It was 2013-03-25 pon 23:48, when Lennart Poettering wrote:
On Mon, 25.03.13 21:19, Lukasz Stelmach (stl...@poczta.fm) wrote:
W dniu 25.03.2013 16:48, Lennart Poettering pisze:
On Sun, 24.03.13 13:32, Łukasz Stelmach (stl...@poczta.fm) wrote:
Make systemd-analyze dot output only lines
On Sun, 24.03.13 13:32, Łukasz Stelmach (stl...@poczta.fm) wrote:
Make systemd-analyze dot output only lines matching a regular
expression passed on the command line. Without the regular expression
print everything.
So far we mostly used globs everywhere in system. Does it really make
sense
It was 2013-03-25 pon 16:48, when Lennart Poettering wrote:
On Sun, 24.03.13 13:32, Łukasz Stelmach (stl...@poczta.fm) wrote:
Make systemd-analyze dot output only lines matching a regular
expression passed on the command line. Without the regular expression
print everything.
So far we
W dniu 25.03.2013 16:48, Lennart Poettering pisze:
On Sun, 24.03.13 13:32, Łukasz Stelmach (stl...@poczta.fm) wrote:
Make systemd-analyze dot output only lines matching a regular
expression passed on the command line. Without the regular expression
print everything.
So far we mostly used
Make systemd-analyze dot output only lines matching a regular
expression passed on the command line. Without the regular expression
print everything.
---
A graph created with the full output of dot is completely incomprehensible
on a regular system. It thus makes perfect sense IMHO to add
On Sun, Mar 24, 2013 at 01:32:41PM +0100, Łukasz Stelmach wrote:
Make systemd-analyze dot output only lines matching a regular
expression passed on the command line. Without the regular expression
print everything.
---
A graph created with the full output of dot is completely