Manual Pages for Linux CentOS command on man systemd-escape
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Manual Pages for Linux CentOS command on man systemd-escape

SYSTEMD-ESCAPE(1) systemd-escape SYSTEMD-ESCAPE(1)

NAME

systemd-escape - Escape strings for usage in system unit names SYNOPSIS

systemd-escape [OPTIONS...] [STRING...] DESCRIPTION

systemd-escape may be used to escape strings for inclusion in systemd unit names. The command may be used to escape and to undo escaping of strings. The command takes any number of strings on the command line, and will process them individually, one after the other. It will output them separated by spaces to stdout. By default this command will escape the strings passed, unless unescape is passed which results in the inverse operation being applied. If mangle a special mode of escaping is applied instead, which assumes a string to be already escaped but will escape everything

that appears obviously non-escaped. OPTIONS The following options are understood: suffix= Appends the specified unit type suffix to the escaped string. Takes one of the unit types supported by systemd, such as ".service" or ".mount". May not be used in conjunction with template=, unescape or mangle. template= Inserts the escaped strings in a unit name template. Takes a unit name template such as foobar@.service May not be used in conjunction with suffix=, unescape or mangle.

path, -p When escaping or unescaping a string, assume it refers to a file system path. This enables special processing of the initial "/" of the path. unescape Instead of escaping the specified strings, undo the escaping, reversing the operation. May not be used in conjunction with suffix=, template= or mangle. mangle Like escape, but only escape characters that are obviously not escaped yet, and possibly automatically append an appropriate unit type suffix to the string. May not be used in conjunction with suffix=, template= or unescape.

-h, help Print a short help text and exit. version Print a short version string and exit. EXAMPLES Escape a single string:

$ systemd-escape 'Hallöchen, Meister' Hall\xc3\xb6chen\x2c\x20Meister To undo escaping on a single string:

$ systemd-escape -u 'Hall\xc3\xb6chen\x2c\x20Meister' Hallöchen, Meister To generate the mount unit for a path:

$ systemd-escape -p suffix=mount "/tmp//waldi/foobar/"

tmp-waldi-foobar.mount To generate instance names of three strings

$ systemd-escape template=systemd-nspawn@.service 'My Container 1' 'containerb' 'container/III'

systemd-nspawn@My\x20Container\x201.service systemd-nspawn@containerb.service systemd-nspawn@container-III.service EXIT STATUS

On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. SEE ALSO systemd(1), systemctl(1)

systemd 219 SYSTEMD-ESCAPE(1)




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