Is there a specific reason for Asterisk to use the escape sequence to set the *background* color of the CLI output to black? I grew old and changed the default background color of my terminal from black to white. Whenever something spits out lines with a different background color (of a varying runlength!) my eyes start to hurt. Gr??e, Philipp Kempgen -- http://www.das-asterisk-buch.de - http://www.the-asterisk-book.com Amooma GmbH - Bachstr. 126 - 56566 Neuwied -> http://www.amooma.de Gesch?ftsf?hrer: Stefan Wintermeyer, Handelsregister: Neuwied B14998
On Thu, 2008-08-14 at 20:35 +0200, Philipp Kempgen wrote:> Whenever something spits out lines with a different background > color (of a varying runlength!) my eyes start to hurt.You can turn of the ANSI color support completely by adding "nocolor=yes" to the [options] section of asterisk.conf and then restarting Asterisk. -- Jared Smith Training Manager Digium, Inc.
Jared Smith schrieb:> On Thu, 2008-08-14 at 20:35 +0200, Philipp Kempgen wrote: >> Whenever something spits out lines with a different background >> color (of a varying runlength!) my eyes start to hurt. > > You can turn of the ANSI color support completely by adding > "nocolor=yes" to the [options] section of asterisk.conf and then > restarting Asterisk.Sure. But I want colored output on my default background color. :-) ls with dircolors works perfectly. So I was curious if there is a reason for Asterisk to behave differently (forcing the background color to black). Gr??e, Philipp Kempgen -- http://www.das-asterisk-buch.de - http://www.the-asterisk-book.com Amooma GmbH - Bachstr. 126 - 56566 Neuwied -> http://www.amooma.de Gesch?ftsf?hrer: Stefan Wintermeyer, Handelsregister: Neuwied B14998
On Thursday 14 August 2008 13:59:37 Philipp Kempgen wrote:> Jared Smith schrieb: > > On Thu, 2008-08-14 at 20:35 +0200, Philipp Kempgen wrote: > >> Whenever something spits out lines with a different background > >> color (of a varying runlength!) my eyes start to hurt. > > > > You can turn of the ANSI color support completely by adding > > "nocolor=yes" to the [options] section of asterisk.conf and then > > restarting Asterisk. > > Sure. But I want colored output on my default background color. > > :-) > > ls with dircolors works perfectly. So I was curious if there > is a reason for Asterisk to behave differently (forcing the > background color to black).Because nobody else ever asked, perhaps? http://bugs.digium.com/view.php?id=13306 -- Tilghman