tags: | python, shell |
---|---|
Author: | Roland Smith |
This is a collection of small utilities that I've written over the years. Some of them are simple front-ends for a utility with some standard options, to save me from having to recall the options every time I need them.
Given that there are a number of different programs in this repository,
releases or packages for this repo should not be expected.
Just clone the repo or download the zipfile from the main
branch.
Another portion are basically Python front-ends to run a utility in parallel on different files.
All the functions in the python scripts come with documentation strings to
explain what they do. The shell scripts have comments where necessary. They
use basic sh
syntax and to not use bash
extensions.
All these programs are tested and in use on the FreeBSD operating system. The
shell-scripts use the plain old sh
that comes with FreeBSD, but should
work with bash
. Bug reports and patches welcome. Most of it should work on
other BSD systems, Linux or OS-X without major problems.
Scripts that require FreeBSD are noted as such.
All Python scripts use Python 3 specific features. Most recently I converted
str.format
calls to f-strings, meaning that you'll need Python 3.6 or
later for the Python scripts.
Note that these scripts assume that Python 3 is installed as python
.
For the Python code:
Tests for some of the functions used in the Python scripts are contained in
scripts-tests.py
. Running the tests requires pytest
. Running the tests
is done as follows:
pytest scripts-tests.py
Tests for security issues of the Python scripts can be done with bandit
.
I've run the tests as follows:
bandit -s B404 -x scripts-tests.py *.py | less
One might consider adding B603 and B607 to the exclusion list when the use of
subprocess
calls has been audited. These are:
- B603 subprocess_without_shell_equals_true
- B607 start_process_with_partial_path
When run with:
bandit -s B404,B603,B607 -x scripts-tests.py *.py
The file scripts-tests.py
is excluded because it contains lots of
assert
calls as part of the testing mechanism. In this case, these are no
cause for alarm.
The result should be: No issues identified.
Further general testing of Python scripts is done with pylama
.
The aim is to have no warnings or errors.
This script traverses all the directories under the current directory.
If it finds a directory that is managed by git, it runs git log
to get
the time and hash of the latest commit.
This is then printed followed by the directory name.
This script generates configuration data for dnsmasq and unbound to block facebook and ad networks.
This script removes several types of generated files from the directory it is called from.
Convert a CSV file to a LaTeX table.
This script generates a list of names of installed packages for which the options on the related port are equal to the default options.
This script reads /var/log/security or any other file that contains ipfw log messages, and makes an overview of incoming packages that have been logged.
This of course requires that blocked packets are logged!
If you are writing your own firewall script, make sure to use deny log
instead of just deny
.
A modification of the (pre 2023.12.31) dicom2png
program mentioned below
to produce JPEG output.
This is meant for situaties where lossy compression is acceptable.
For ms-windows users, this version is recommended.
Just make sure that the location where the ImageMagick programs are installed
is part of your PATH environment variable.
Convert DICOM files from an x-ray machine to PNG format.
As of version 2023.12.31, this script uses pydicom. Older versions used the convert` program from ImageMagick.
Multiple images are processed in parallel using a ProcessPoolExecutor
from
the concurrent.futures
module to start subprocesses using as many worker
processes as your CPU has cores. This number is determined by the
os.cpu_count
function, so this program requires at least Python 3.4.
This version is recommended for ms-windows users.
This program uses pydicom to extract and print information about DICOM files.
(Note that I don't use this much anymore. These days I tend to use Handbrake for my encoding needs.)
When I buy DVDs, I generally transfer their contents to my computer for easier viewing. However, the video and audio format used on DVD is not very compact. So I tend to use ffmpeg to convert it to smaller formats without losing quality. As of 2016, my favorite storage format is a webm container with a VP9 video stream and vorbis audio.
Initially I used the simple webm.sh
script mentioned below.
This had some shortcomings. It does not crop the video and cannot incorporate
subtitles. It does enable multiple quality setting, but I seldomly used those.
The dvd2webm.py
script performs a 2-pass encoding in constrained quality
mode. Optionally it also adds subtitles to the video, and starts from an
offset.
