UNICONV(1) 3.1.8 UNICONV(1)NAMEuniconv - convert Netatalk volume encoding
SYNOPSISuniconv [-ndv] -c cnidbackend -f fromcode -t tocode [-m maccode]
volumepath
DESCRIPTIONuniconv converts the volume encoding of volumepath from the fromcode to
the tocode encoding.
OPTIONS-c
CNID backend used on this volume, usually cdb or dbd. Should match
the backend selected with afpd for this volume. If not specified,
the default CNID backend "dbd" is used
-d
don't HEX encode leading dots (:2e), equivalent to use dots = yes
in afp.conf(5)-f
encoding to convert from, use ASCII for HEX encoded volumes
-h
display help
-m
Macintosh client codepage, required for HEX encoded volumes.
Defaults to "MAC_ROMAN"
-n
"dry run", don't do any real changes
-t
volume encoding to convert to, e.g. UTF8
-v
verbose output, use twice for maximum logging.
-V
print version and exit
WARNING
Setting the wrong options might render your data unusable!!! Make sure
you know what you are doing. Always backup your data first.
It is *strongly* recommended to do a "dry run" first and to check the
output for conversion errors.
afpd(8) should not be running while you change the volume encoding.
Remember to change unix charset or vol charset in afp.conf(5) to the
new codepage, before restarting afpd.
In case of MacChineseTraditional, MacJapanese or MacKorean, uniconv
cannot be used.
USE AT YOUR OWN RISK!!!
SELECTABLE CHARSETS
Netatalk provides internal support for UTF-8 (pre- and decomposed) and
HEX. If you want to use other charsets, they must be provided by
iconv(1)uniconv also knows iso-8859.adapted, an old style 1.x NLS widely used.
This is only intended for upgrading old volumes, afpd(8) cannot handle
iso-8859.adapted anymore.
CNID BACKGROUND
The CNID backends maintains name to ID mappings. If you change a
filename outside afpd(8) (shell, samba), the CNID db, i.e. the DIDNAME
index, gets inconsistent. Netatalk tries to recover from such
inconsistencies as gracefully as possible. The mechanisms to resolve
such inconsistencies may fail sometimes, though, as this is not an easy
task to accomplish. I.e. if several names in the path to the file or
directory have changed, things may go wrong.
If you change a lot of filenames at once, chances are higher that the
afpds fallback mechanisms fail, i.e. files will be assigned new IDs,
even though the file hasn't changed. uniconv therefore updates the
CNID entry for each file/directory directly after it changes the name
to avoid inconsistencies. The two supported backends for volumes, dbd
and cdb, use the same CNID db format. Therefore, you could use uniconv
with cdb and afpd with dbd later.
Warning: There must not be two processes opening the CNID database
using different backends at once! If a volume is still opened with dbd
(cnid_metad/cnid_dbd) and you start uniconv with cdb, the result will
be a corrupted CNID database, as the two backends use different locking
schemes. You might run into additional problems, e.g. if dbd is
compiled with transactions, cdb will not update the transaction logs.
In general, it is recommended to use the same backend for uniconv you
are using with afpd(8).
EXAMPLES
convert 1.x CAP encoded volume to UTF-8, clients used MacRoman
codepage, cnidscheme is dbd:
example% uniconv-c dbd -f ASCII -t UTF8 -m MAC_ROMAN /path/to/share
convert iso8859-1 volume to UTF-8, cnidscheme is cdb:
example% uniconv-c cdb -f ISO-8859-1 -t UTF8 -m MAC_ROMAN /path/to/share
convert 1.x volume using iso8859-1 adapted NLS to HEX encoding:
example% uniconv-f ISO-8859-ADAPTED -t ASCII -m MAC_ROMAN/path/to/share
convert UTF-8 volume to HEX, for MacCyrillic clients:
example% uniconv-f UTF8 -t ASCII -m MAC_CYRILLIC /path/to/share
SEE ALSOafp.conf(5),afpd(8),iconv(1),cnid_metad(8),cnid_dbd(8)3.1.8 19 Jan 2013 UNICONV(1)