NAME
   cv - a fast gtk+ image viewer loosely modeled after XV

SYNOPSIS
      cv

      cv directory

      cv path...

      cv -g <glob expression...>

      find .. -print0 | cv -0r

FEATURES
   CV is supposed to work similar to the venerable XV image viewer, just
   faster. Why faster?

   *   optimized directory scanning algorithm

       The directory scanning in CV uses some tricks that - on most modern
       filesystems - makes it possible to detect filetypes faster than
       stat()'ing every file. This makes CV suitable for directories with
       lots of files (10000+).

       This algorithm is quite unprecise - it doesn't make a difference
       between files, device nodes, symlinks and the like, and filetype
       detection is done using the file extension only.

       On the positive side, it is usually many orders of magnitude faster
       than traditional scanning techniques (good for directories with
       10000 or 100000+ files).

   *   queuing for all time-consuming background tasks

       All tasks, such as unlinking files or generating thumbnails, that
       can be done in the background will be done so - no waiting required,
       even when changing directories.

   *   use of asynchronous I/O

       CV tries to use asynchronous I/O whereever it makes sense, for
       example while scanning directories, waiting for stat data, unlinking
       files or generating thumbnails. This usually decreases scanning
       times for large directories a bit (especially on RAID devices and
       over NFS) and makes CV much more interactive.

   *   fast image loading

       The time span between the user issuing a command and displaying the
       new image should be as small as possible. CV uses optimized
       (especially for JPEG) loading functions and sacrifices some quality
       (e.g no gamma correction, although this might change) to achieve
       this speed.

   *   fast thumbnail creation

       Thumbnail creation uses both CPU and Disk-I/O. CV interleaves both,
       so on modern CPUs, thumbnailing is usually limited by I/O speed.
       Thumbnail creation for JPEGs has been specially optimized and can
       even take advantage of multiple CPUs.

   *   minimum optical clutter

       CV has no menus or other user interface elements that take up a lot
       of screen space (or are useful for beginning users). The schnauzer
       windows can also be somewhat crowded.

       The point of an image viewer is viewing images, not a nice GUI. This
       is similar to XV's behaviour.

   *   efficient (and hard to learn) user interface

       CV uses key combinations. A lot. If you are an experienced XV user,
       you will find most of these keys familiar. If not, CV might be hard
       to use at first, but will be an efficient tool later.

   *   multi-window GUI

       CV doesn't force you to use a specific layout, instead it relies on
       your window manager, thus enabling you to chose whatever layout that
       suits you most.

   *   i18n'ed filename handling throughout

       As long as glib can recognize your filename encoding (either UTF-8
       or locale-specific, depending on the setting of G_BROKEN_FILENAMES)
       and you have the relevant fonts, CV will display your filenames
       correctly.

   *   extensible through plug-ins

       I have weird plug-ins that access remote databases to find a
       directory. This is not likely to be of any use to other people.
       Likewise, others might have weird requirements I cannot dream of.

   *   filename clustering

       Among the standard plug-ins is a filename clustering plug-in, that
       (in case of tens of thousands images in one directory) might be able
       to cluster similar names together.

DESCRIPTION
 THE IMAGE WINDOW
   You can use the following keys in the image window:

    q            quit the program
    <            half the image size
    >            double the image size
    ,            shrink the image by 10%
    .            enlarge the image by 10%
    n            reset to normal size
    m            maximize to screensize
    M            maximize to screensize, respecting image aspect
    ctrl-m       toggle maxpect-always mode
    ctrl-sift-m  toggle using current image size as max image size
    u            uncrop
    r            set scaling mode to 'nearest' (fastest)
    s            set scaling mode to 'bilinear' (default)
    shift-s      set scaling mode to 'hyper' (slowest)
    t            rotate clockwise 90°
    T            rotate counterclockwise°
    a            apply all rotations loslessly to a jpeg file (using exiftran)
    ctrl-shift-t apply current rotation for future image loads
    ctrl-v       open a new visual schnauzer window for the current dir
    ctrl-c       clone the current image window
    ctrl-e       run an editor ($CV_EDITOR or "gimp") on the current image
    ctrl-p       fire up the print dialog
    ctrl-shift-p same as ctrl-p, but automatically selects "ok"
    escape       cancel a crop action

   And when playing movies, these additional keys are active:

    left         rewind by 10 seconds
    right        forward by 10 seconds
    down         rewind by 60 seconds
    up           forward by 60 seconds
    pg_up        rewind by 600 seconds
    pg_down      forward by 600 seconds
    o            toggle on-screen display
    p            pause/unpause
    escape       stop playing
    9            turn volume down
    0            turn volume up

   Any other keys will be sent to the default schnauzer window, which can
   be toggled on and off by right-clicking into the image window.

