NAME¶
dailystrips - view web comic strips more conveniently
SYNOPSIS¶
dailystrips [
options]
stripname...
DESCRIPTION¶
This manual page documents briefly the
dailystrips command. This manual
page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the original
program does not have a manual page.
dailystrips is a Perl script that gathers online comic strips for more
convenient viewing. When in normal mode, it creates an HTML page that
references the strips directly, and when in local mode, it also downloads the
images to your local disk. In local mode, it is intended to be run from cron,
and for your own private use only -- redistribution of the images may be
illegal.
COMIC STRIP DEFINITIONS¶
There are three files from which the definitions for comic strips can be read
(aside from that specified with the --defs option, which is read right after
the one in /usr/share/dailystrips). The shipped definition file is in
/usr/share/dailystrips/strips.def and is read first. Next, dailystrips reads
the system-wide override file in /etc/dailystrips.defs (unless --nosystem is
specified), which can hold an updated definition file permitting up to date or
locally-specific definitions without having to upgrade the whole package.
Finally, the user's own override file in ~/.dailystrips.defs is read (unless
--nopersonal is used). The last definition read has precedence. Updated strip
definitions can be downloaded at
<
http://dailystrips.sourceforge.net/download.html>.
OPTIONS¶
These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options
starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is included below. For a
complete description, see the README file in /usr/share/doc/dailystrips/.
- -h, --help
- Show summary of options
- -q, --quiet
- Turn off progress messages
- --verbose
- Turns on extra progress information, overrides -q
- --list
- List available strips
- --random
- Download a random strip
- --defs FILE
- Use alternate strips definition file
- --nopersonal
- Ignore ~/.dailystrips.defs
- --nosystem
- Ignore system-wide definitions in
/etc/dailystrips.defs
- --output FILE
- Output HTML to FILE instead of STDOUT (does not apply to
local mode)
- --lite
- Output a reduced HTML page
- --stripnav
- Add links for navigation within the page
- --titles STRING
- Customize HTML output
- -l, --local
- Output HTML to file and save strips locally
- --noindex
- Disable symlinking current page to index.html (local mode
only)
- -a, --archive
- Generate archive.html as a list of all days (local mode
only)
- -d, --dailydir
- Create a separate directory for each day's images (local
mode only)
- --stripdir
- Create a separate directory for each strip's images (local
mode only)
- -s, --save
- If it appears that a particular strip has been downloaded,
does not attempt to re-download it (local mode only)
- --nostale
- If a new strip is not available, displays an error in the
HTML output instead of showing the old image
- --nosymlinks
- Do not use symlinks for day-to-day duplicates
- --date DATE
- Use value DATE instead of local time (DATE is parsed by
Date::Parse function, not available on Win32)
- --avantgo
- Format images for viewing with Avantgo on PDAs
- --basedir DIR
- Work in specified directory instead of current directory
(program will look here for strip definitions, previous HTML files, etc.
and save new files here)
- --proxy host:port
- Use specified HTTP proxy server (overrides environment
proxy, if set)
- --proxyauth user:pass
- Set username and password for proxy server
- --noenvproxy
- Ignore the http_proxy environment variable, if set
- --nospaces
- Remove spaces from image filenames (local mode only)
- --useragent STRING
- Set User-Agent: header to STRING (default is none)
- --retries NUM
- When downloading items, retry NUM times instead of default
3 times
- --clean NUM
- Keep only the latest NUM days of files; remove all older
files
- -v, --version
- Print version number
SEE ALSO¶
README, README.DEFS.gz (to add strips to the database), and README.LOCAL (for
more details about 'local' operation) in /usr/share/doc/dailystrips/.
AUTHOR¶
This manual page was written by Rene Weber
<rene_debmaint@public.e-mail.elvenlord.com>, for the Debian GNU/Linux
system (but may be used by others).