man page updated: alpha -> beta

This commit is contained in:
Ole Tange 2014-09-23 16:23:55 +02:00
parent b3ba17ca23
commit 9270b1284b
3 changed files with 49 additions and 65 deletions

View file

@ -4,6 +4,7 @@
Check that documentation is updated (compare to web):
Fixet for 20141022
git diff last-release-commit
Unmodified beta since last version => production
Unmodified alpha since last version => beta
@ -224,33 +225,16 @@ cc:Tim Cuthbertson <tim3d.junk@gmail.com>,
Ryoichiro Suzuki <ryoichiro.suzuki@gmail.com>,
Jesse Alama <jesse.alama@gmail.com>
Subject: GNU Parallel 20140922 ('Attenborough') released
Subject: GNU Parallel 20141022 ('') released
GNU Parallel 20140922 ('Attenborough') has been released. It is available for download at: http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/parallel/
GNU Parallel 20141022 ('') has been released. It is available for download at: http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/parallel/
Haiku of the month:
<<>>
(Last month's haiku was by Malcolm Cook)
New in this release:
* If the file give as --sshloginfile is changed it will be re-read when a job finishes though at most once per second. This makes it possible to add and remove hosts while running.
* Brutha uses GNU Parallel https://pypi.python.org/pypi/brutha/1.0.2
* OCRmyPDF uses GNU Parallel https://github.com/fritz-hh/OCRmyPDF/
* GNU Parallel was presented at Balti and Bioinformatics "On-Air" http://youtu.be/UtXlr19xTh8?t=2h5m0s
* Pleiades Plus uses GNU Parallel https://github.com/ryanfb/pleiades-plus
* Imagemagick and GNU Parallel http://deepdish.io/2014/09/15/gnu-parallel/
* GNU Parallel (Sebuah Uji Coba) http://pr4ka5a.wordpress.com/2014/09/04/gnu-parallel-sebuah-uji-coba/
* GNU Parallel: 并行执行Linux命令 http://blog.csdn.net/xzz_hust/article/details/39183837
* Bug fixes and man page updates.
GNU Parallel - For people who live life in the parallel lane.

View file

@ -724,7 +724,7 @@ sub get_options_from_array {
sub parse_options {
# Returns: N/A
# Defaults:
$Global::version = 20140922;
$Global::version = 20140923;
$Global::progname = 'parallel';
$Global::infinity = 2**31;
$Global::debug = 0;

