Re: Problem while viewing rotated log files
- From: Leonard den Ottolander <leonard den ottolander nl>
- To: MC Devel <mc-devel gnome org>
- Subject: Re: Problem while viewing rotated log files
- Date: Wed, 06 Jul 2005 13:32:29 +0200
Hello Oleg,
On Mon, 2005-07-04 at 15:49, Oleg Tarasov wrote:
> There are 2 ways to implement this situation:
> 1) if [file] in [manpath-dirs] use groff
> else use normal viewing
> 2) if [file] in [logfile-dirs] use normal viewing
> else use groff
>
> Let's see. Most manpages are most commonly located in:
>
> /usr/share/man
> /usr/local/man
> ... (add here a couple of common dirs)
>
> Also, you can much harder evaluate common paths to log files as they
> are much more specific due to implementation of software and operation
> systems and their configuration.
By matching for */log/* or */logs/* most .[1-9] files are viewed using
groff. I consider this a good thing. Plus the user can override this,
but not the other way around. Only the files in */log/* or */logs/* are
viewed as plain text.
(In both scenario's a man page in /var/log would be viewed as plain text
so you don't loose anything there either.)
Viewing most .[1-9] files with groff and putting the exception on the
specific log file paths really seems the most sensible thing to do.
Leonard.
--
mount -t life -o ro /dev/dna /genetic/research
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