Ok, this part I don't understand. I'm using the t option, yet in my long
I see no timestamp at all. Tmp is just a sample output from multilog.
Are you saying that tai64n should be used at logging? Perhaps you could
give me an example that would better clarify this for me.
Thanks
-jeremy
> So what's tmp (ie, where does it come from)? Just looking at that command
> line, it looks a lot like you're adding timestamps to every line fresh
> each time you run the above command pipeline, which means that you're
> giving every line pretty much the same timestamp.
>
> tai64n is intended to be used to put an accurate timestamp on each line
> *when it's logged*, not after the fact. Since you're using multilog, you
> don't need it at all; just use the t action in multilog.
>
> --
> Russ Allbery ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) <URL:http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>
>
http://www.xxedgexx.com | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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