NAME¶
vileget - Pass file edit requests to a Vile editor running Vileserv.
SYNOPSIS¶
vileget [
-n] [
-d] [
-w] [
-s socket-path]
[
-c command] [
-C command] [
file ...]
DESCRIPTION¶
Vileget can be used to load files into an already running instance of Vile or
XVile. The editor should have already loaded and started the Vileserv perl
module. (See the Vileserv documentation for more detail.)
By default, if vileget cannot connect to a running instance of the editor it
tries to start a new one. This will only work correctly if you have configured
Vile to start Vileserv automatically. (Vileget will try to find an XVile
binary first, then look for a Vile binary.)
Vileget looks for the Vileserv socket in the user's home directory (
$HOME /.vilesock) by default. This can be changed by
setting the
VILESOCK environment variable, or by using the
-s
option.
If vileget is handed a directory name, it trys to get the target Vile to load
the
directory.pm module and popup the appropriate directory listing.
This only works for the first directory mentioned on the command line, and it
only works if the target Vile is configured to accept remote commands (see the
-c/-C options).
COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS¶
- -d
- With this option, vileget will change the current working directory of the
running Vile to be the directory in which vileget is being run, in
addition to loading any requested files.
- -n
- This tells vileget NOT to try starting a new instance of Vile if
necessary. If vileget cannot connect to a running Vile, it will just die
with a connection error instead.
- -w
- Vileget waits for given file(s) to be written by Vile before exiting.
- -s socket-path
- Tells vileget to use the socket given by socket-path. This
overrides the default and the environment variable VILESOCK.
- -c command
- -C command
- The -c and -C options can be used to pass arbitrary Vile
commands to a running instance of Vile. These can be used at the same time
that file edits are being requested, or without giving any files at all.
When file arguments are used, the -c option can be used to execute
a Vile command before the requested files are loaded. The -C
option is used to execute a Vile command after the requested files
are loaded. If no file arguments are given, then -c and -C
are basically the same, except that -c has precedence. These
options are non-repeatable, so you can only execute two Vile commands per
invocation of vileget. Of course, there are always procedures...
You can have a lot of mindless fun with these two options. For example, you
can popup and close the buffer list by repeatedly executing:
vileget -c '*'
As a nod towards security, command execution is disabled by default in
Vileserv. To enable it, you can use
setv %vileserv-accept-commands true
in your .vilerc file. Note that running something like
vileget -c 'setv %vileserv-accept-commands false'
can be used to disable remote commands dynamically. Naturally, this is
considered to be both a security violation *and* a feature...
Passing arbitrary commands to Vile may well produce arbitrary results. The
author assumes no liability for edit sessions that have collapsed into
singularities, or, as a matter of fact, for anything else.
SEE ALSO¶
vileserv(3),
vile(1)
AUTHOR¶
J. Chris Coppick, 1998 (last updated: July 26, 2000)