SYNOPSIS
- yapet2csv [[-c] | [-h] | [-V]] [-H] [-p {password}] [-q] [-s {separator}] {src} {dst}
DESCRIPTION
The resulting CSV file dst has the format as shown in Table 1, "CSV file format".
Table 1. CSV file format
Column # |
YAPET record field
|
1 |
Record Name
|
2 |
Host Name
|
3 |
User Name
|
4 |
Password
|
5 |
Comment
|
OPTIONS
-h
- Show help.
-c
- Show copyright.
-V
- Show version.
-H
- Add header line to CSV file.
-p
-
Use the master password
password
provided to decrypt
src. The use of this option is not recommended for security reasons.
By default, yapet2csv prompts for the master password.
-q
- Do not produce verbose output, except for error messages. By default, yapet2csv will print a period for each converted password record to stdout.
OPERANDS
src
- Source YAPET pathname which will be converted to CSV and stored in dst. If the file path does not end in .pet, yapet2csv will append .pet to the operand.
dst
- Pathname where the converted YAPET file will be stored. The file must not exist prior to invoking yapet2csv. Refer to Table 1, "CSV file format" for the format of the resulting CSV file dst.
EXAMPLES
Example 1. Prompt for Master Password
Convert the YAPET file /tmp/foo.pet to a CSV file /tmp/bar.csv. Master password used to decrypt foo.pet will be prompted for:
-
$ yapet2csv /tmp/foo.pet /tmp/bar.csv
Example 2. Provide Master Password on command line
Convert the YAPET file /tmp/foo2.pet to a CSV file /tmp/bar2.csv. Master password secret used to decrypt foo2.pet is provided on command line:
-
$ yapet2csv -p secret /tmp/foo2.pet /tmp/bar2.csv
EXIT STATUS
0
- Successful completion.
1
- Error while parsing command line arguments.
2
- File dst already exists.
3
- An error occurred.
BUGS
Please report bugs to m[blue]http://bugs.guengel.ch/m[].
AUTHOR
Rafael Ostertag [email protected]