JOURNALCTL(1) journalctl JOURNALCTL(1)NAME
journalctl, systemd-journalctl - Query the systemd journal
SYNOPSIS
journalctl [OPTIONS...] [MATCH]
DESCRIPTION
journalctl may be used to query the contents of the systemd(1) journal
as written by systemd-journald.service(8).
If called without parameter will show the full contents of the journal,
starting with the oldest entry collected.
If a match argument is passed the output is filtered accordingly. A
match is in the format FIELD=VALUE, e.g. _SYSTEMD_UNIT=httpd.service.
See systemd.journal-fields(7) for a list of well-known fields.
Output is interleaved from all accessible journal files, whether they
are rotated or currently being written, and regardless whether they
belong to the system itself or are accessible user journals.
All users are granted access to their private per-user journals.
However, by default only root and users who are members of the adm
group get access to the system journal and the journals of other users.
OPTIONS
The following options are understood:
--help, -h
Prints a short help text and exits.
--version
Prints a short version string and exits.
--no-pager
Do not pipe output into a pager.
--all, -a
Show all fields in full, even if they include unprintable
characters or are very long.
--follow, -f
Show only most recent journal entries, and continously print new
entries as they are appended to the journal.
--lines=, -n
Controls the number of journal lines to show, counting from the
most recent ones. Takes a positive integer argument. In follow mode
defaults to 10, otherwise is unset thus not limiting how many lines
are shown.
--no-tail
Show all stored output lines, even in follow mode. Undoes the
effect of --lines=.
--output=, -o
Controls the formatting of the journal entries that are shown.
Takes one of short, short-monotonic, verbose, export, json, cat.
short is the default and generates an output that is mostly
identical to the formatting of classic syslog log files, showing
one line per journal entry. short-monotonic is very similar but
shows monotonic timestamps instead of wallclock timestamps.
verbose shows the full structered entry items with all fiels.
export serializes the journal into a binary (but mostly text-based)
stream suitable for backups and network transfer. json formats
entries as JSON data structures. cat generates a very terse output
only showing the actual message of each journal entry with no meta
data, not even a timestamp.
--quiet, -q
Suppresses any warning message regarding inaccessable system
journals when run as normal user.
--local, -l
Show only locally generated messages.
--new-id128
Instead of showing journal contents generate a new 128 bit ID
suitable for identifying messages. This is intended for usage by
developers who need a new identifier for a new message they
introduce and want to make recognizable. Will print the new ID in
three different formats which can be copied into source code or
similar.
EXIT STATUS
On success 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise.
ENVIRONMENT
$SYSTEMD_PAGER
Pager to use when --no-pager is not given; overrides $PAGER.
Setting this to an empty string or the value cat is equivalent to
passing --no-pager.
SEE ALSOsystemd(1), systemd-journald.service(8), systemctl(1), systemd.journal-
fields(7), systemd-journald.conf(5)AUTHOR
Lennart Poettering <lennart@poettering.net>
Developer
systemd 02/15/2013 JOURNALCTL(1)