View file

@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ B<exportf> to export and to set $SHELL to bash:
The command cannot contain the character \257 (macron: ¯).
=item B<{}> (beta testing)
=item B<{}>
Input line. This replacement string will be replaced by a full line
read from the input source. The input source is normally stdin
@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ If the command line contains no replacement strings then B<{}> will be
appended to the command line.
=item B<{.}> (beta testing)
=item B<{.}>
Input line without extension. This replacement string will be replaced
by the input with the extension removed. If the input line contains
@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ The replacement string B<{.}> can be changed with B<--er>.
To understand replacement strings see B<{}>.
=item B<{/}> (beta testing)
=item B<{/}>
Basename of input line. This replacement string will be replaced by
the input with the directory part removed.
@ -137,7 +137,7 @@ B<--basenamereplace>.
To understand replacement strings see B<{}>.
=item B<{//}> (beta testing)
=item B<{//}>
Dirname of input line. This replacement string will be replaced by the
dir of the input line. See B<dirname>(1).
@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ B<--dirnamereplace>.
To understand replacement strings see B<{}>.
=item B<{/.}> (beta testing)
=item B<{/.}>
Basename of input line without extension. This replacement string will
be replaced by the input with the directory and extension part
@ -160,7 +160,7 @@ B<--basenameextensionreplace>.
To understand replacement strings see B<{}>.
=item B<{#}> (beta testing)
=item B<{#}>
Sequence number of the job to run. This replacement string will be
replaced by the sequence number of the job being run. It contains the
@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ The replacement string B<{#}> can be changed with B<--seqreplace>.
To understand replacement strings see B<{}>.
=item B<{%}> (beta testing)
=item B<{%}>
Job slot number. This replacement string will be replaced by the job's
slot number between 1 and number of jobs to run in parallel. There
@ -183,7 +183,7 @@ The replacement string B<{%}> can be changed with B<--slotreplace>.
To understand replacement strings see B<{}>.
=item B<{>I<n>B<}> (beta testing)
=item B<{>I<n>B<}>
Argument from input source I<n> or the I<n>'th argument. This
positional replacement string will be replaced by the input from input
@ -194,7 +194,7 @@ I<n>'th last argument.
To understand replacement strings see B<{}>.
=item B<{>I<n>.B<}> (beta testing)
=item B<{>I<n>.B<}>
Argument from input source I<n> or the I<n>'th argument without
extension. It is a combination of B<{>I<n>B<}> and B<{.}>.
@ -207,7 +207,7 @@ extension removed.
To understand positional replacement strings see B<{>I<n>B<}>.
=item B<{>I<n>/B<}> (beta testing)
=item B<{>I<n>/B<}>
Basename of argument from input source I<n> or the I<n>'th argument.
It is a combination of B<{>I<n>B<}> and B<{/}>.
@ -220,7 +220,7 @@ directory (if any) removed.
To understand positional replacement strings see B<{>I<n>B<}>.
=item B<{>I<n>//B<}> (beta testing)
=item B<{>I<n>//B<}>
Dirname of argument from input source I<n> or the I<n>'th argument.
It is a combination of B<{>I<n>B<}> and B<{//}>.
@ -232,7 +232,7 @@ the I<n>'th argument (when used with B<-N>). See B<dirname>(1).
To understand positional replacement strings see B<{>I<n>B<}>.
=item B<{>I<n>/.B<}> (beta testing)
=item B<{>I<n>/.B<}>
Basename of argument from input source I<n> or the I<n>'th argument
without extension. It is a combination of B<{>I<n>B<}>, B<{/}>, and
@ -246,7 +246,7 @@ directory (if any) and extension removed.
To understand positional replacement strings see B<{>I<n>B<}>.
=item B<{=>I<perl expression>B<=}> (beta testing)
=item B<{=>I<perl expression>B<=}>
Replace with calculated I<perl expression>. B<$_> will contain the
same as B<{}>. After evaluating I<perl expression> B<$_> will be used
@ -259,7 +259,7 @@ The B<{=>I<perl expression>B<=}> must be given as a single string.
See also: B<--rpl> B<--parens>
=item B<{=>I<n> I<perl expression>B<=}> (beta testing)
=item B<{=>I<n> I<perl expression>B<=}>
Positional equivalent to B<{= perl expression =}>. To understand
positional replacement strings see B<{>I<n>B<}>.
@ -360,7 +360,7 @@ string that is not in the command line.
See also: B<:::>.
=item B<--bar> (beta testing)
=item B<--bar>
Show progress as a progress bar. In the bar is shown: % of jobs
completed, estimated seconds left, and number of jobs started.
@ -370,9 +370,9 @@ It is compatible with B<zenity>:
seq 1000 | parallel -j30 --bar '(echo {};sleep 0.1)' 2> >(zenity --progress --auto-kill) | wc
=item B<--basefile> I<file> (beta testing)
=item B<--basefile> I<file>
=item B<--bf> I<file> (beta testing)
=item B<--bf> I<file>
I<file> will be transferred to each sshlogin before a jobs is
started. It will be removed if B<--cleanup> is active. The file may be
@ -523,7 +523,7 @@ Use the replacement string I<replace-str> instead of B<{//}> for
dirname of input line.
=item B<-E> I<eof-str> (beta testing)
=item B<-E> I<eof-str>
Set the end of file string to eof-str. If the end of file string
occurs as a line of input, the rest of the input is ignored. If
@ -546,9 +546,9 @@ the job may be scheduled on another computer or the local computer if
: is in the list.
=item B<--eof>[=I<eof-str>] (beta testing)
=item B<--eof>[=I<eof-str>]
=item B<-e>[I<eof-str>] (beta testing)
=item B<-e>[I<eof-str>]
This option is a synonym for the B<-E> option. Use B<-E> instead,
