networkctl: shorten Minimum/Maximum to min/max

This makes the output slightly "lighter" visually. min/max are well-established
forms, so there's no risk of misunderstanding. Also, not using title-case looks
a bit better.

Follow-up for c06ff86e25.

$ build/networkctl status '*'|grep MTU
                   MTU: 65536
                   MTU: 1500 (min: 68, max: 9000)
                   MTU: 1500 (max: 2048)
                   MTU: 1500 (min: 256, max: 2304)
                   MTU: 1500 (min: 68, max: 65535)
                   MTU: 1500 (min: 68, max: 65521)
                   MTU: 1500 (min: 68, max: 65535)
                   MTU: 1500 (max: 65535)
                   MTU: 1360 (min: 68, max: 65535)
This commit is contained in:
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek 2019-05-31 10:56:45 +02:00 committed by Yu Watanabe
parent 75e40119a4
commit 90e29fe1a5
1 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -997,10 +997,10 @@ static int link_status_one(
r = table_add_cell_stringf(table, NULL, "%" PRIu32 "%s%s%s%s%s%s%s",
info->mtu,
info->min_mtu > 0 || info->max_mtu > 0 ? " (" : "",
info->min_mtu > 0 ? "Minimum: " : "",
info->min_mtu > 0 ? "min: " : "",
info->min_mtu > 0 ? min_str : "",
info->min_mtu > 0 && info->max_mtu > 0 ? ", " : "",
info->max_mtu > 0 ? "Maximum: " : "",
info->max_mtu > 0 ? "max: " : "",
info->max_mtu > 0 ? max_str : "",
info->min_mtu > 0 || info->max_mtu > 0 ? ")" : "");
if (r < 0)