This script uses ghostscript to render encapsulated PostScript files to PNG format. Using command-line arguments the resolution and the type of PNG file can be changed.
Extract and print the metadata from an epub file, a standardized form of book readable on a computer, tablet or other compatible device.
The metadata is contained in a file traditionally named content.opf
, which
might or might not be located in the root directory of the zip-file that is an
epub.
Small helper script to start mutt in an urxvt terminal for a mailto
link.
Front-end for find to locate all files under the current directory that have been modified up to a given number of days ago.
Script for FreeBSD to compare the versions of locally installed packages to
the versions available from the FreeBSD package repo mirror. It will tell
you which packages can be upgraded via pkg upgrade
, and which have to be
built from source.
Corrects the BoundingBox
for single-page PostScript documents.
It requires the ghostscript program.
Fix filenames by replacing whitespace, converting to lower case and removing trailing IDs.
Scales fotos for including them into LaTeX documents. The standard configuration sets the width to 886 pixels and sets the resolution to 300 dpi. This gives an image 75 mm (about 3 in) wide.
This uses and requires the wand binding for ImageMagick.
In my (limited) testing with Wand 0.6.7 it was slightly faster than using
convert
from Python with subprocess
.
It is definitely more Pythonic.
Generates a backup of the directory it is called from in the form of a tar-file. The name of the backup file generally consists of;
- the word
backup
, - the date in the form YYYYMMDD,
- the short hash-tag if the directory is managed by git.
These parts are separated by dashes, and the file gets the .tar
extension.
It requires the tar
program. Tested with FreeBSD's tar. Should work with
GNU tar as long as you don't use the -x
option; the exclude syntax is
different between BSD tar and GNU tar.
Generates an old-fashioned one-time pad; 65 lines of 12 groups of 5 random capital letters. Each pad has a header line containing a random identifier. It was inspired by reading Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon.
It uses random numbers from the operating system via Python's os.urandom
function.
A partial example:
+++++ KWSNKYJLFF +++++ 01 WAGGB HJVHQ TTQPD LQUMD KFRFS GGCKA SVLLA WEUCS HTXNI DITNW RBZKM SEGGW 02 GDSBB XECBL AUVLQ TUDPO DTXKW MWGAV DLRXT NRYAH HTGII YXEJJ JLNRC BIVDX 03 JDQUJ QPAUT CUEHN RHIHT QYBGV WOVAQ MKVZQ WPRGL QJAVA RPLRS AXIII FKLEP 04 WXYAD JNSAQ LBRXE QLCUX ZCLIE WPHSO OZBNH ZQLVN FAUEZ IDAJY VPQJN WVCAD 05 BEYRE WORKU CPEGE JKKWZ XUVYU WSZXQ NOULH QOFDQ PREMG YJBIT GMOAM USKLV 06 ZVATP YSRWH EEQDV LIPVQ FVYSY CIICG JKMOA RFJYE RUDJG HHJXI NNPNU VERMN 07 WAHFD WGGGN GHIUM BCJNN CVBCK QXYGZ PEYLW XOGMT SJFQJ NWEBE BFBPJ IDHDB 08 NPPEG HNONE YCJTG BFSFA NFYUR CMCGD XSKRO NSRBX WSDDX MEMLX BBMLC IMDJL 09 PZNAK OCOXA PEGNL UAWQW YCVDM WBNZZ YQICH MTLBG LDQTW TQMCS KUYBN RUNXT ...
My impression is that the random data device on FreeBSD is pretty good;
> ./ent -u
ent -- Calculate entropy of file. Call
with ent [options] [input-file]
Options: -b Treat input as a stream of bits
-c Print occurrence counts
-f Fold upper to lower case letters
-t Terse output in CSV format
-u Print this message
By John Walker
http://www.fourmilab.ch/
January 28th, 2008
> dd if=/dev/random of=rdata.bin bs=1K count=1K
1024+0 records in
1024+0 records out
1048576 bytes transferred in 0.086200 secs (12164455 bytes/sec)
> ./ent rdata.bin
Entropy = 7.999857 bits per byte.
