Organize files based on regex rules, file extensions by default.
Installation
Using cargo (require Rust)
Install it by running
It will download & compile binary to ~/.cargo/bin. Add this directory to your path or copy binary to /usr/bin/
Compiling from source (require Rust)
Just clone this repo and build this project:
After compiling, you can use binary ./target/release/organize-rt
. For example, you could copy it to /usr/bin.
Using pre-build binaries
Download binaries from GitLab release section.
Arch Linux
Clone repo and use makepkg:
Usage
$ organize-rt --help
organize-rt 0.9.1
Tool for organizing files in garbage dirs like 'Downloads'
USAGE:
organize-rt [FLAGS] --output <output> --source <source>
FLAGS:
--dry-run Prints where the file would move, but does not move
-h, --help Prints help information
-H, --hidden Include hidden files/directories
-q, --quiet Quiet run, empty output
-r, --recursive
-V, --version Prints version information
-v, --verbose Show more info
OPTIONS:
-o, --output <output> Output directory
-s, --source <source> Directory to organize
Recommended mode: organize-rt -rH
Writing own rules
Just edit ~/.config/organize-rt/organize-rt.toml (will appear after the first run). File structure:
= [
#...
[
'REGEX',
'OUTPUT_SUBDIR',
]
#...
]
With this rule, file, that match REGEX rule, but didn't match previous rules will move to OUTPUT_DIR/OUTPUT_SUBDIR, where OUTPUT_DIR is --output option.
Like it?
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Bad code?
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