table of contents
Pamexec User Manual(0) | Pamexec User Manual(0) |
NAME¶
pamexec - Execute a shell command on each image in a Netpbm image stream
SYNOPSIS¶
pamexec
["command"]
[netpbmfile]
[-check]
Minimum unique abbreviation of option is acceptable. You may use double hyphens instead of single hyphen to denote options. You may use white space in place of the equals sign to separate an option name from its value.
DESCRIPTION¶
This program is part of Netpbm(1).
pamexec reads a Netpbm image stream as input. For each image, it runs a specified shell command and supplies the image to it as Standard Input (with a pipe).
netpbmfile is the file name of the input file, or - to indicate Standard Input. The default is Standard Input.
Many Netpbm programs understand multimage Netpbm streams themselves, so you don't need to use pamexec to run the program on the images in the stream. Ideally, all Netpbm programs would have that capability, but multi-image streams are a relatively recent invention, so older Netpbm programs just process the first image in the stream and then stop. Even many recently written Netpbm programs work that way, since the authors aren't aware of the multi-image possibility.
Another way to process a multi-image stream is to use pamsplit to explode it into multiple files, one image per file. You can then process those files.
To run your command on a subset of the images in the stream, use pampick to select the desired images from the input stream and pipe the result to pamexec.
OPTIONS¶
In addition to the options common to all programs based on
libnetpbm (most notably -quiet, see
Common Options ), pamexec recognizes the following command line
option:
- -check
- This causes pamexec to exit without processing any further images if the command has a nonzero exit status.
APPLICATIONS¶
To make an animated GIF movie:
pamexec pamtogif myvideo.ppm | gifsicle --multifile >myvideo.gif
LIMITATIONS¶
pamexec assumes all commands consume all of Standard Input.
If yours doesn't (perhaps it just exits when it's seen enough),
you can buffer through a temporary file like this, which copies the
first 3 lines of every image (the PPM header) to Standard Output:
pamexec "cat >/tmp/x; head --lines=3 x" myvideo.ppm
HISTORY¶
pamexec was new in Netpbm 10.56 (September 2011).
Michael Pot wrote it, borrowing from pamsplit.
SEE ALSO¶
pamfile(1), pampick(1), pamsplit(1), pnm(5), pam(5), cat man page
DOCUMENT SOURCE¶
This manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool 'makeman' from HTML source. The master documentation is at
21 December 2021 | netpbm documentation |