Optimum compression would reduce the size
of this 1048576 byte file by 0 percent.
Chi square distribution for 1048576 samples is 208.12, and randomly
would exceed this value 98.57 percent of the times.
Arithmetic mean value of data bytes is 127.5057 (127.5 = random).
Monte Carlo value for Pi is 3.137043522 (error 0.14 percent).
Serial correlation coefficient is 0.000771 (totally uncorrelated = 0.0).
According to the manual page, Wikipedia and other sources I could find the FreeBSD random device is intended to provide cryptographically secure pseudorandom data.
Using the new secrets
module in Python;
> python
Python 3.9.9 (main, Dec 11 2021, 14:34:11)
[Clang 12.0.1 ([email protected]:llvm/llvm-project.git llvmorg-12.0.1-0-gfed41342a on freebsd13
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import secrets
>>> data = secrets.token_bytes(1024*1024)
>>> with open("rpdata.bin", "wb") as bf:
... bf.write(data)
...
1048576
>>> quit()
> ent rpdata.bin
- Entropy is 7.999836 bits per byte.
- Optimum compression would reduce the size
of this 1048576 byte file by 0%.
- χ² distribution for 1048576 samples is 238.34, and randomly
would exceed this value 76.58% of the times.
According to the χ² test, this sequence looks random.
- Arithmetic mean value of data bytes is 127.5072 (random = 127.5).
- Monte Carlo value for π is 3.140614092 (error 0.03%).
- Serial correlation coefficient is 0.000215 (totally uncorrelated = 0.0).
This looks good enough as well.
Generates random passwords. It uses random numbers from the operating system
via Python's secrets.token_bytes
function and converts them to text using
a choice of encoding. On FreeBSD I think this is secure enough given the
previous section.
As of version 2022.01.16 is uses the requested amount of entropy (75 bits by default) to calculate the required length.
Some examples:
> genpw --log=info -e 128 -g 4
INFO: base85 encoder is used, 6.409 bits/character entropy
INFO: 20 characters required for ≥128 bits of entropy
INFO: grouping by 4 characters
JnX< aqd% y9J$ -<4W ?<d8
> genpw -e 128 -r 5
il)1|ASvX@Xv<+oX0j(;
oJcpJ+!H%R`M4OfqE(f3
f13}Hrf{B3z%hu!C%fK-
9%KiUJgaKjp<3hqtxS+*
+!<O%9xW4!r${xq`9<Zw
Determines the bounding box of PostScript files using ghostscript.
After using lsdvd to see the tracks on a DVD, this script can be used to extract the required tracks for viewing or transcoding.
It sxtracts the given tracks from a DVD using tccat
from the transcode
package.
Find all directories in the user's home directory that are managed with git,
and run git gc
on them unless they have uncommitted changes.
For all command-line arguments, print out when they were first checked into
git
.
Print information about the repository when called from the root of a directory tree under git control.
For all the subdirectories under the current working directory, report those that are not clean or are ahead of their remote(s).
For each file in a directory managed by git, get the short hash and data of the most recent commit of that file.
Used with FreeBSD's pkg info
and dot
from the graphviz port to graph
dependencies between packages.
GUI program to set a Razer BlackWidow Elite or Razer Ornata Chroma to a static color. Requires the GTK toolkit, PyGObject and pyusb.
The user interface was built with glade. The resulting XML file
gtk-razer.glade
was then compressed and base85
encoded for inclusion
in the script.
It should work on operating systems that support pyusb, without requiring a kernel driver like the openrazer driver for Linux.
To see how this works, best look at set-ornata-chroma.py
, which is
a simple command-line utility to do the same thing.
Makes a histogram of the bytes in each input file, and calculates the entropy in each file.
A program to check a PDF, PNG or JPEG file and return a suitable LaTeX figure environment for it.
this program requires ImageMagick program identify
.
