gio GIO Developer Matthias Clasen mclasen@redhat.com gio 1 User Commands gio GIO commandline tool gio help COMMAND gio version gio cat LOCATION gio copy OPTION SOURCE DESTINATION gio info OPTION LOCATION gio launch DESKTOP-FILE FILE-ARG gio list OPTION LOCATION gio mime MIMETYPE HANDLER gio mkdir OPTION LOCATION gio monitor OPTION LOCATION gio mount OPTION LOCATION gio move OPTION SOURCE DESTINATION gio open LOCATION gio rename LOCATION NAME gio remove OPTION LOCATION gio save OPTION DESTINATION gio set OPTION LOCATION ATTRIBUTE VALUE gio trash OPTION LOCATION gio tree OPTION LOCATION Description gio is a utility that makes many of the GIO features available from the commandline. In doing so, it provides commands that are similar to traditional utilities, but let you use GIO locations instead of local files: for example you can use something like smb://server/resource/file.txt as a location. Plain filenames which contain a colon will be interpreted as URIs with an unknown protocol. To avoid this, prefix them with a path such as ./, or with the file: protocol. Commands help COMMAND Displays a short synopsis of the available commands or provides detailed help on a specific command. version Prints the GLib version to which gio belongs. cat LOCATION Concatenates the given files and prints them to the standard output. The cat command works just like the traditional cat utility. Note: just pipe through cat if you need its formatting options like , or other. copy OPTION SOURCE DESTINATION Copies one or more files from SOURCE to DESTINATION. If more than one source is specified, the destination must be a directory. The copy command is similar to the traditional cp utility. Options , Don’t copy into DESTINATION even if it is a directory. , Show progress. , Prompt for confirmation before overwriting files. Preserve all attributes of copied files. , Create backups of existing destination files. , Never follow symbolic links. Use the default permissions of the current process for the destination file, rather than copying the permissions of the source file. info OPTION LOCATION Shows information about the given locations. The info command is similar to the traditional ls utility. Options , List writable attributes. , Show information about the filesystem that the given locations reside on. The attributes to get. Attributes can be specified with their GIO name, e.g. standard::icon, or just by namespace, e.g. unix, or by *, which matches all attributes. Several attributes or groups of attributes can be specified, separated by comma. By default, all attributes are listed. , Don’t follow symbolic links. launch DESKTOP-FILE FILE-ARG Launch a desktop file from any location given. The launch command extends the behavior of the open command by allowing any desktop file to be launched, not only those registered as file handlers. list OPTION LOCATION Lists the contents of the given locations. If no location is given, the contents of the current directory are shown. The list command is similar to the traditional ls utility. Options The attributes to get. Attributes can be specified with their GIO name, e.g. standard::icon, or just by namespace, e.g. unix, or by *, which matches all attributes. Several attributes or groups of attributes can be specified, separated by comma. By default, all attributes are listed. , Show hidden files. , Use a long listing format. , Don’t follow symbolic links. , Print display names. , Print full URIs. mime MIMETYPE HANDLER If no handler is given, the mime command lists the registered and recommended applications for the mimetype. If a handler is given, it is set as the default handler for the mimetype. Handlers must be specified by their desktop file name, including the extension. Example: org.gnome.gedit.desktop. mkdir OPTION LOCATION Creates directories. The mkdir command is similar to the traditional mkdir utility. Options , Create parent directories when necessary. monitor OPTION LOCATION Monitors files or directories for changes, such as creation deletion, content and attribute changes, and mount and unmount operations affecting the monitored locations. The monitor command uses the GIO file monitoring APIs to do its job. GIO has different implementations for different platforms. The most common implementation on Linux uses inotify. Options , Monitor the given location as a directory. Normally, the file type is used to determine whether to monitor a file or directory. , Monitor the given location as a file. Normally, the file type is used to determine whether to monitor a file or directory. , Monitor the file directly. This allows changes made via hardlinks to be captured. , Monitor the file directly, but don’t report changes. , Report moves and renames as simple deleted/created events. , Watch for mount events. mount OPTION LOCATION Provides commandline access to various aspects of GIO’s mounting functionality. Mounting