Instead of the normal output, output only @dfn{string constants}: at
least @var{bytes} consecutive @acronym{ASCII} graphic characters,
followed by a zero byte (@acronym{ASCII} @sc{nul}).
-Prefixes and suffixes on @code{bytes} are interpreted as for the
+Prefixes and suffixes on @var{bytes} are interpreted as for the
@option{-j} option.
If @var{n} is omitted with @option{--strings}, the default is 3.
Likewise, the @option{-f} option has no effect for any
operand specified as @samp{-}, when standard input is a FIFO or a pipe.
+With kernel inotify support, output is asynchronous and generally very prompt.
+Otherwise, @command{tail} sleeps for one second between checks---
+use @option{--sleep-interval=@var{N}} to change that default---which can
+make the output appear slightly less responsive or bursty.
+
@item -F
@opindex -F
This option is the same as @option{--follow=name --retry}. That is, tail
Put @var{lines} lines of @var{input} into each output file.
For compatibility @command{split} also supports an obsolete
-option syntax @option{-@var{lines}}. New scripts should use @option{-l
-@var{lines}} instead.
+option syntax @option{-@var{lines}}. New scripts should use
+@option{-l @var{lines}} instead.
@item -b @var{size}
@itemx --bytes=@var{size}
@var{size} bytes are broken into multiple files.
@var{size} has the same format as for the @option{--bytes} option.
+@itemx --filter=@var{command}
+@opindex --filter
+With this option, rather than simply writing to each output file,
+write through a pipe to the specified shell @var{command} for each output file.
+@var{command} should use the $FILE environment variable, which is set
+to a different output file name for each invocation of the command.
+For example, imagine that you have a 1TiB compressed file
+that, if uncompressed, would be too large to reside on disk,
+yet you must split it into individually-compressed pieces
+of a more manageable size.
+To do that, you might run this command:
+
+@example
+xz -dc BIG.xz | split -b200G --filter='xz > $FILE.xz' - big-
+@end example
+
+Assuming a 10:1 compression ratio, that would create about fifty 20GiB files
+with names @file{big-xaa.xz}, @file{big-xab.xz}, @file{big-xac.xz}, etc.
+
@item -n @var{chunks}
@itemx --number=@var{chunks}
@opindex -n
@command{less} usually produces unreadable results. However, using
@code{more -f} does seem to work.
+@vindex LS_COLORS
+@vindex SHELL @r{environment variable, and color}
+Note that using the @option{--color} option may incur a noticeable
+performance penalty when run in a directory with very many entries,
+because the default settings require that @command{ls} @code{stat} every
+single file it lists.
+However, if you would like most of the file-type coloring
+but can live without the other coloring options (e.g.,
+executable, orphan, sticky, other-writable, capability), use
+@command{dircolors} to set the @env{LS_COLORS} environment variable like this,
+@example
+eval $(dircolors -p | perl -pe \
+ 's/^((CAP|S[ET]|O[TR]|M|E)\w+).*/$1 00/' | dircolors -)
+@end example
+and on a @code{dirent.d_type}-capable file system, @command{ls}
+will perform only one @code{stat} call per command line argument.
+
@item -F
@itemx --classify
@itemx --indicator-style=classify