because it is POSIX compliant for B<xargs> while this option is not.
@ -556,7 +556,7 @@ If I<eof-str> is omitted, there is no end of file string. If neither
B<-E> nor B<-e> is used, no end of file string is used.
=item B<--env> I<var> (beta testing)
=item B<--env> I<var>
Copy environment variable I<var>. This will copy I<var> to the
environment that the command is run in. This is especially useful for
@ -674,9 +674,9 @@ See also: B<--line-buffer> B<--ungroup>
Print a summary of the options to GNU B<parallel> and exit.
=item B<--halt-on-error> I<val> (beta testing)
=item B<--halt-on-error> I<val>
=item B<--halt> I<val> (beta testing)
=item B<--halt> I<val>
How should GNU B<parallel> terminate if one of more jobs fail?
@ -726,9 +726,9 @@ If I<regexp> is a number, it will match that many lines.
Use the replacement string I<replace-str> instead of {}.
=item B<--replace>[=I<replace-str>] (beta testing)
=item B<--replace>[=I<replace-str>]
=item B<-i>[I<replace-str>] (beta testing)
=item B<-i>[I<replace-str>]
This option is a synonym for B<-I>I<replace-str> if I<replace-str> is
specified, and for B<-I>{} otherwise. This option is deprecated;
@ -789,13 +789,13 @@ If the evaluated number is less than 1 then 1 will be used. See also
B<--use-cpus-instead-of-cores>.
=item B<--jobs> I<N>% (beta testing)
=item B<--jobs> I<N>%
=item B<-j> I<N>% (beta testing)
=item B<-j> I<N>%
=item B<--max-procs> I<N>% (beta testing)
=item B<--max-procs> I<N>%
=item B<-P> I<N>% (beta testing)
=item B<-P> I<N>%
Multiply N% with the number of CPU cores. Run this many jobs in
parallel. See also B<--use-cpus-instead-of-cores>.
@ -887,9 +887,9 @@ the same syntax as B<--jobs>, so I<100%> for one per CPU is a valid
setting. Only difference is 0 which is interpreted as 0.01.
=item B<--controlmaster> (beta testing)
=item B<--controlmaster>
=item B<-M> (beta testing)
=item B<-M>
Use ssh's ControlMaster to make ssh connections faster. Useful if jobs
run remote and are very fast to run. This is disabled for sshlogins
@ -937,7 +937,7 @@ This is useful for scripts that depend on features only available from
a certain version of GNU B<parallel>.
=item B<--nonall>
=item B<--nonall> (beta testing)
B<--onall> with no arguments. Run the command on all computers given
with B<--sshlogin> but take no arguments. GNU B<parallel> will log
@ -948,7 +948,7 @@ This is useful for running the same command (e.g. uptime) on a list of
servers.
=item B<--onall>
=item B<--onall> (beta testing)
Run all the jobs on all computers given with B<--sshlogin>. GNU
B<parallel> will log into B<--jobs> number of computers in parallel
@ -999,7 +999,7 @@ B<--files> is often used with B<--pipe>.
See also: B<--recstart>, B<--recend>, B<--fifo>, B<--cat>, B<--pipepart>.
=item B<--pipepart>
=item B<--pipepart> (beta testing)
Pipe parts of a physical file. B<--pipepart> works similar to
B<--pipe>, but is much faster. It has a few limitations:
@ -1024,7 +1024,7 @@ control on the command line (used by GNU B<parallel> internally when
called with B<--sshlogin>).
=item B<--plus> (beta testing)
=item B<--plus>
Activate additional replacement strings: {+/} {+.} {+..} {+...} {..}
{...} {/..} {/...}. The idea being that '{+foo}' matches the opposite of
@ -1145,9 +1145,9 @@ B<,,>:
See also: B<--rpl> B<{= perl expression =}>
=item B<--profile> I<profilename> (beta testing)
=item B<--profile> I<profilename>
=item B<-J> I<profilename> (beta testing)
=item B<-J> I<profilename>
Use profile I<profilename> for options. This is useful if you want to
have multiple profiles. You could have one profile for running jobs in
@ -1320,7 +1320,7 @@ useful if some jobs fail for no apparent reason (such as network
failure).
=item B<--return> I<filename> (beta testing)
=item B<--return> I<filename>
Transfer files from remote computers. B<--return> is used with
B<--sshlogin> when the arguments are files on the remote computers. When
@ -1368,7 +1368,7 @@ B<--keep-order> will not work with B<--round-robin> as it is
impossible to track which input block corresponds to which output.
=item B<--rpl> 'I<tag> I<perl expression>' (beta testing)
=item B<--rpl> 'I<tag> I<perl expression>'
Use I<tag> as a replacement string for I<perl expression>. This makes
it possible to define your own replacement strings. GNU B<parallel>'s
@ -1549,9 +1549,9 @@ I<secs> seconds after starting each ssh. I<secs> can be less than 1
seconds.
=item B<-S> I<[ncpu/]sshlogin[,[ncpu/]sshlogin[,...]]> (beta testing)
=item B<-S> I<[ncpu/]sshlogin[,[ncpu/]sshlogin[,...]]>
=item B<--sshlogin> I<[ncpu/]sshlogin[,[ncpu/]sshlogin[,...]]> (beta testing)
=item B<--sshlogin> I<[ncpu/]sshlogin[,[ncpu/]sshlogin[,...]]>
Distribute jobs to remote computers. The jobs will be run on a list of
remote computers. GNU B<parallel> will determine the number of CPU
@ -1587,9 +1587,9 @@ B<--sshlogin> is often used with B<--transfer>, B<--return>,
B<--cleanup>, and B<--trc>.
=item B<--sshloginfile> I<filename> (alpha testing)
=item B<--sshloginfile> I<filename> (beta testing)
=item B<--slf> I<filename> (alpha testing)
=item B<--slf> I<filename> (beta testing)
File with sshlogins. The file consists of sshlogins on separate
lines. Empty lines and lines starting with '#' are ignored. Example:
@ -1717,7 +1717,7 @@ Print the job to be run on stderr (standard error).
See also B<-v>, B<-p>.
=item B<--transfer> (beta testing)
=item B<--transfer>
Transfer files to remote computers. B<--transfer> is used with
B<--sshlogin> when the arguments are files and should be transferred