From 7b4c7a681cc4c0a53dc8a8baf4853e921cfbf5de Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: bigbiff Date: Thu, 1 Jan 2015 19:44:14 -0500 Subject: Update blkid to 2.25.0 Break libblkid into 4 libraries: libblkid, libuuid, libutil-linux and libfdisk. This should help in later patch updates. Change-Id: I680d9a7feb031e5c29a603e9c58aff4b65826262 --- libblkid/lib/terminal-colors.d.5 | 190 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 190 insertions(+) create mode 100644 libblkid/lib/terminal-colors.d.5 (limited to 'libblkid/lib/terminal-colors.d.5') diff --git a/libblkid/lib/terminal-colors.d.5 b/libblkid/lib/terminal-colors.d.5 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..66ecf2c48 --- /dev/null +++ b/libblkid/lib/terminal-colors.d.5 @@ -0,0 +1,190 @@ +.\" terminal-colors.d.5 -- +.\" Copyright 2014 Ondrej Oprala +.\" Copyright (C) 2014 Karel Zak +.\" Copyright 2014 Red Hat, Inc. +.\" May be distributed under the GNU General Public License +.TH "TERMINAL_COLORS.D" "5" "January 2014" "util-linux" "terminal-colors.d" +.SH "NAME" +terminal-colors.d \- Configure output colorization for various utilities +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +/etc/terminal-colors\&.d/[[\fIname\fR][@\fIterm\fR]\&.][\fItype\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +Files in this directory determine the default behavior for utilities +when coloring output. + +The +.I name +is a utility name. The name is optional and when none is specified then the +file is used for all unspecified utilities. + +The +.I term +is a terminal identifier (the TERM environment variable). +The terminal identifier is optional and when none is specified then the file +is used for all unspecified terminals. + +The +.I type +is a file type. Supported file types are: +.TP +.B disable +Turns off output colorization for all compatible utilities. +.TP +.B enable +Turns on output colorization; any matching +.B disable +files are ignored. +.TP +.B scheme +Specifies colors used for output. The file format may be specific to the utility, +the default format is described below. +.PP +If there are more files that match for a utility, then the file with the more +specific filename wins. For example, the filename "@xterm.scheme" has less +priority than "dmesg@xterm.scheme". The lowest priority are those files without a +utility name and terminal identifier (e.g. "disable"). + +The user-specific +.I $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/terminal-colors.d +or +.I $HOME/.config/terminal-colors.d +overrides the global setting. + +.SH EXAMPLES +Disable colors for all compatible utilities: +.RS +.br +.B "touch /etc/terminal-colors.d/disable" +.br +.RE + +Disable colors for all compatible utils on a vt100 terminal: +.RS +.br +.B "touch /etc/terminal-colors.d/@vt100.disable" +.br +.RE + +Disable colors for all compatible utils except dmesg(1): +.RS +.br +.B "touch /etc/terminal-colors.d/disable" +.sp +.B "touch /etc/terminal-colors.d/dmesg.enable" +.br +.RE + +.SH DEFAULT SCHEME FILES FORMAT +The following statement is recognized: + +.RS +.br +.B "name color-sequence" +.br +.RE + +The +.B name +is a logical name of color sequence (for example "error"). The names are +specific to the utilities. For more details always see the COLORS section +in the man page for the utility. + +The +.B color-sequence +is a color name, ASCII color sequences or escape sequences. + +.SS Color names +black, blue, brown, cyan, darkgray, gray, green, lightblue, lightcyan +lightgray, lightgreen, lightmagenta, lightred, magenta, red and yellow +.SS ANSI color sequences +The color sequences are composed of sequences of numbers +separated by semicolons. The most common codes are: +.sp +.RS +.TS +l l. + 0 to restore default color + 1 for brighter colors + 4 for underlined text + 5 for flashing text +30 for black foreground +31 for red foreground +32 for green foreground +33 for yellow (or brown) foreground +34 for blue foreground +35 for purple foreground +36 for cyan foreground +37 for white (or gray) foreground +40 for black background +41 for red background +42 for green background +43 for yellow (or brown) background +44 for blue background +45 for purple background +46 for cyan background +47 for white (or gray) background +.TE +.RE +.SS Escape sequences +To specify control or blank characters in the color sequences, +C-style \e-escaped notation can be used: +.sp +.RS +.TS +lb l. +\ea Bell (ASCII 7) +\eb Backspace (ASCII 8) +\ee Escape (ASCII 27) +\ef Form feed (ASCII 12) +\en Newline (ASCII 10) +\er Carriage Return (ASCII 13) +\et Tab (ASCII 9) +\ev Vertical Tab (ASCII 11) +\e? Delete (ASCII 127) +\e_ Space +\e\e Backslash (\e) +\e^ Caret (^) +\e# Hash mark (#) +.TE +.RE +.sp +Please note that escapes are necessary to enter a space, backslash, +caret, or any control character anywhere in the string, as well as a +hash mark as the first character. + +For example, to use a red background for alert messages in the output of +.BR dmesg (1), +use: + +.RS +.br +.B "echo 'alert 37;41' >> /etc/terminal-colors.d/dmesg.scheme" +.br +.RE + +.SS Comments +Lines where the first non-blank character is a # (hash) are ignored. +Any other use of the hash character is not interpreted as introducing +a comment. + +.SH FILES +.B $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/terminal-colors.d +.br +.B $HOME/.config/terminal-colors.d +.br +.B /etc/terminal-colors.d + +.SH ENVIRONMENT +.IP TERMINAL_COLORS_DEBUG=all +enables debug output. + +.SH COMPATIBILITY +The terminal-colors.d functionality is currently supported by all util-linux +utilities which provides colorized output. For more details always see the +COLORS section in the man page for the utility. + +.SH AVAILABILITY +terminal-colors.d is part of the util-linux package and is available from +.UR ftp://\:ftp.kernel.org\:/pub\:/linux\:/utils\:/util-linux/ +Linux Kernel Archive +.UE . -- cgit v1.2.3