man hpls (Commandes) - list the contents of a directory on an HFS+ volume

NAME

hpls - list the contents of a directory on an HFS+ volume

SYNOPSIS

hpls [options] [hfs-path ...]

Description

hpls is used to list files and directories on an HFS+ volume. If one or more arguments are given, each file or directory is shown; otherwise, the contents of the current working directory are displayed.

Options

-1
Each entry appears on a line by itself. This is the default if standard output is not a terminal.
-a
All entries are shown, including "invisible" files. The default is to omit invisible files.
-c
Sort and display entries by their creation date, rather than their modification date.
-d
List directory entries themselves rather than their contents. Normally the contents are shown for named directories on the command-line.
-i
Show the catalogue ID for each entry. Every file and directory on an HFS+ volume has a unique catalogue ID.
-l
Display entries in long format. This format shows the entry type ("d" for directory, "f" for file, "F" for locked file), flags ("i" for invisible), type and creator (four-character strings) for files only, size (number of items in a directory or resource and data bytes of a file, respectively), date of last modification (or creation if the -c flag is given), and name.
-m
Display entries in a continuous format separated by commas.
-q
Replace special and non-printable characters in displayed filenames with question marks (?). This is the default when standard output is a terminal.
-r
Sort entries in reverse order before displaying.
-s
Show the file size for each entry in 1K block units. The size includes blocks used for both data and resource forks.
-t
Sort and display entries by time. Normally files will be sorted by name. This option uses the last modification date to sort unless -c is also specified.
-x
Display entries in column format like -C, but sorted horizontally into rows rather than columns.
-w width
Format output lines suitable for display in the given width. Normally the width will be determined from your terminal, from the environment variable COLUMNS, or from a default value of 80.
-C
Display entries in column format with entries sorted vertically. This is the default output format when standard output is a terminal.
-F
Cause certain output filenames to be followed by a single-character flag indicating the nature of the entry; directories are followed by a slash "/" and executable Macintosh applications are followed by an asterisk "*".
-N
Cause all filenames to be output verbatim without question-mark substitution.
-R
For each directory that is encountered in a listing, recursively descend into and display its contents.

See also

Author

This manual page was written by Jens Schmalzing <jensen@debian.org> for Debian GNU/Linux using the manual page by Klaus Halfmann <halfmann@libra.de> that comes with the source code and documentation from the Tech Info Library.