I (grudgingly) use the Calibre e-book management software to handle my collection of books, and copy them over to my kindle-toy.
One thing that has always bothered me was the fact that when books are imported their ratings are too. If I receive a small sample of ebooks from a friend their ratings are added to my collections.
I've always regarded ratings as things personal to me, rather than attributes of a book itself; as my tastes might not match yours, and vice-versa.
On that basis the last time I was importing a small number of books and getting annoyed at having to manually reset all the imported ratings I decided to do something about it. I started hacking and put together a simple Calibre plugin to automatically zero ratings when books are imported to the collection (i.e. set the rating to be zero).
Sadly this work wasn't painless, despite the small size, as an unfortunate bug in Calibre meant my plugin method wasn't called. Happily Kovid Goyal helped me work through the problem, and he committed a fix that will be in the next Calibre release. For the moment I'm using today's git-snapshot and it works well.
Similarly I've recently started using extended file attributes to store metadata on my desktop system. Unfortunately the GNU findutils
package doesn't allow you to do the obvious thing:
$ find ~/foo -xattr user.comment
/home/skx/foo/bar/t.txt
/home/skx/foo/bar/xc.txt
/home/skx/foo/bar/x.txt
There are several xattr
patches floating around, but I had to bundle my own in debian/patches
to get support for finding files that have particular attribute names.
Maybe one day extended attributes will be taken seriously. (rsync
, cp
, etc will preserve them. I'm hazy on the compatibility with tar
, but most things seem to be working.)
Tags: calibre, findutils, python, wikipedia 4 comments
Your blog seems to be showing the comments from the previous article on the current one.
Regarding find with xattrs: while it won't be as fast, you can use -exec to do what you want.