A command-line tool to help mark assignments submitted to D2L
It's frustrating dealing with the zip files full of assignment submissions that you get from D2L.
- Merging all of a student's submissions into a single folder is tedious.
- Navigating submissions on the command line sucks, because each directory name starts with a long number.
- Extracting all the zip files, tar archives, and 7z archives that students submit adds a needless extra step to marking.
I've found this tool useful for eliminating those annoyances, and I hope you will too.
This is the most common command I use:
d2lmf extract -R "Assignment 1 Download Oct 11, 2015 803 PM.zip" A1/T01
It extracts the submissions from the zip folder into the directory A1/T01
.
The -R
option makes it run all the recommended cleanup actions on the
submissions, and is equivalent to using -x
, -j
, -c
and -m
.
The -x
specifies that we want to extract any zip, rar, tar, or 7z archives
that students submitted. The -j
deletes 'junk' like .DS_Store
. The -c
collapses needlessly nested directories. Finally, the -m
merges all submitted
files into a single directory for each student.
If you haven't added your local Python bin directory to your path, you may need to invoke d2lmf as a module, like so:
python -m d2lmf extract -R "Assignment 1 Download Oct 11, 2015 803 PM.zip" A1/T01
d2lmf is available through pip. If you're running a recent version of Python, you probably already have pip installed. If not, that's the first step in each of the commands below.
After installing, you may want to follow the instructions to add your local Python bin directory to your PATH.
sudo apt-get install python-pip
pip install --user d2lmf
sudo easy_install pip
pip install --user d2lmf
First, download and install Python from https://www.python.org/downloads/
Then, install d2lmf:
python -m pip install --user d2lmf
The extraction of rar and 7z archives depends on external tools. If you do not have a rar or 7z utility installed, those archives will be skipped.
On Windows, I suggest installing 7-Zip.
On Ubuntu, p7zip is the equivalent, and it can be installed with
sudo apt-get install p7zip-full
. p7zip is also available for OSX, and can
be installed from homebrew with brew install p7zip
.