diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'man/systemd-cat.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | man/systemd-cat.xml | 14 |
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/man/systemd-cat.xml b/man/systemd-cat.xml index ba7a2cf0c7..16a8eb456c 100644 --- a/man/systemd-cat.xml +++ b/man/systemd-cat.xml @@ -60,18 +60,18 @@ <title>Description</title> <para><command>systemd-cat</command> may be used to - connect STDOUT and STDERR of a process with the + connect the standard input and output of a process to the journal, or as a filter tool in a shell pipeline to pass the output the previous pipeline element generates to the journal.</para> <para>If no parameter is passed, <command>systemd-cat</command> will write - everything it reads from standard input (STDIN) to the journal.</para> + everything it reads from standard input (stdin) to the journal.</para> <para>If parameters are passed, they are executed as - command line with standard output (STDOUT) and standard - error output (STDERR) connected to the journal, so + command line with standard output (stdout) and standard + error output (stderr) connected to the journal, so that all it writes is stored in the journal.</para> </refsect1> @@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ <title>Invoke a program</title> <para>This calls <filename noindex='true'>/bin/ls</filename> - with STDOUT/STDERR connected to the + with standard output and error connected to the journal:</para> <programlisting># systemd-cat ls</programlisting> @@ -188,8 +188,8 @@ <para>Even though the two examples have very similar effects the first is preferable since only one process - is running at a time, and both STDOUT and STDERR are - captured while in the second example only STDOUT is + is running at a time, and both stdout and stderr are + captured while in the second example only stdout is captured.</para> </refsect1> |