This program also requires the ghostscript interpreter to determine the size of PDF files.
As of version 1.4 it reads the text block width and height in mm from
an INI-style configuration file named ~/.img4latexrc
.
A valid example is shown below.
[size]
width = 100
height = 200
The image is scaled so that it fits within the text block. If a bitmapped image does not have a defined resolution, 300 pixels/inch is assumed.
Lock down files or directories.
This makes files read-only for the owner and inaccessible for the group and others. Then it sets the user immutable and user undeletable flag on the files. For directories, it recursively treats the files as mentioned above. It then sets the sets the directories to read/execute only for the owner and inaccessible for the group and others. Then it sets the user immutable and undeletable flag on the directories as well.
Using the -u flag unlocks the files or directories, making them writable for the owner only.
As usual, I wrote this to automate and simplify something that I was doing on a regular basis; safeguarding important but not often changed files.
The os.chflags function that is used in this script is only available on UNIX-like operating systems. So this doesn't work on ms-windows.
Encodes WAV files from cdparanoia to FLAC format. Processing is done in
parallel using as many subprocesses as the machine has cores. Album
information is gathered from a text file called album.json
.
This file has the following format:
{ "title": "title of the album", "artist": "name of the artist", "year": 1985, "genre": "rock", "tracks": [ "foo", "bar", "spam", "eggs" ] }
Works like make-flac.py
but uses lame to encode to variable bitrate MP3
files. It uses the same album.json
file as make-flac.
This scripts adds a copyright notice to pictures.
Warning
You should edit this script and update the cr
string in the
processfile
function to contain your details before using this script!
Note
This script requires exiftool.
This script takes the git log
history from the current working
directory and formats it as LaTeX “tabbing” environment with one commit per line.
This is written to standard output.
It uses the --pretty=format:
option of git log
to do most of the work,
while echo
is used to create the “tabbing” environment around the log
output.
Use montage
from the ImageMagick suite to create an index picture of all
the files given on the command-line.
Use convert
from the ImageMagick suite to convert scanned images to PDF files.
It assumes that images are scanned at 150 PPI, and the target page is A4.
Renames files so that their names do not contain whitespace.
A very simple NTP query and time setting program. It doesn't pretend to be extremely accurate.
Reads an SRT file and applies the given offset to all times in the file. This time-shifts all subtitles.
Renames a directory by prefixing the name with old-
, unless that directory
already exists. If the directory name starts with a period, it removes the
period and prefixes it with old-dot
.
This Python script is a small helper to open files from the command line. It was inspired by a OS X utility of the same name.
A lot of my interaction with the files on my computers is done through a
command-line shell, even though I use the X Window System. One of the things I
like about the gvim
editor is that it forks and detach from the shell it
was started from. With other programs one usually has to explicitly add an
&
to the end of the command.
Then I read about the OS X open program, and I decided to write a simple program like it in Python.
The result is open.py
. Note that it is pretty simple. and the programs
that is uses to open files are geared towards common use. So text files are
opened in an editor, while photos and most other types are opened in a viewer.
This simplicity by design. It has no options and it only opens files and
directories. I have no intention of it becoming like OS X's open or plan9's
plumb.
This utility requires the python-magic module.
The filetypes
and othertypes
dictionaries in the beginning of this
script should be changed to suit your preferences.
Prints the value __FreeBSD_version, aka OSVERSION.
Script to do simple parameter substitution in files.
Generate a passphrase from random words from a wordlist. It determines the amount of words to use from the desired amount of entropy.
Note
You should update the wordfiles
dictionary at the top of the
script to point to suitable word lists. These word lists should contain one
word per line.
Uses pdftotext
and diff
to generate a unified diff between two PDF
files.
Select consecutive pages from a PDF document and put them in a separate document. Requires ghostscript.
Update the DOCINFO dictionary in a PDF file with the given values.
Rewrite a PDF file using ghostscript.
Front-end for POV-ray with a limited amount of choices for picture size and quality.
Program to prepare files for inclusion in Python code.
