vbuf

Langue: en

Version: 2006 Sep 5 (debian - 07/07/09)

Section: 1 (Commandes utilisateur)

NAME

vbuf - Virtual Ring Buffer shell interface

SYNOPSIS

vbuf [options]

DESCRIPTION

This manual page documents briefly the vbuf command.

vbuf is a program to glue two programs (a producer and a consumer) together, one of which not being able to fulfil the other's constant data rate requirements.

OPTIONS

-h

Show short help message.
--help

Show long help message.
-p, --progress

Show progress status line.
-q, --quiet

Suppress progress status line. The default is to show the progress display.
-s size, --size=size

Set buffer size in bytes. Suffixes k, m, and g may be used. The actual size used will be rounded up for system mapping requirements. The default is 1m, or 1048576 bytes.
-t time, --time=seconds

Set time in seconds between progress display refreshes. Fractions of a second may be used. Default is 1.500000 seconds.
-b, --bits

Set progress rate display units to bits per second.
-B, --bytes

Set progress rate display units to bytes per second. The default is bytes.
-d, --decimal

Set progress rate display base to decimal. The default is decimal.
-x, --hexadecimal

Set progress rate display base to hexadecimal.
--octal

Set progress rate display base to octal.
-i file, --input=file

Specify an input file to be opened and used instead of using stdin.
-o file, --output=file

Specify an output file to be opened and used instead of using stdout.
-M file, --mapfile=file

Specify a file which will be used for backing store for the virtual ring buffer. The allows using filesystem space in case swap space is full.
-r bytes, --read-min=bytes

Specify the minimum number of bytes to be requested by read. Reading will not happen unless at least this much buffer space is available. The default is 1.
-R bytes, --read-max=bytes

Specify the maximum number of bytes to be requested by read. Reading will not request more even if more buffer space is available. The default is the full buffer size.
-w bytes, --write-min=bytes

Specify the minumum number of bytes to be written. Writing will not be done unless at least this much data is available. Once end of file is reached on input, a smaller amount may be written. The default is 1.
-W bytes, --write-max=bytes

Specify the maximum number of bytes to be written. Writing will not write more each time even if more data is available in the buffer. The default is the full buffer size.

AUTHOR

VRB and vbuf were written by Phil Howard <vrb@ipal.org>.

This manual page was written by Szekelyi Szabolcs <cc@mail.3d.hu>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).