Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek 7524c3cf44 bash-completion: journalctl --file 2013-11-15 22:54:51 -05:00
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek f11880744c journalctl: add --list-boots to show boot IDs and times
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.
2013-10-28 23:43:57 -04:00
Dave Reisner a72d698d0d bash-completion: use a better definition of __contains_word
- scope the iterator var
- use the correct, quoted, non-expansion prone positional parameter
  notation
- prevent expansion on RHS of comparison
- remove unneeded explicit returns.

This really should be defined only once...
2013-07-30 13:04:46 -04:00
Jan Janssen a331b5e6d4 journalctl: Add support for showing messages from a previous boot
Hi,

I redid the boot ID look up to use enumerate_unique.

This is quite fast if the cache is warm but painfully slow if
it isn't. It has a slight chance of returning the wrong order if
realtime clock jumps around.

This one has to do n searches for every boot ID there is plus
a sort, so it depends heavily on cache hotness. This is in contrast
to the other way of look-up through filtering by a MESSAGE_ID,
which only needs about 1 seek + whatever amount of relative IDs
you want to walk.

I also have a linked-list + (in-place) mergesort version of this
patch, which has pretty much the same runtime. But since this one
is using libc sorting and armortized allocation, I prefer this
one.

To summarize: The MESSAGE_ID way is a *lot* faster but can be
incomplete due to rotation, while the enumerate+sort will find
every boot ID out there but will be painfully slow for large
journals and cold caches.

You choose :P

Jan
2013-07-16 17:38:12 +02:00
Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek 3f3a438f58 journalctl: add --system/--user flags
--user basically gives messages from your own systemd --user services.
--system basically gives messages from PID 1, kernel, and --system
services. Those two options are not exahustive, because a priviledged
user might be able to see messages from other users, and they will not
be shown with either or both of those flags.
2013-06-10 10:10:06 -04:00
Harald Hoyer 1535fb7379 shell-completion/bash/journalctl: suppress stderr 2013-03-19 15:04:02 +01:00
Michael Biebl d611dadcc7 bash-completion: split completions and move to new location
Split the large bash completion script into separate, smaller files each
named after the binary it is used for and move the files to
/usr/share/bash-completion/completions. This way the completions can be
loaded on demand and we only install the completions for the tools we
actually build. The old path /etc/bash_completion.d/ is deprecated and
will disappear in the future.
2013-03-03 14:39:51 +01:00