After reading a file, it optionally compresses the data using zlib
and
then encodes it as text using base85
encoding.
It then formats the text and adds the relevant decoding and decompression
routines.
For example, the following is the pylama.ini
file processed with python3
py-include.py -c -t pylama.ini
:
# pylama.ini
data = zlib.decompress(base64.b85decode(
'c-nQ)O;5ux3<ltPe}(U?C9PVzW)y*@a^eKs&@_eB=}hxcB^g@(JsCr2mz^T{ePTOVfh2_-rdbI'
'sGBT8`;F~l*mC@{MPiANjL8ePCd);c`Ms!?;wzvLQNB?vPd+Rv7X3rVCX$pI|cm8xf9(^g4%8Y'
'u5ZtYM6>^T%HuTxg1c?EgRS;NaE+^~YNh+c#bpyOOgf3!*2GA+vYqTp2-^;sq#=bbl+A8CRXGG'
'`~8oc+RGxZPPJX~?EIp}|;(G4G1IYSC3JUvzbuFV+pq|C{h>mP(B1H_7LLR3PKyjqPO~zXE-j6'
'>btOj$1_rw+hV=AKOC1E@{ld74-uUe{^F'
)).decode("utf-8")
List or set the __version__
string in all Python files given on the
command line or recursively in all directories given on the command line.
Pull the current git-managed directory from another server and rebase around that.
Works in conjunction with serve-git
.
Recursively finds the most recently modified files in each directory. List the modification date/time in ISO format followed by the path.
Renames files given on the command line to <prefix><number>, keeping the extension of the original file. Example:
> ls
img_3240.jpg img_3246.jpg img_3252.jpg img_3258.jpg img_3264.jpg
img_3271.jpg img_3277.jpg img_3241.jpg img_3247.jpg img_3253.jpg
img_3259.jpg img_3265.jpg img_3272.jpg img_3278.jpg img_3242.jpg
img_3248.jpg img_3254.jpg img_3260.jpg img_3266.jpg img_3273.jpg
img_3279.jpg img_3243.jpg img_3249.jpg img_3255.jpg img_3261.jpg
img_3267.jpg img_3274.jpg img_3280.jpg img_3244.jpg img_3250.jpg
img_3256.jpg img_3262.jpg img_3269.jpg img_3275.jpg img_3245.jpg
img_3251.jpg img_3257.jpg img_3263.jpg img_3270.jpg img_3276.jpg
> rename -p holiday2014- -w 3 img_32*
> ls
holiday2014-001.jpg holiday2014-009.jpg holiday2014-017.jpg
holiday2014-025.jpg holiday2014-033.jpg holiday2014-002.jpg
holiday2014-010.jpg holiday2014-018.jpg holiday2014-026.jpg
holiday2014-034.jpg holiday2014-003.jpg holiday2014-011.jpg
holiday2014-019.jpg holiday2014-027.jpg holiday2014-035.jpg
holiday2014-004.jpg holiday2014-012.jpg holiday2014-020.jpg
holiday2014-028.jpg holiday2014-036.jpg holiday2014-005.jpg
holiday2014-013.jpg holiday2014-021.jpg holiday2014-029.jpg
holiday2014-037.jpg holiday2014-006.jpg holiday2014-014.jpg
holiday2014-022.jpg holiday2014-030.jpg holiday2014-038.jpg
holiday2014-007.jpg holiday2014-015.jpg holiday2014-023.jpg
holiday2014-031.jpg holiday2014-039.jpg holiday2014-008.jpg
holiday2014-016.jpg holiday2014-024.jpg holiday2014-032.jpg
holiday2014-040.jpg
By default, the script renames files in the sequence they were given as arguments. For example, if you have files like this:
file-1.jpg file-10.jpg file-11.jpg file-12.jpg file-13.jpg file-14.jpg file-15.jpg file-16.jpg file-17.jpg file-18.jpg file-19.jpg file-2.jpg file-20.jpg file-21.jpg file-22.jpg file-23.jpg file-24.jpg file-25.jpg file-26.jpg file-27.jpg file-28.jpg file-29.jpg file-3.jpg file-4.jpg file-5.jpg file-6.jpg file-7.jpg file-8.jpg file-9.jpg
You give the command:
rename -p holiday- *.jpg
This would rename file-1.jpg
to holiday-01.jpg
, but
file-10.jpg
to holiday-02.jpg
et cetera.
