специальные поля журнала (Special journal fields)
Имя (Name)
systemd.journal-fields - Special journal fields
Описание (Description)
Entries in the journal (as written by
systemd-journald.service(8)) resemble a UNIX process environment
block in syntax but with fields that may include binary data.
Primarily, fields are formatted UTF-8 text strings, and binary
encoding is used only where formatting as UTF-8 text strings
makes little sense. New fields may freely be defined by
applications, but a few fields have special meanings. All fields
with special meanings are optional. In some cases, fields may
appear more than once per entry.
USER JOURNAL FIELDS
User fields are fields that are directly passed from clients and
stored in the journal.
MESSAGE=
The human-readable message string for this entry. This is
supposed to be the primary text shown to the user. It is
usually not translated (but might be in some cases), and is
not supposed to be parsed for metadata.
MESSAGE_ID=
A 128-bit message identifier ID for recognizing certain
message types, if this is desirable. This should contain a
128-bit ID formatted as a lower-case hexadecimal string,
without any separating dashes or suchlike. This is
recommended to be a UUID-compatible ID, but this is not
enforced, and formatted differently. Developers can generate
a new ID for this purpose with systemd-id128 new
.
PRIORITY=
A priority value between 0 ("emerg") and 7 ("debug")
formatted as a decimal string. This field is compatible with
syslog's priority concept.
CODE_FILE=, CODE_LINE=, CODE_FUNC=
The code location generating this message, if known. Contains
the source filename, the line number and the function name.
ERRNO=
The low-level Unix error number causing this entry, if any.
Contains the numeric value of errno(3) formatted as a decimal
string.
INVOCATION_ID=, USER_INVOCATION_ID=
A randomized, unique 128-bit ID identifying each runtime
cycle of the unit. This is different from
_SYSTEMD_INVOCATION_ID in that it is only used for messages
coming from systemd code (e.g. logs from the system/user
manager or from forked processes performing systemd-related
setup).
SYSLOG_FACILITY=, SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER=, SYSLOG_PID=,
SYSLOG_TIMESTAMP=
Syslog compatibility fields containing the facility
(formatted as decimal string), the identifier string (i.e.
"tag"), the client PID, and the timestamp as specified in the
original datagram. (Note that the tag is usually derived from
glibc's program_invocation_short_name variable, see
program_invocation_short_name(3).)
Note that the journal service does not validate the values of
any structured journal fields whose name is not prefixed with
an underscore, and this includes any syslog related fields
such as these. Hence, applications that supply a facility,
PID, or log level are expected to do so properly formatted,
i.e. as numeric integers formatted as decimal strings.
SYSLOG_RAW=
The original contents of the syslog line as received in the
syslog datagram. This field is only included if the MESSAGE=
field was modified compared to the original payload or the
timestamp could not be located properly and is not included
in SYSLOG_TIMESTAMP=. Message truncation occurs when when the
message contains leading or trailing whitespace (trailing and
leading whitespace is stripped), or it contains an embedded
NUL
byte (the NUL
byte and anything after it is not
included). Thus, the original syslog line is either stored as
SYSLOG_RAW= or it can be recreated based on the stored
priority and facility, timestamp, identifier, and the message
payload in MESSAGE=.
DOCUMENTATION=
A documentation URL with further information about the topic
of the log message. Tools such as journalctl
will include a
hyperlink to an URL specified this way in their output.
Should be a "http://", "https://", "file:/", "man:" or
"info:" URL.
TID=
The numeric thread ID (TID) the log message originates from.
TRUSTED JOURNAL FIELDS
Fields prefixed with an underscore are trusted fields, i.e.
fields that are implicitly added by the journal and cannot be
altered by client code.
_PID=, _UID=, _GID=
The process, user, and group ID of the process the journal
entry originates from formatted as a decimal string. Note
that entries obtained via "stdout" or "stderr" of forked
processes will contain credentials valid for a parent process
(that initiated the connection to systemd-journald
).
_COMM=, _EXE=, _CMDLINE=
The name, the executable path, and the command line of the
process the journal entry originates from.
_CAP_EFFECTIVE=
The effective capabilities(7) of the process the journal
entry originates from.
_AUDIT_SESSION=, _AUDIT_LOGINUID=
The session and login UID of the process the journal entry
originates from, as maintained by the kernel audit subsystem.
_SYSTEMD_CGROUP=, _SYSTEMD_SLICE=, _SYSTEMD_UNIT=,
_SYSTEMD_USER_UNIT=, _SYSTEMD_USER_SLICE=, _SYSTEMD_SESSION=,
_SYSTEMD_OWNER_UID=
The control group path in the systemd hierarchy, the systemd
slice unit name, the systemd unit name, the unit name in the
systemd user manager (if any), the systemd session ID (if
any), and the owner UID of the systemd user unit or systemd
session (if any) of the process the journal entry originates
from.
_SELINUX_CONTEXT=
The SELinux security context (label) of the process the
journal entry originates from.
_SOURCE_REALTIME_TIMESTAMP=
The earliest trusted timestamp of the message, if any is
known that is different from the reception time of the
journal. This is the time in microseconds since the epoch
UTC, formatted as a decimal string.
_BOOT_ID=
The kernel boot ID for the boot the message was generated in,
formatted as a 128-bit hexadecimal string.
_MACHINE_ID=
The machine ID of the originating host, as available in
machine-id(5).
