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mirror of https://github.com/kellyjonbrazil/jc.git synced 2025-06-17 00:07:37 +02:00

add windows msi info

This commit is contained in:
Kelly Brazil
2021-05-21 10:16:08 -07:00
parent 14f3d442cb
commit 473a643142
4 changed files with 10 additions and 3 deletions

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@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ Use Cases:
- [Nornir command output parsing](https://blog.kellybrazil.com/2020/12/09/parsing-command-output-in-nornir-with-jc/)
## Installation
There are several ways to get `jc`. You can install via `pip`; other OS package repositories like `apt-get`, `dnf`, `zypper`, `pacman`, `nix-env`, `guix`, `brew`, or `portsnap`; via DEB/RPM packaged binaries; or by downloading the correct binary for your architecture and running it anywhere on your filesystem.
There are several ways to get `jc`. You can install via `pip`; other OS package repositories like `apt-get`, `dnf`, `zypper`, `pacman`, `nix-env`, `guix`, `brew`, or `portsnap`; via DEB, RPM, and MSI packaged binaries for linux and Windows; or by downloading the correct binary for your architecture and running it anywhere on your filesystem.
### Pip (macOS, linux, unix, Windows)
```bash
@ -266,11 +266,16 @@ If a UTC timezone can be detected in the text of the command output, the timesta
## Compatibility
Some parsers like `dig`, `xml`, `csv`, etc. will work on any platform. Other parsers that convert platform-specific output will generate a warning message if they are run on an unsupported platform. To see all parser information, including compatibility, run `jc -ap`.
You may still use a parser on an unsupported platform - for example, you may want to parse a file with linux `lsof` output on an macOS laptop. In that case you can suppress the warning message with the `-q` cli option or the `quiet=True` function parameter in `parse()`:
You may still use a parser on an unsupported platform - for example, you may want to parse a file with linux `lsof` output on an macOS or Windows laptop. In that case you can suppress the warning message with the `-q` cli option or the `quiet=True` function parameter in `parse()`:
macOS:
```bash
cat lsof.out | jc --lsof -q
```
or Windows:
```bash
type lsof.out | jc --lsof -q
```
Tested on:
- Centos 7.7
@ -282,6 +287,8 @@ Tested on:
- NixOS
- FreeBSD12
- Windows 10
- Windows 2016 Server
- Windows 2019 Server
## Contributions
Feel free to add/improve code or parsers! You can use the [`jc/parsers/foo.py`](https://github.com/kellyjonbrazil/jc/blob/master/jc/parsers/foo.py) parser as a template and submit your parser with a pull request.

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@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ Use Cases:
- [Nornir command output parsing](https://blog.kellybrazil.com/2020/12/09/parsing-command-output-in-nornir-with-jc/)
## Installation
There are several ways to get `jc`. You can install via `pip`; other OS package repositories like `apt-get`, `dnf`, `zypper`, `pacman`, `nix-env`, `guix`, `brew`, or `portsnap`; via DEB/RPM packaged binaries; or by downloading the correct binary for your architecture and running it anywhere on your filesystem.
There are several ways to get `jc`. You can install via `pip`; other OS package repositories like `apt-get`, `dnf`, `zypper`, `pacman`, `nix-env`, `guix`, `brew`, or `portsnap`; via DEB, RPM, and MSI packaged binaries for linux and Windows; or by downloading the correct binary for your architecture and running it anywhere on your filesystem.
### Pip (macOS, linux, unix, Windows)
```bash