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HFSSH(1) General Commands Manual HFSSH(1)

NAME

hfssh - Tcl interpreter with HFS extensions

SYNOPSIS

hfssh [script]

DESCRIPTION

hfssh is a Tcl interpreter like tclsh(1) but which also implements the following extensions to support manipulation of Macintosh HFS media:

Mounts the indicated HFS partition from the given path. An HFS volume handle is returned, which may be used for further volume commands described below.
The given path is overwritten with a Macintosh partition structure which can accommodate up to nparts partitions. All space on the medium is initially allocated to an empty partition, from which new partitions can be created using hfs mkpart. The number of blocks in this empty space available for partitioning is returned.
A new HFS partition is created from the available free space on the specified Macintosh-partitioned medium. The partition is created with a size of nblocks. Any remaining free blocks left in the empty partition space can be further allocated to other new partitions, as long as there are enough partition slots remaining.
N.B. When the last remaining partition slot is used, all remaining free space must be allocated to it. It is therefore best to consider this when initially creating the total number of partition slots with hfs zero.
This command returns the number of HFS partitions which exist on the Macintosh-formatted medium specified by path. If path does not appear to have a Macintosh partition map, or if an error occurs, this command will return -1. Otherwise, it will return a number greater than or equal to 0.
This command creates a new HFS volume by formatting the given path and partition partno and giving it a volume label vname.
If it is desired to "spare" some blocks from being used by the volume, a list of "bad block" numbers can be given, relative to the beginning of the partition. The given blocks will be mapped out of use (if possible) and the size of the resulting volume will be decreased.
All pending changes to all open volumes are flushed immediately. This is useful to do periodically to avoid accidental loss of data when volumes are open for long periods of time.
This command translates the given string from the fromset character set to the toset set. Both fromset and toset can be one of latin1 (ISO 8859-1) or macroman (MacOS Standard Roman). A new (translated) string is returned.
The translation is not necessarily reversible, since the two character sets do not have a complete one-to-one mapping.
The current running version of hfsutils is returned.
A copyright notice is returned.
The name and email address of the author of hfsutils is returned.
A license statement for hfsutils is returned.
The volume name of the given vol handle is returned. This is also the name of the volume's root directory, needed to construct absolute pathnames on the volume.
A list of two numbers is returned; the first is the total size of the given vol (in bytes), and the second is the number of free bytes that are currently available.
The creation date of the given vol is returned, expressed as a number of seconds since 00:00:00 01-Jan-1970 UTC.
The last modification date of the given vol is returned, expressed as a number of seconds since 00:00:00 01-Jan-1970 UTC.
A boolean value (either 1 or 0) is returned, indicating whether the given vol handle is locked for read-only access. It may be locked because the medium is physically locked through hardware, or because the medium was opened read-only for special reasons (such as another process also has the medium open).
The indicated vol is unmounted, flushing any unsaved data to the volume and closing the access path to the medium. The vol handle subsequently becomes invalid for further use.
A numeric value is returned indicating the catalog node ID (CNID) of the current working directory on the given vol. This value can be passed to vol dirinfo to learn the directory's name and parent CNID.
A list of directory names is returned, representing the hierarchy between the root and the current directory. These names can be joined with vol sepchar characters (:) to construct an absolute pathname to the current directory.
The same information can be acquired by traversing the CNIDs from the current directory to the root using vol dirinfo. (The root directory always has a CNID of 2.)
A list is returned describing the contents of the given directory path (defaulting to the current directory) on the given vol. Each element of the list describes one entry, and contains a set of attribute/value pairs represented as another list, suitable for assignment to a Tcl array using array set.
All pending changes to the given volume are flushed immediately.
The HFS path separator character ":" is returned.
The current working directory on the given volume is changed to path, which may be either an absolute or relative path.
A two-element list describing the directory having the given cnid on the given vol is returned. The first element contains the name of the directory, while the second element contains the CNID of the directory's parent. Two CNID values are special: the root directory of the volume has CNID 2, and the "parent" of the root directory is returned with CNID 1.
The file on vol having the given path is opened. An HFS file handle is returned, which may be used for further file commands described below.
Information about the file or directory having the given path is returned in much the same way as vol dir except that only the single argument is described (not its contents).
A new directory on vol having the given path is created. All of the parent directories leading to path must already exist, but path itself must not.
The directory on vol with the given path is removed. The directory must be empty.
The file on vol with the given path is removed. Both resource and data forks of the file are deleted.
The modification time for the file or directory specified by path on the given vol is updated to the current time.
The given pattern is treated as a list of globbing patterns, each of which may be expanded to the names of files or directories on the given vol according to the globbing rules described in the hfsutils(1) documentation. The resulting pathnames are returned in a (possibly longer) list. If a pattern does not match any file or directory name, it is returned in the resulting list unchanged.
The folder named by the given path is "blessed" as the MacOS System Folder. For this to be useful, the folder should contain valid Macintosh System and Finder files.
The existing oldpath on the given vol is renamed to newpath, possibly changing its location at the same time. If newpath already exists, it must be a directory, and the item will simply be moved into it keeping the same name. (In the latter case, there must not be another file or directory already with the same name; in no case will another file or directory be overwritten.)
A new, empty file is created on vol having the given path, and an HFS file handle is returned in the same manner as vol open. The file is given the specified MacOS type and creator codes, which must be 4 character strings.
The given file srcpath located on vol is copied to dstpath located on dstvol (which may be the same as vol). The file and its attributes are copied verbatim; no translation is performed.
The specified local (UNIX) srcpath is copied into the given vol as a file having the specified (HFS) dstpath. A translation mode must be given as one of macbinary, binhex, text, or raw.
The specified (HFS) srcpath on the given vol is copied out as a local file having the specified (UNIX) dstpath. A translation mode must be given as one of macbinary, binhex, text, or raw.
The indicated file is closed, all pending changes to the file are flushed, and the file handle becomes invalid for any subsequent operation.
A numeric index is returned indicating the character position within file at which the next read or write operation will occur.
Information about the given file is returned in much the same way as vol stat.
If the given file is currently performing I/O on its data fork, the string "data" is returned. Otherwise, the string "rsrc" is returned. When files are opened, they will default to read/write on their data fork. The current fork may be changed with file setfork.
The current fork of the given file is set to fork (which must be one of data or rsrc), and the current read/write position is reset to the beginning of the file.
The character position for the next read or write on file is changed to pos, relative to the indicated from position, which must be one of start, current, or end. The default is to position relative to the start of the file.
length bytes are read from the current read/write position in file, and these bytes are returned as a string. This string may be shorter than length in some circumstances, or may even be empty, indicating the end of the file has been reached.
The given string is written to file at the current read/write position. The number of bytes actually written to the file is returned, and may be less than the length of the string in unusual circumstances (such as when the volume is full).

SEE ALSO

hfsutils(1), hfs(1), tclsh(1)

NOTES

Precautions are taken to ensure all open files and mounted volumes are cleanly closed and unmounted before exiting the shell, however abnormal termination (e.g. CTRL-C) can circumvent this, potentially leaving volumes in an inconsistent state. Judicious use of hfs flushall may help reduce this risk.

BUGS

Tcl does not provide a mechanism for manipulating arbitrary binary data. Therefore caution should be used when reading or writing files containing anything other than plain text.

AUTHOR

Robert Leslie <rob@mars.org>

19-Feb-1998 HFSUTILS