ls-like command for image frame sequences
Project description
About lsseq
lsseq
is a Unix/Linux command-line utility that
lists directory contents (akin to /bin/ls
) while condensing image
sequences (or cache sequences) to one entry each and listing the sequence in
a helpful way. Filenames that are part of sequences are assumed to be of
the form:
<descriptiveName>.<frameNum>.<imgExtension>
where <imgExtension>
is drawn from a default list of image extensions or an
environment variable that can be set to override the default list. (see
lsseq --help
and in particular --imgExt
).
Note that lsseq
can also handle the case that the dot-separator
between the <descriptiveName>
and the <frameNum>
is an underscore
(see lsseq --help
for --looseNumSeparator, -l
).
lsseq
can print the image sequence in a variety of formats useful for nuke
,
houdini
or rv
and can also print a glob
pattern for use in the shell. It also
has it's own native format which is nicer to read, and also used by another command-line
tool called renumseq
.
For example:
$ ls
aaa.097.tif aaa.098.tif aaa.100.tif aaa.101.tif aaa.102.tif aaa.103.tif
$ lsseq
aaa.[097-103].tif m:[99]
What lsseq
tells us here is that there is a sequence of tif files named
aaa
with frames 97 through 103 (three padded) and frame 99 is missing.
lsseq
is designed to have the flavor of the unix/linux/osx ls
command as much as possible. The idea is to make it easier on the user when
switching back and forth between using lsseq
and regular ls
so that the
look of the output as well as several command-line-arguments are the same
(where possible and it makes sense).
Furthermore it was written to be as robust as possible. For example, it handles negative frames properly and has been extensively tested and used at several production studios. There is a regression test program included with the source here on github to help test any changes, additions, bug fixes etc.
Lastly some useful options have been added beyond what /bin/ls
does that
extend lsseq's
capability.
For example:
1$ ls -F
aaa/ bbb/ ccc.0101.exr nonImage.file
2$ ls *
ccc.0101.exr nonImage.file
aaa:
aaa.097.tif aaa.098.tif aaa.100.tif aaa.101.tif aaa.102.tif aaa.103.tif nonImage_A.file
bbb:
bbx.0097.tif bbx.0100.tif bbx.0103.tif bby.0199.tif bby.0202.tif nonImage_B2.file
bbx.0098.tif bbx.0101.tif bby.0197.tif bby.0200.tif bby.0203.tif
bbx.0099.tif bbx.0102.tif bby.0198.tif bby.0201.tif nonImage_B1.file
3$ lsseq *
nonImage.file
ccc.[0101].exr
aaa:
nonImage_A.file
aaa.[097-103].tif m:[99]
bbb:
nonImage_B1.file nonImage_B2.file
bbx.[0097-0103].tif
bby.[0197-0203].tif
4$ lsseq --prependPathRel *
ccc.[0101].exr
aaa/aaa.[097-103].tif m:[99]
bbb/bbx.[0097-0103].tif
bbb/bby.[0197-0203].tif
5$ lsseq --prependPathAbs --skipMissing --format rv *
/user/jrowellfx/test/ccc.0101.exr
/user/jrowellfx/test/aaa/aaa.97-103@@@.tif
/user/jrowellfx/test/bbb/bbx.97-103#.tif
/user/jrowellfx/test/bbb/bby.197-203#.tif
The first thing to note above is how close lsseq
is to mimicking /bin/ls
in
labelling directories and listing directory contents etc. (compare the
output of command 2 to 3). One difference being that lsseq
first lists all
non-sequence images in a directory exactly as ls
would list them (minus the
sequences) then lists all the sequences in their condensed form.
Secondly note the two useful options in commands 4 and 5 above,
--prependPathRel
and --prependPathAbs
which can be very useful when creating
lists of sequences to pipe into other scripts.
It's recommended to review the capabilities of lsseq in how it can sort
sequences, especially with respect to how it handles sorting by time. See
lsseq --help
for --time, -t and --onlyShow
options.
Installing lsseq
python3 -m pip install lsseq
I have written more helpful installation-information below in an addendum. You may find it helpful when trying to install this command on your system, be it Linux or macOS.
Testing lsseq
To test lsseq
, cd
into a directory containing frames from an image
sequence then lsseq
the contents of the directory.
If you don't have one handy you can try this to test it.
$ cd ~
$ mkdir tmp
$ cd tmp
$ touch aaa.001.tif aaa.002.tif aaa.003.tif aaa.004.tif aaa.005.tif
$ lsseq
aaa.[001-005].tif z:[1-5]
Note the z:[1-5]
which is telling you that the frames aaa.[001-005].tif
have zero length, and if you had generated those with a renderer I'm
guessing you'd need to rerender them.
Type:
$ lsseq --help
for much more useful info.
Addendum - more on installing command-line tools
Here's the process that I've followed to install lsseq
, as well as my other
python-based command-line
tools (i.e., expandseq
, condenseseq
and renumseq
)
so that they are accessible to all users. This works on both macOS and Linux.
$ su -
# cd /usr/local
# python3 -m venv venv
# cd venv
# source bin/activate
# python3 -m pip install --upgrade pip
# deactivate
# bin/pip install lsseq
# bin/pip install expandSeq
# bin/pip install renumSeq
# ln -s /usr/local/venv/bin/lsseq /usr/local/bin/lsseq
# ln -s /usr/local/venv/bin/expandseq /usr/local/bin/expandseq
# ln -s /usr/local/venv/bin/condenseseq /usr/local/bin/condenseseq
# ln -s /usr/local/venv/bin/renumseq /usr/local/bin/renumseq
# exit
$ lsseq --version
2.4.4
At this point any user should be able to run any of the commands linked in the example above. Note that updates are easy now too. Say there's an update to lsseq that you want to install.
$ su -
# cd /usr/local/venv
# bin/pip install lsseq --upgrade
# exit
$ lsseq --version
99.99.99
Just kidding about the version number, maybe in the year 2159? Will Unix still be a thing!?
Contact
Please contact j a m e s <at> a l p h a - e l e v e n . c o m
with any bug
reports, suggestions or praise as the case may be.
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