refers to the traditional concept of arranging multiple file systems and devices in a single tree, rooted at /. Classical mounting happens in the kernel and is controlled by the mount utility. GIO expands this concept by introducing mount daemons that can make file systems available to GIO applications without kernel involvement. GIO mounts can require authentication, and the mount command may ask for user IDs, passwords, and so on, when required. Options , Mount as mountable. , Mount volume with device file, or other identifier. , Unmount the location. , Eject the location. , Stop drive with device file. , Unmount all mounts with the given scheme. , Ignore outstanding file operations when unmounting or ejecting. , Use an anonymous user when authenticating. , List all GIO mounts. , Monitor mount-related events. , Show extra information. The numeric PIM when unlocking a VeraCrypt volume. Mount a TCRYPT hidden volume. Mount a TCRYPT system volume. move OPTION SOURCE DESTINATION Moves one or more files from SOURCE to DESTINATION. If more than one source is specified, the destination must be a directory. The move command is similar to the traditional mv utility. Options , Don’t copy into DESTINATION even if it is a directory. , Show progress. , Prompt for confirmation before overwriting files. , Create backups of existing destination files. , Don’t use copy and delete fallback. open LOCATION Opens files with the default application that is registered to handle files of this type. GIO obtains this information from the shared-mime-info database, with per-user overrides stored in $XDG_DATA_HOME/applications/mimeapps.list. The mime command can be used to change the default handler for a mimetype. Environment variables will not be set on the application, as it may be an existing process which is activated to handle the new file. rename LOCATION NAME Renames a file. The rename command is similar to the traditional rename utility. remove OPTION LOCATION Deletes each given file. This command removes files irreversibly. If you want a reversible way to remove files, see the trash command. Note that not all URI schemes that are supported by GIO may allow deletion of files. The remove command is similar to the traditional rm utility. Options , Ignore non-existent and non-deletable files. save OPTION DESTINATION Reads from standard input and saves the data to the given location. This is similar to just redirecting output to a file using traditional shell syntax, but the save command allows saving to location that GIO can write to. Options , Back up existing destination files. , Only create the destination if it doesn’t exist yet. , Append to the end of the file. , When creating, restrict access to the current user. , When replacing, replace as if the destination did not exist. , Print the new ETag in the end. , The ETag of the file that is overwritten. set LOCATION ATTRIBUTE VALUE Sets a file attribute on a file. File attributes can be specified with their GIO name, e.g standard::icon. Note that not all GIO file attributes are writable. Use the option of the info command to list writable file attributes. If the TYPE is unset, VALUE does not have to be specified. If the TYPE is stringv, multiple values can be given. Options , Specifies the type of the attribute. Supported types are string, stringv, bytestring, boolean, uint32, int32, uint64, int64 and unset. If the type is not specified, string is assumed. , Don’t follow symbolic links. trash OPTION LOCATION Sends files or directories to the ‘Trashcan’ or restore them from ‘Trashcan’. This can be a different folder depending on where the file is located, and not all file systems support this concept. In the common case that the file lives inside a user’s home directory, the trash folder is $XDG_DATA_HOME/Trash. Note that moving files to the trash does not free up space on the file system until the ‘Trashcan’ is emptied. If you are interested in deleting a file irreversibly, see the remove command. Inspecting and emptying the ‘Trashcan’ is normally supported by graphical file managers such as Nautilus, but you can also see the trash with the command: gio trash --list or gio list trash://. Options , Ignore non-existent and non-deletable files. Empty the trash. List files in the trash with their original locations Restore a file from trash to its original location. A URI beginning with trash:// is expected here. If the original directory doesn't exist, it will be recreated. tree OPTION LOCATION Lists the contents of the given locations recursively, in a tree-like format. If no location is given, it defaults to the current directory. The tree command is similar to the traditional tree utility. Options , Show hidden files. , Follow symbolic links. Exit status On success 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. See Also cat 1 , cp 1 , ls 1 , mkdir 1 , mv 1 , rm 1 , tree 1 .