_SYSTEMD_INVOCATION_ID=
The invocation ID for the runtime cycle of the unit the
message was generated in, as available to processes of the
unit in $INVOCATION_ID (see systemd.exec(5)).
_HOSTNAME=
The name of the originating host.
_TRANSPORT=
How the entry was received by the journal service. Valid
transports are:
audit
for those read from the kernel audit subsystem
driver
for internally generated messages
syslog
for those received via the local syslog socket with the
syslog protocol
journal
for those received via the native journal protocol
stdout
for those read from a service's standard output or error
output
kernel
for those read from the kernel
_STREAM_ID=
Only applies to "_TRANSPORT=stdout" records: specifies a
randomized 128bit ID assigned to the stream connection when
it was first created. This ID is useful to reconstruct
individual log streams from the log records: all log records
carrying the same stream ID originate from the same stream.
_LINE_BREAK=
Only applies to "_TRANSPORT=stdout" records: indicates that
the log message in the standard output/error stream was not
terminated with a normal newline character ("\n", i.e. ASCII
10). Specifically, when set this field is one of nul
(in case
the line was terminated by a NUL
byte), line-max
(in case the
maximum log line length was reached, as configured with
LineMax= in journald.conf(5)), eof
(if this was the last log
record of a stream and the stream ended without a final
newline character), or pid-change
(if the process which
generated the log output changed in the middle of a line).
Note that this record is not generated when a normal newline
character was used for marking the log line end.
_NAMESPACE=
If this file was written by a systemd-journald
instance
managing a journal namespace that is not the default, this
field contains the namespace identifier. See
systemd-journald.service(8) for details about journal
namespaces.
KERNEL JOURNAL FIELDS
Kernel fields are fields that are used by messages originating in
the kernel and stored in the journal.
_KERNEL_DEVICE=
The kernel device name. If the entry is associated to a block
device, contains the major and minor numbers of the device
node, separated by ":" and prefixed by "b". Similarly for
character devices, but prefixed by "c". For network devices,
this is the interface index prefixed by "n". For all other
devices, this is the subsystem name prefixed by "+", followed
by ":", followed by the kernel device name.
_KERNEL_SUBSYSTEM=
The kernel subsystem name.
_UDEV_SYSNAME=
The kernel device name as it shows up in the device tree
below /sys/.
_UDEV_DEVNODE=
The device node path of this device in /dev/.
_UDEV_DEVLINK=
Additional symlink names pointing to the device node in
/dev/. This field is frequently set more than once per entry.
FIELDS TO LOG ON BEHALF OF A DIFFERENT PROGRAM
Fields in this section are used by programs to specify that they
are logging on behalf of another program or unit.
Fields used by the systemd-coredump
coredump kernel helper:
COREDUMP_UNIT=, COREDUMP_USER_UNIT=
Used to annotate messages containing coredumps from system
and session units. See coredumpctl(1).
Privileged programs (currently UID 0) may attach OBJECT_PID= to a
message. This will instruct systemd-journald
to attach additional
fields on behalf of the caller:
OBJECT_PID=PID
PID of the program that this message pertains to.
OBJECT_UID=, OBJECT_GID=, OBJECT_COMM=, OBJECT_EXE=,
OBJECT_CMDLINE=, OBJECT_AUDIT_SESSION=, OBJECT_AUDIT_LOGINUID=,
OBJECT_SYSTEMD_CGROUP=, OBJECT_SYSTEMD_SESSION=,
OBJECT_SYSTEMD_OWNER_UID=, OBJECT_SYSTEMD_UNIT=,
OBJECT_SYSTEMD_USER_UNIT=
These are additional fields added automatically by
systemd-journald
. Their meaning is the same as _UID=, _GID=,
_COMM=, _EXE=, _CMDLINE=, _AUDIT_SESSION=, _AUDIT_LOGINUID=,
_SYSTEMD_CGROUP=, _SYSTEMD_SESSION=, _SYSTEMD_UNIT=,
_SYSTEMD_USER_UNIT=, and _SYSTEMD_OWNER_UID= as described
above, except that the process identified by PID is
described, instead of the process which logged the message.
ADDRESS FIELDS
During serialization into external formats, such as the Journal
Export Format
[1] or the Journal JSON Format
[2], the addresses of
journal entries are serialized into fields prefixed with double
underscores. Note that these are not proper fields when stored in
the journal but for addressing metadata of entries. They cannot
be written as part of structured log entries via calls such as
sd_journal_send(3). They may also not be used as matches for
sd_journal_add_match(3).
__CURSOR=
The cursor for the entry. A cursor is an opaque text string
that uniquely describes the position of an entry in the
journal and is portable across machines, platforms and
journal files.
__REALTIME_TIMESTAMP=
The wallclock time (CLOCK_REALTIME
) at the point in time the
entry was received by the journal, in microseconds since the
epoch UTC, formatted as a decimal string. This has different
properties from "_SOURCE_REALTIME_TIMESTAMP=", as it is
usually a bit later but more likely to be monotonic.
__MONOTONIC_TIMESTAMP=
The monotonic time (CLOCK_MONOTONIC
) at the point in time the
entry was received by the journal in microseconds, formatted
as a decimal string. To be useful as an address for the
entry, this should be combined with the boot ID in
"_BOOT_ID=".
Смотри также (See also)
systemd(1), systemd-journald.service(8), journalctl(1),
journald.conf(5), sd-journal(3), coredumpctl(1),
systemd.directives(7)
Примечание (Note)
1. Journal Export Format
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/export
2. Journal JSON Format
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/json