Standardizing File Maintainance The tuneup functionality is the interface the centos-art.sh script provides to standardize the maintainance tasks related to individual files inside the working copy. centos-art tuneup [OPTIONS] [DIRECTORY] The DIRECTORY parameter specifies the directory path, inside the working copy of &TCAR;, where the files you want to process are stored in. This paramter can be provided more than once in order to process more than one directory path in a single command execution. When this parameter is not provided, the current directory path where the command was called from is used instead. The tuneup functionality accepts the following options: Supress all output messages except error messages. When this option is passed, all confirmation requests are supressed and a possitive answer is assumed for them, just as if the option would have been provided. Assume yes to all confirmation requests. Reduce the list of files to process inside path/to/dir using REGEX as pattern. You can use this option to control the amount of files you want to tuneup. The deeper you go into the directory structure the more specific you'll be about the files you want to tuneup. When you cannot go deeper into the directory structure through path/to/dir specification, use this option to reduce the list of files therein. Supress all commit and update actions realized over files, before and after the action itself had took place over files in the working copy. Tasks related to file maintainance are repetitive. You might find yourself doing them time after time inside the working copy of &TCAR;. Some of these maintainance tasks do update top comments on shell scripts, create table of contents for web pages, update metadata related to design models and remove unused definitions from design models. When you execute the tuneup functionality of centos-art.sh script, it looks for all files that match the supported extensions (e.g., .sh, .svg and .xhtml) in the directory specified, builds a list with them and applies the maintainance tasks using file extensions as reference. When shell scripts are found, the tuneup functionality of centos-art.sh script reads a comment template from trunk/Scripts/Functions/Tuneup/Shell/Config/topcomment.sed and applies it to all shell scripts found, one by one. As result, all shell scripts will end up having the same copyright and license information the comment template does. In order for the shell script top comment template to be applied correctly, the shell scripts you write must have the structure described in . Shell script top-comment template. Shell script top-comment template. 1| #!/bin/bash 2| # 3| # doSomething.sh -- The function description goes here. 4| # 5| # Copyright 6| # 7| # ... 8| # 9| # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 10| # $Id$ 11| # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 12| 13| function doSomething { 14| 15| } The tuneup functionality of centos-art.sh script replaces all lines between the Copyright line (e.g., line 5) and the first separator line (e.g., line 9), inclusively. Everything else will remain immutable in the file. When scalable vector graphics are found, the tuneup functionality reads a SVG metadata template from trunk/Scripts/Functions/Tuneup/Svg/Config/metadata.sed and applies it to all files found, one by one. Immediatly after the metadata template has been applied and, before passing to next file, all unused definition are removed from the file, too. The metadata applied by the SVG metadata template is created dynamicaly combining the absolute path of the file being currently modified, the workstation's date information, the centos-art.sh script copyright holder (e.g., =COPYRIGHT_HOLDER=) as reference and the Creative Common Distribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License as default license to release SVG files. The elimination of unused definitions inside SVG files takes place through Inkscape's option, as described in its man page (e.g., man inkscape). When HTML files are found, the tuneup functionality of centos-art.sh script transforms web page headings to make them accessible through a table of contents. The table of contents is expanded in place, wherever the <div class="toc"></div> piece of code be in the file. Once the table of contents has been expanded, there is no need to put anything else in the page. You can run the tuneup functionality everytime you update the heading information so as to update the table of contents, too. In order for this functionality to build the table of contents from headings, you need to put headings in just one line. The headin level can vary from h1 to h6 with attribute definitions accepted. Closing tag must be present and also match the openning tag. Inside the heading definition an anchor definition must be present with attribute definitions accepted. The value of name and href attributes from the anchor element are set dynamically using the md5sum output of combining the page location, the head- string and the heading content itself. If any of the components used to build the heading reference changes, you need to run the the tuneup functionality of centos-art.sh script in order for the anchor elements to use the correct information. For example, the headings shown in produces the table of contents shown in . HTML heading definition. HTML heading definition. <h1 class="title"><a name="head-8a23b56a28dfa7277d176576f217054a">Forms</a></h1> <h2 class="title"><a name="head-629f38bc607f2a270177106b450aeae3">Elements</a></h2> <h2 class="title"><a name="head-f49cae1d73592c984bbb0bffb1d5699a">Recommendations</a></h2> HTML table of contents definition. HTML table of contents definition. <div class="toc"> <p>Table of contents</p> <dl><dt><a href="#head-8a23b56a28dfa7277d176576f217054a">Forms</a> <dl><dt><a href="#head-629f38bc607f2a270177106b450aeae3">Elements</a> </dt><dt><a href="#head-f49cae1d73592c984bbb0bffb1d5699a">Recommendations</a> </dt></dl> </dt></dl> </div>