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Since this is a shortopt with an optional argument, assume the user
knows what they're doing. The longopts --boot and --this-boot will
continue to offer boot IDs as completions.
-- fix grammar and reword some descriptions for clarity
-- add a useful description of what --follow does
-- fix the description for --after-cursor
-- properly introduce the FSS acronym for "Forward Secure Sealing" in
both sections
-- clarify the --disk-usage command
[zj: perform similar changes to zsh completions]
squash! journalctl: fix several issues in --help message text
Instead of having two different listings of machines, use an autoloaded
function that can be used by other shell completions in the future. It
will also allow editing a single file to change the way machinectl and
systemd-run completion for machines.
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.
_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.
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.
Some of the options in systemd can take multiple arguments, such as
systemctl's --type option. Previously, you would only be able to
complete a single type after the -t, but now zsh will continue to
complete the types, separating them by commas.
systemd-inhibit's --what command has colon (:), and that has been taken
into account.
_hosts_or_user_at_host was used by 6 different completions, and
previously was in all 6 of those files. I moved it out to its own file,
_sd_hosts_or_user_at_host. This will be autoloaded for use in other
completion functions. It also allows external completions to use this
function by simply calling _sd_hosts_or_user_at_host as in the systemd
completions.
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.
Moved zsh shell completion to shell-completion/zsh/_systemd for
automake's sake. Also allow users to specify where the files should go
with::
./configure --with-zshcompletiondir=/path/to/some/where
and by default going to `$datadir/zsh/site-functions`
The AA is unnecessary and only adds needless complexity. Replace it
with a case statement instead of repeatedly calling __contains_word to
overglorify string equalities.
- 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...
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
--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.
Instead of completing the whole line, which doesn't work, only complete
the pid, but still show the whole line so the user can see which command
was which.
Users can also let the parameter expansion sort the completion by date
instead of by pid, by setting
zstyle ':completion:*:*:systemd-coredumpctl:*' sort no
so that the zshcompsys doesn't sort the _describe function for only
systemd-coredumpctl.
This mirrors --property, and is generally useful.
New functionality is used in bash completion.
In case of zsh completion, new functionality is less useful
because of caching. Nevertheless, zsh completion for restart
is made to behave more-or-less the same as bash completion.
At least sockets can be restarted.