etc., it will not be redirected. Putting + in front of a file name will open the file in append mode.

``` Start a sub-process and redirect its standard I/O's.

Usage: o-o [options] [--] ... o-o --help o-o --version

Options: File served as the standard input. - for no redirection. File served as the standard output. - for no redirection. = for the same file as the standard input. . for /dev/null. File served as the standard error. - for no redirection. = for the same file as the standard output. . for /dev/null. Prefixing the file name with + will append to the file (same as >>). -e VAR=VALUE Environment variables. --pipe=STR, -p STR Use the string for connecting sub-processes by pipe (that is, |). --force-overwrite, -F Overwrite the file even when exit status != 0. Valid only when is =. --working-directory=DIR, -d DIR Working directory. ```

Installation

Use the cargo command to install.

sh cargo install o-o

License

MIT/Apache-2.0

Todos