Lines Matching full:just

11 #define HELP_toybox_norecurse "When one toybox command calls another, usually it just calls the new\ncommand's main() function rather than searching the $PATH and calling\nexec on another file (which is much slower).\n\nThis disables that optimization, so toybox will run external commands\n       even when it has a built-in version of that command. This requires\n       toybox symlinks to be installed in the $PATH, or re-invoking the\n       \"toybox\" multiplexer command by name."
87 #define HELP_mktemp "usage: mktemp [-dqu] [-p DIR] [TEMPLATE]\n\nSafely create a new file \"DIR/TEMPLATE\" and print its name.\n\n-d Create directory instead of file (--directory)\n-p Put new file in DIR (--tmpdir)\n-q Quiet, no error messages\n-t Prefer $TMPDIR > DIR > /tmp (default DIR > $TMPDIR > /tmp)\n-u Don't create anything, just print what would be created\n\nEach X in TEMPLATE is replaced with a random printable character. The\ndefault TEMPLATE is tmp.XXXXXXXXXX."
127 #define HELP_netstat "usage: netstat [-pWrxwutneal]\n\nDisplay networking information. Default is netstat -tuwx\n\n-r Routing table\n-a All sockets (not just connected)\n-l Listening server sockets\n-t TCP sockets\n-u UDP sockets\n-w Raw sockets\n-x Unix sockets\n-e Extended info\n-n Don't resolve names\n-W Wide display\n-p Show PID/program name of sockets"
133 #define HELP_ifconfig "usage: ifconfig [-aS] [INTERFACE [ACTION...]]\n\nDisplay or configure network interface.\n\nWith no arguments, display active interfaces. First argument is interface\nto operate on, one argument by itself displays that interface.\n\n-a All interfaces displayed, not just active ones\n-S Short view, one line per interface\n\nStandard ACTIONs to perform on an INTERFACE:\n\nADDR[/MASK] - set IPv4 address (1.2.3.4/5) and activate interface\nadd|del ADDR[/LEN] - add/remove IPv6 address (1111::8888/128)\nup|down - activate or deactivate interface\n\nAdvanced ACTIONs (default values usually suffice):\n\ndefault - remove IPv4 address\nnetmask ADDR - set IPv4 netmask via 255.255.255.0 instead of /24\ntxqueuelen LEN - number of buffered packets before output blocks\nmtu LEN - size of outgoing packets (Maximum Transmission Unit)\nbroadcast ADDR - Set broadcast address\npointopoint ADDR - PPP and PPPOE use this instead of \"route add default gw\"\nhw TYPE ADDR - set hardware (mac) address (type = ether|infiniband)\n\nFlags you can set on an interface (or -remove by prefixing with -):\n\narp - don't use Address Resolution Protocol to map LAN routes\npromisc - don't discard packets that aren't to this LAN hardware address\nmulticast - force interface into multicast mode if the driver doesn't\nallmulti - promisc for multicast packets"
165 #define HELP_nproc "usage: nproc [--all]\n\nPrint number of processors.\n\n--all Show all processors, not just ones this task can run on"
197 #define HELP_readlink "usage: readlink FILE...\n\nWith no options, show what symlink points to, return error if not symlink.\n\nOptions for producing canonical paths (all symlinks/./.. resolved):\n\n-e Canonical path to existing entry (fail if missing)\n-f Full path (fail if directory missing)\n-m Ignore missing entries, show where it would be\n-n No trailing newline\n-q Quiet (no output, just error code)"
251 #define HELP_ionice "usage: ionice [-t] [-c CLASS] [-n LEVEL] [COMMAND...|-p PID]\n\nChange the I/O scheduling priority of a process. With no arguments\n(or just -p), display process' existing I/O class/priority.\n\n-c CLASS = 1-3: 1(realtime), 2(best-effort, default), 3(when-idle)\n-n LEVEL = 0-7: (0 is highest priority, default = 5)\n-p Affect existing PID instead of spawning new child\n-t Ignore failure to set I/O priority\n\nSystem default iopriority is generally -c 2 -n 4."
353 #define HELP_stty "usage: stty [-ag] [-F device] SETTING...\n\nGet/set terminal configuration.\n\n-F Open device instead of stdin\n-a Show all current settings (default differences from \"sane\")\n-g Show all current settings usable as input to stty\n\nSpecial characters (syntax ^c or undef): intr quit erase kill eof eol eol2\nswtch start stop susp rprnt werase lnext discard\n\nControl/input/output/local settings as shown by -a, '-' prefix to disable\n\nCombo settings: cooked/raw, evenp/oddp/parity, nl, ek, sane\n\nN set input and output speed (ispeed N or ospeed N for just one)\ncols N set number of columns\nrows N set number of rows\nline N set line discipline\nmin N set minimum chars per read\ntime N set read timeout\nspeed show speed only\nsize show size only"
419 #define HELP_fsck "usage: fsck [-ANPRTV] [-C FD] [-t FSTYPE] [FS_OPTS] [BLOCKDEV]...\n\nCheck and repair filesystems\n\n-A Walk /etc/fstab and check all filesystems\n-N Don't execute, just show what would be done\n-P With -A, check filesystems in parallel\n-R With -A, skip the root filesystem\n-T Don't show title on startup\n-V Verbose\n-C n Write status information to specified file descriptor\n-t TYPE List of filesystem types to check"
499 #define HELP_sed "usage: sed [-inrzE] [-e SCRIPT]...|SCRIPT [-f SCRIPT_FILE]... [FILE...]\n\nStream editor. Apply one or more editing SCRIPTs to each line of input\n(from FILE or stdin) producing output (by default to stdout).\n\n-e Add SCRIPT to list\n-f Add contents of SCRIPT_FILE to list\n-i Edit each file in place (-iEXT keeps backup file with extension EXT)\n-n No default output (use the p command to output matched lines)\n-r Use extended regular expression syntax\n-E POSIX alias for -r\n-s Treat input files separately (implied by -i)\n-z Use \\0 rather than \\n as the input line separator\n\nA SCRIPT is a series of one or more COMMANDs separated by newlines or\nsemicolons. All -e SCRIPTs are concatenated together as if separated\nby newlines, followed by all lines from -f SCRIPT_FILEs, in order.\nIf no -e or -f SCRIPTs are specified, the first argument is the SCRIPT.\n\nEach COMMAND may be preceded by an address which limits the command to\napply only to the specified line(s). Commands without an address apply to\nevery line. Addresses are of the form:\n\n [ADDRESS[,ADDRESS]][!]COMMAND\n\nThe ADDRESS may be a decimal line number (starting at 1), a /regular\nexpression/ within a pair of forward slashes, or the character \"$\" which\nmatches the last line of input. (In -s or -i mode this matches the last\nline of each file, otherwise just the last line of the last file.) A single\naddress matches one line, a pair of comma separated addresses match\neverything from the first address to the second address (inclusive). If\nboth addresses are regular expressions, more than one range of lines in\neach file can match. The second address can be +N to end N lines later.\n\nREGULAR EXPRESSIONS in sed are started and ended by the same character\n(traditionally / but anything except a backslash or a newline works).\nBackslashes may be used to escape the delimiter if it occurs in the\nregex, and for the usual printf escapes (\\abcefnrtv and octal, hex,\nand unicode). An empty regex repeats the previous one. ADDRESS regexes\n(above) require the first delimiter to be escaped with a backslash when\nit isn't a forward slash (to distinguish it from the COMMANDs below).\n\nSed mostly operates on individual lines one at a time. It reads each line,\nprocesses it, and either writes it to the output or discards it before\nreading the next line. Sed can remember one additional line in a separate\nbuffer (using the h, H, g, G, and x commands), and can read the next line\nof input early (using the n and N command), but other than that command\nscripts operate on individual lines of text.\n\nEach COMMAND starts with a single character. The following commands take\nno arguments:\n\n ! Run this command when the test _didn't_ match.\n\n { Start a new command block, continuing until a corresponding \"}\".\n Command blocks may nest. If the block has an address, commands within\n the block are only run for lines within the block's address range.\n\n } End command block (this command cannot have an address)\n\n d Delete this line and move on to the next one\n (ignores remaining COMMANDs)\n\n D Delete one line of input and restart command SCRIPT (same as \"d\"\n unless you've glued lines together with \"N\" or similar)\n\n g Get remembered line (overwriting current line)\n\n G Get remembered line (appending to current line)\n\n h Remember this line (overwriting remembered line)\n\n H Remember this line (appending to remembered line, if any)\n\n l Print line, escaping \\abfrtv (but not newline), octal escaping other\n nonprintable characters, wrapping lines to terminal width with a\n backslash, and appending $ to actual end of line.