For this case, the -n
option was implemented.
It sorts the given filenames in ascending order of the last number in the
original filename.
This is just a collection of tests for functions from the different Python scripts.
Start a git daemon
for every directory under the current working directory
that is under git control.
Works in conjunction with pull-git
.
This changes the color or the LEDs on a Razer Ornata Chroma keyboard to a static RGB color. It should work on operating systems that support pyusb, without requiring a kernel driver like the openrazer driver for Linux.
The openrazer driver served as an inspiration and source of information
about Razer's USB protocol. At first I contemplated porting this driver to
FreeBSD. But the differences between Linux and FreeBSD would make that
a complete rewrite. Not to mention that the openrazer driver contains much
more functionality than I need. Since FreeBSD comes with libusb
, and
supports pyusb
you can pretty much control USB devices from user space
with Python. So that's what I did.
Set the title of the current terminal window to the hostname or to the first argument given on the command line.
Sets the resolution of pictures to the provided value in dots per inch.
Uses the mogrify
program from the ImageMagick suite.
A utility written in pure Python to calculate the SHA-256 checksum of files, for systems that don't come with such a utility.
Compiles a LaTeX file with the standalone documentclass to Encapsulated PostScript format.
A small Python script that replaces conky for me on FreeBSD with the i3 window manager.
This script uses Open CASCADE's DRAWEXE
program to show a 3D view of a STEP
file.
This script was written to simplify the syncronization of data between different computers using rsync(1).
It assumes that:
- The other host you are synchronizing to is running the rsync(1) daemon.
- That host exposes
/home
as the[home]
module. - You are syncronizing a directory in your $HOME to the same directory on the other host.
When given TeX file names, this program determines the short hash of last
git
commit that changed these file. When the original filename is
<filename>.tex
, this is written to a <filename>.hash
. In the TeX file
you can use \input
to include the hash into the document. It is meant as
a limited alternative to the vc
bundle from CTAN.
This small shell script find Opentype fonts in my TeXlive installation and installs symbolic links to those font files in a single directory. This directory is then scanned by fc-cache to make the fonts available to all programs that use fontconfig.
Convert TIFF files to PDF format using the utilities tiffinfo
and
tiff2pdf
from the libtiff package.
Command-line utility to unlock excel 2007+ file.
GUI version of unlock-excel.py
, mainly for use on ms-windows.
GUI version of unlock-excel.py
, using multithreading.
Convert all video files given on the command line to theora / vorbis streams
in a matroška container using ffmpeg. As of 3452c8a it uses
a ThreadPoolExecutor
.
Analogue to vid2mkv.py
, but converts to H.264 (using the x264 encoder)
/ AAC streams in an MP4 container.
Small script to give an audible warning when the battery of a laptop is low.
Specific to FreeBSD because it uses sysctl
.
Also requires the audio/mpg123 package.
Convert video files to VP9 video and Vorbis audio streams in a webm container, using a 2-pass process.
Extract and print the requirements of Python wheel file(s). Example:
> whl-req matplotlib-3.4.2-cp39-cp39-win_amd64.whl matplotlib-3.4.2-cp39-cp39-win_amd64.whl cycler (>=0.10) kiwisolver (>=1.0.1) numpy (>=1.16) pillow (>=6.2.0) pyparsing (>=2.2.1) python-dateutil (>=2.7)
Checks youtube for the latest video's from your favorite channels.
It requires you to have a JSON-file called .ytfdrc
in your
$HOME
directory. What this file should contain is documented in the script.
Tkinter GUI to change the color on a Razer keyboard. Succesfulle tested on an Ornata Chroma and a BlackWidow Elite.