   Left-clicking into the image window will let you crop the image (usually
   to zoom into large images that CV scales down).

 THE VISUAL SCHNAUZER
   Any image-loading action in a schnauzer window acts on the
   "last-recently-activated" imagewindow, which currently is simply the
   last image window that received a keypress.

   You can use the following keys in the schnauzer window:

    ctrl-space,
    space        move to and display next image
    ctrl-backspace,
    backspace    move to and display previous image
    ctrl-return,
    return       display selected picture, or enter directory

    cursor keys  move selection
    page-up      move one page up
    page-down    move one page down
    home         move to first file
    end          move to last file

    ctrl-a       select all files
    ctrl-shift-a select all files currently displayed in the schnauzer window
    ctrl-d       delete selected files WITHOUT ASKING AGAIN
    ctrl-g       force generation of thumbnails for the selected files
    ctrl-shift-g remove thumbnails for the selected files
    ctrl-s       rescan current direcory or files updates/deletes etc.
    ctrl-u       update selected (or all) icons if neccessary
    ctrl--       unselected thumbnailed images
    ctrl-+       keep only thumbnailed images, deselect others

    ^            go to parent directory (caret).

    0-9,
    a-z          find the first filename beginning with this letter

   Right-clicking into the schnauzer window displays a pop-up menu with
   additional actions.

  SELECTION
   You can select entries in the Schnauzer in a variety of ways:

   Keyboard
       Moving the cursor with the keyboard will first deselect all files
       and then select the file you moved to.

   Clicking
       Clicking on an entry will select the one you clicked and deselect
       all others.

   Shift-Clicking
       Shift-clicking will toggle the selection on the entry under the
       mouse.

   Dragging
       Dragging will select all entries between the one selected when
       pushing the button and the one selected when releasing the button.
       If you move above or below the schnauzer area while drag-selecting,
       the schnauzer will move up/down one row twice per second. In
       addition, horizontal mouse movement acts as a kind of invisible
       horizontal scrollbar.

   Hint: double-click works while click-selecting
       You can double-click any image while click-selecting to display it
       without stopping the selection process. This will act as if you
       normally double-clicked the image to display it, and will toggle the
       selection twice, resulting in no change.

FILES
   When starting, CV runs the .cvrc file in your $HOME directory as if it
   were a perl script. in that, you will mostly load plug-ins.

   Example:

      system "fping -q -t 10 ether"
        or require "/fs/cv/cvplugin.pl";

   This will load a plug-in, but only if the machine *ether* is reachable
   (supposedly the plug-in is networked in some way :).

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
   CV_EDITOR
       The program that gets executed when the user presses "CTRL-e" in the
       Schnauzer or image window. The default is "gimp".

   CV_AUDIO_PLAYER
       EXPERIMENTAL: audio playback is now via mpv, this variable is
       currently ignored.

       Program used to play all sorts of audio (wav, aif, mp3, ogg...),
       default "play". Will be called like "$CV_AUDIO_PLAYER -- <path>".

   CV_MPLAYER
       Program used to play all sorts of video files. Unlike
       "CV_AUDIO_PLAYER", this really must be one of the "mplayer",
       "mplayer2" or "mpv" programs, or something that is very command-line
       compatible to them.

       Currently, if this string contains the substring "mpv", then it is
       assumed to be mpv-compatible, otherwise it is assumed to be
       mplayer-compatible.

       Note: for video-thumbnailing, mplayer is still used (and hardcoded).

   CV_PRINT_DESTINATION
       The default (perl-style) destination to use in the print dialog.

   CV_TRASHCAN
       When set, must point to a directory where all files that are deleted
       by the "Delete Physically" (ctrl-d) action are moved to (other
       deletion actions still delete!). If unset, files that are deleted
       are really being deleted.

SIGNALS
   Sending CV a SIGUSR1 signal will cause all image viewers to reload the
   currently loaded image. This is useful if you use CV as a viewer for
   changing data - just run it in the background with some path and each
   time the image changes, send it a SIGUSR1.

SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
   CV uses Pixbuf to load non-JPEG images. Pixbuf is not considered safe
   for this purpose, though (from the gtk-2.2 release notes):

   "While efforts have been made to make gdk-pixbuf robust against invalid
   images, using gdk-pixbuf to load untrusted data is not recommended, due
   to the likelyhood that there are additional problems where an invalid
   image could cause gdk-pixbuf to crash or worse."

BUGS/TODO
    Lots of functionality is missing.

    Pixbuf doesn't always honor G_BROKEN_FILENAMES, so accessing files with
    names incompatible with utf-8 might fail.

    rotate on disk
    lots of ui issues
    save(?)
    preferences

AUTHOR
   Marc Lehmann <[email protected]>.