On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 06:39:59PM -0500, Chris Adams wrote: > Once upon a time, Zbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@xxxxxxxxx> said: > > On Mon, Jul 15, 2013 at 05:43:43PM -0500, Chris Adams wrote: > > > No, the "bug" is journalctl, not less. If I run "journalctl | less", I > > > get wrapped lines. If I run "journalctl", I get truncated lines > > > (despite your repeated claims to the contrary). > > [At least in default configuration] you can switch between "truncated" > > and "non-truncated" output by pressing -S<ENTER>, or view the "truncated" > > part by pressing right arrow. If you're seeing something different, > > then please file a bug (against less, because journalctl doesn't really > > do anything other than popen("less") here). For reference, try pressing > > 'h' in less, I see: > > Actually, journalctl DOES do something other than popen("less"); it > overrides the user's $LESS and sets it to "FRSXMK" (the S option tells > less to chop lines). So while technically journalctl is not chopping > lines, it is forcing less to do so. A user's $LESS should not be > overridden, especially to chop log lines. Sure, those are the defaults. If you had written that you don't like the systemd defaults, instead of talking about "bugs", this whole conversation would have been much productive. The default was picked as is, after some back-and-forth, because this way it much easier to browse through a long listing. You can always change *your* default by sticking export SYSTEMD_PAGER='less -FRX -+S' in your .bashrc or wherever. > Another thing that I don't see in the man page is why some lines are > bold/in color. error -> red, notice -> bold, etc. It's a feature you don't get traditionally because syslog drops the priority information from the on-disk format. Zbyszek -- they are not broken. they are refucktored -- alxchk -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel