- cross-posted to:
 - linux@programming.dev
 
- cross-posted to:
 - linux@programming.dev
 
cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/36342010
Nitro is a tiny process supervisor that also can be used as pid 1 on Linux.
There are four main applications it is designed for:
- As init for a Linux machine for embedded, desktop or server purposes
 - As init for a Linux initramfs
 - As init for a Linux container (Docker/Podman/LXC/Kubernetes)
 - As unprivileged supervision daemon on POSIX systems
 Nitro is configured by a directory of scripts, defaulting to /etc/nitro (or the first command line argument).



There are a lot of command-line tools for text, like
grepandsed, that don’t work on binary files. Whether this matters to you depends on your workflow. (I usegrepa lot.)Just
journalctl | grepand you’re good to go. The binary log files contain a lot of metadata per message that makes it easy to do more advanced filtering without breaking existing log file parsers.Oh. That’s fucked up. Appreciate the info