\n\n n Print default output and read next line, replacing current line\n (If no next line available, quit processing script)\n\n N Append next line of input to this line, separated by a newline\n (This advances the line counter for address matching and \"=\", if no\n next line available quit processing script without default output)\n\n p Print this line\n\n P Print this line up to first newline (from \"N\")\n\n q Quit (print default output, no more commands processed or lines read)\n\n x Exchange this line with remembered line (overwrite in both directions)\n\n = Print the current line number (followed by a newline)\n\nThe following commands (may) take an argument. The \"text\" arguments (to\nthe \"a\", \"b\", and \"c\" commands) may end with an unescaped \"\\\" to append\nthe next line (for which leading whitespace is not skipped), and also\ntreat \";\" as a literal character (use \"\\;\" instead).\n\n a [text] Append text to output before attempting to read next line\n\n b [label] Branch, jumps to :label (or with no label, to end of SCRIPT)\n\n c [text] Delete line, output text at end of matching address range\n (ignores remaining COMMANDs)\n\n i [text] Print text\n\n r [file] Append contents of file to output before attempting to read\n next line.\n\n s/S/R/F Search for regex S, replace matched text with R using flags F.\n The first character after the \"s\" (anything but newline or\n backslash) is the delimiter, escape with \\ to use normally.\n\n The replacement text may contain \"&\" to substitute the matched\n text (escape it with backslash for a literal &), or \\1 through\n \\9 to substitute a parenthetical subexpression in the regex.\n You can also use the normal backslash escapes such as \\n and\n a backslash at the end of the line appends the next line.\n\n The flags are:\n\n [0-9] A number, substitute only that occurrence of pattern\n g Global, substitute all occurrences of pattern\n i Ignore case when matching\n p Print the line if match was found and replaced\n w [file] Write (append) line to file if match replaced\n\n t [label] Test, jump to :label only if an \"s\" command found a match in\n this line since last test (replacing with same text counts)\n\n T [label] Test false, jump only if \"s\" hasn't found a match.\n\n w [file] Write (append) line to file\n\n y/old/new/ Change each character in 'old' to corresponding character\n in 'new' (with standard backslash escapes, delimiter can be\n any repeated character except \\ or \\n)\n\n : [label] Labeled target for jump commands\n\n # Comment, ignore rest of this line of SCRIPT\n\nDeviations from POSIX: allow extended regular expressions with -r,\nediting in place with -i, separate with -s, NUL-separated input with -z,\nprintf escapes in text, line continuations, semicolons after all commands,\n2-address anywhere an address is allowed, \"T\" command, multiline\ncontinuations for [abc], \\; to end [abc] argument before end of line."
513 #define HELP_iotop "usage: iotop [-AaKObq] [-n NUMBER] [-d SECONDS] [-p PID,] [-u USER,]\n\nRank processes by I/O.\n\n-A All I/O, not just disk\n-a Accumulated I/O (not percentage)\n-H Show threads\n-K Kilobytes\n-k Fallback sort FIELDS (default -[D]IO,-ETIME,-PID)\n-m Maximum number of tasks to show\n-O Only show processes doing I/O\n-o Show FIELDS (default PID,PR,USER,[D]READ,[D]WRITE,SWAP,[D]IO,COMM)\n-s Sort by field number (0-X, default 6)\n-b Batch mode (no tty)\n-d Delay SECONDS between each cycle (default 3)\n-n Exit after NUMBER iterations\n-p Show these PIDs\n-u Show these USERs\n-q Quiet (no header lines)\n\nCursor LEFT/RIGHT to change sort, UP/DOWN move list, space to force\nupdate, R to reverse sort, Q to exit."
521 #define HELP_patch "usage: patch [-d DIR] [-i file] [-p depth] [-Rlsu] [--dry-run]\n\nApply a unified diff to one or more files.\n\n-d Modify files in DIR\n-i Input file (default=stdin)\n-l Loose match (ignore whitespace)\n-p Number of '/' to strip from start of file paths (default=all)\n-R Reverse patch\n-s Silent except for errors\n-u Ignored (only handles \"unified\" diffs)\n--dry-run Don't change files, just confirm patch applies\n\nThis version of patch only handles unified diffs, and only modifies\na file when all hunks to that file apply. Patch prints failed hunks\nto stderr, and exits with nonzero status if any hunks fail.\n\nA file compared against /dev/null (or with a date <= the epoch) is\ncreated/deleted as appropriate."
583 #define HELP_du "usage: du [-d N] [-askxHLlmc] [file...]\n\nShow disk usage, space consumed by files and directories.\n\nSize in:\n-k 1024 byte blocks (default)\n-K 512 byte blocks (posix)\n-m Megabytes\n-h Human readable (e.g., 1K 243M 2G)\n\nWhat to show:\n-a All files, not just directories\n-H Follow symlinks on cmdline\n-L Follow all symlinks\n-s Only total size of each argument\n-x Don't leave this filesystem\n-c Cumulative total\n-d N Only depth < N\n-l Disable hardlink filter"