A file management automation tool.
This is in really early development. Please come back later!
The Python organize is a file management automation tool.
From their docs:
Your desktop is a mess? You cannot find anything in your downloads and documents? Sorting and renaming all these files by hand is too tedious? Time to automate it once and benefit from it forever. organize is a command line, open-source alternative to apps like Hazel (macOS) or File Juggler (Windows).
This is a Rust implementation of the same concept.
-
Filter
files
, which aresmaller than
20KB in one location:organize filter size -l C:\Users\dailyuse\dev-src\organize\docs\screenshots -t files --range ..20KB
This filter uses the
range
syntax (always inclusive) of Rust:..11MB
=> smaller than15MB..
=> bigger than10KB..20MiB
=> bigger than 10 KB, but smaller than 20 MiB
NOTE: You can use
decimal
(metric) andbinary
(IEC) multiple-byte units. E.g.,KiB
orKB
,GB
orGiB
. They will be converted accordingly and are case-insensitive. -
Filter
files
by their mimetype:organize filter mimetype -l C:\organize\docs\screenshots -t files --mimetype image/jpeg
-
Filter
files
by their creation date (created in the last 5 days), ignore paths that havetarget\
in their name, recursive, maximum4
levels deep.organize filter -r -m 4 created -l . -t files --ignore-path target\ --range ..5d
-
Filter
files
, which file stem ends withgo
, recursive, maximum2
levels deep:organize filter -r -m 2 name -l "C:\organize\" -t files --ends-with "go"
-
Filter
files
intwo locations
, which extensions matchrs
ortoml
, recursive, maximum2
levels deeporganize filter -r -m 2 extension -l C:\organize -l D:\folders -t files --exts rs --exts toml
-
Filter
files
andfolders
, which are empty (0 bytes
orno files
in directory), recursive, maximum4
levels deep, ignoregit
in path namesorganize filter -r -m 4 empty -l "C:\organize\" -t both --ignore-path git
-
Filter
files
andfolders
, which are empty (0 bytes
orno files
in directory), recursive, maximum4
levels deep, ignoregit
only in file namesorganize filter -r -m 4 empty -l "C:\organize\" -t both --ignore-name git
Be aware: This is WIP. Not all functionality is implemented, (yet).
For now the first goal for this Rust version of organize
is to have feature
parity with its Python equivalent.
BUT: I want to take another approach on tackling the problem. It is also
relatively complicated to map all the stuff within a config
file, because we
are bound to the syntax of yaml
/json
/toml
/ron
.
Maybe this is exactly the problem to solve!
Basically you want to have a configuration file, which replaces a mini scripting
language. With predefined filters
and actions
that are applied to the items
that the filter spits out.
Basically almost everything in the configuration files are parameters for functions/methods.
This makes everything more complicated.
-
What if we implement rusty
organize
in a way, that we can callorganize filter extension --ext "exe, msi, apk" --path {}
and it spits out all the paths that match thisprecoded
filter? This way we can already utilize it easily within shell scripts. -
On the second implementation stage, we can embed a scripting engine like rhai, where we expose some functionality of rusty
organize
asfunctions
and register them with therhai
engine. -
Instead of pressing everything in a complicated configuration file syntax, we can utilize a scripting language and boil it down to its minimum syntax.
That being said, a big factor for the Rust reiteration for me is that I like
Rust. I want to reimplement organize
's approach in a language that has better
error handling, and makes it easier to maintain software. That is fast and at
the same time makes development less error prone.
I'm the first user of the Rust implementation, and will be going to use it with my private files. Thus an important goal for me is stability.
AGPL-3.0-or-later; see LICENSE.