Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Suggested by David Wilkins <dwilkins@maths.tcd.ie> in
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=967521:
> [Specific boot ID is a] bit of a palaver to obtain. I consulted the
> verbose dump of the journal to discover the _BOOT_ID for the
> timestamp, and then generated the journal dump for that boot using
> journalctl _BOOT_ID=foo -o short-monotonic.
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_SYSTEMD_USER_UNIT in the --user-unit flag argument should instead be
USER_UNIT. It should also have an optional `=` between the flag and the
argument.
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Things like -n to specify the lines to show with systemctl and
journalctl accepts syntax like:
journalctl -n4
systemctl -n14
Previously, typing `-nXX <tab>` where XX is a number, zsh would try to
complete an integer. Now it will see the XX and use the _journalctl_none
completion. This is also how any of the single letter options that take
arguments work as well.
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Show equals and field values when used with _journal_none, don't show
anything if we're not using _journal_none.
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Splitting things unnecessarily at newlines causes tab completion to take
an extremely long time. Also add a note saying that caching is not good
for journalctl's completion.
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Actually displays a list of boot ID's and offsets to the user
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Re-ordered some of the options and added a few that were missing
previously as well.
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