откройте системный журнал для чтения (open the system journal for reading)
Имя (Name)
sd_journal_open, sd_journal_open_directory,
sd_journal_open_directory_fd, sd_journal_open_files,
sd_journal_open_files_fd, sd_journal_open_namespace,
sd_journal_close, sd_journal, SD_JOURNAL_LOCAL_ONLY,
SD_JOURNAL_RUNTIME_ONLY, SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM,
SD_JOURNAL_CURRENT_USER, SD_JOURNAL_OS_ROOT,
SD_JOURNAL_ALL_NAMESPACES, SD_JOURNAL_INCLUDE_DEFAULT_NAMESPACE -
Open the system journal for reading
Синопсис (Synopsis)
#include <systemd/sd-journal.h>
int sd_journal_open(sd_journal **
ret, int
flags);
int sd_journal_open_namespace(sd_journal **
ret,
const char *
namespace, int
flags);
int sd_journal_open_directory(sd_journal **
ret, const char *
path,
int
flags);
int sd_journal_open_directory_fd(sd_journal **
ret, int
fd,
int
flags);
int sd_journal_open_files(sd_journal **
ret, const char **
paths,
int
flags);
int sd_journal_open_files_fd(sd_journal **
ret, int
fds[],
unsigned
n_fds, int
flags);
void sd_journal_close(sd_journal *
j);
Описание (Description)
sd_journal_open()
opens the log journal for reading. It will find
all journal files automatically and interleave them automatically
when reading. As first argument it takes a pointer to a
sd_journal pointer, which, on success, will contain a journal
context object. The second argument is a flags field, which may
consist of the following flags ORed together:
SD_JOURNAL_LOCAL_ONLY
makes sure only journal files generated on
the local machine will be opened. SD_JOURNAL_RUNTIME_ONLY
makes
sure only volatile journal files will be opened, excluding those
which are stored on persistent storage. SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM
will
cause journal files of system services and the kernel (in
opposition to user session processes) to be opened.
SD_JOURNAL_CURRENT_USER
will cause journal files of the current
user to be opened. If neither SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM
nor
SD_JOURNAL_CURRENT_USER
are specified, all journal file types
will be opened.
sd_journal_open_namespace()
is similar to sd_journal_open()
but
takes an additional namespace parameter that specifies which
journal namespace to operate on. If specified as NULL
the call is
identical to sd_journal_open()
. If non-NULL
only data from the
namespace identified by the specified parameter is accessed. This
call understands two additional flags: if
SD_JOURNAL_ALL_NAMESPACES
is specified the namespace parameter is
ignored and all defined namespaces are accessed simultaneously;
if SD_JOURNAL_INCLUDE_DEFAULT_NAMESPACE
the specified namespace
and the default namespace are accessed but no others (this flag
has no effect when namespace is passed as NULL
). For details
about journal namespaces see systemd-journald.service(8).
sd_journal_open_directory()
is similar to sd_journal_open()
but
takes an absolute directory path as argument. All journal files
in this directory will be opened and interleaved automatically.
This call also takes a flags argument. The flags parameters
accepted by this call are SD_JOURNAL_OS_ROOT
, SD_JOURNAL_SYSTEM
,
and SD_JOURNAL_CURRENT_USER
. If SD_JOURNAL_OS_ROOT
is specified,
journal files are searched for below the usual /var/log/journal
and /run/log/journal relative to the specified path, instead of
directly beneath it. The other two flags limit which files are
opened, the same as for sd_journal_open()
.
sd_journal_open_directory_fd()
is similar to
sd_journal_open_directory()
, but takes a file descriptor
referencing a directory in the file system instead of an absolute
file system path.
sd_journal_open_files()
is similar to sd_journal_open()
but takes
a NULL
-terminated list of file paths to open. All files will be
opened and interleaved automatically. This call also takes a
flags argument, but it must be passed as 0 as no flags are
currently understood for this call. Please note that in the case
of a live journal, this function is only useful for debugging,
because individual journal files can be rotated at any moment,
and the opening of specific files is inherently racy.
sd_journal_open_files_fd()
is similar to sd_journal_open_files()
but takes an array of open file descriptors that must reference
journal files, instead of an array of file system paths. Pass the
array of file descriptors as second argument, and the number of
array entries in the third. The flags parameter must be passed as
0.
sd_journal objects cannot be used in the child after a fork.
Functions which take a journal object as an argument
(sd_journal_next()
and others) will return -ECHILD
after a fork.
sd_journal_close()
will close the journal context allocated with
sd_journal_open()
or sd_journal_open_directory()
and free its
resources.
When opening the journal only journal files accessible to the
calling user will be opened. If journal files are not accessible
to the caller, this will be silently ignored.
See sd_journal_next(3) for an example of how to iterate through
the journal after opening it with sd_journal_open()
.
A journal context object returned by sd_journal_open()
references
a specific journal entry as current entry, similar to a file seek
index in a classic file system file, but without absolute
positions. It may be altered with sd_journal_next(3) and
sd_journal_seek_head(3) and related calls. The current entry
position may be exported in cursor strings, as accessible via
sd_journal_get_cursor(3). Cursor strings may be used to globally
identify a specific journal entry in a stable way and then later
to seek to it (or if the specific entry is not available locally,
to its closest entry in time) sd_journal_seek_cursor(3).
Notification of journal changes is available via
sd_journal_get_fd()
and related calls.
Возвращаемое значение (Return value)
The sd_journal_open()
, sd_journal_open_directory()
, and
sd_journal_open_files()
calls return 0 on success or a negative
errno-style error code. sd_journal_close()
returns nothing.
Примечание (Note)
All functions listed here are thread-agnostic and only a single
specific thread may operate on a given object during its entire
lifetime. It's safe to allocate multiple independent objects and
use each from a specific thread in parallel. However, it's not
safe to allocate such an object in one thread, and operate or
free it from any other, even if locking is used to ensure these
threads don't operate on it at the very same time.
These APIs are implemented as a shared library, which can be
compiled and linked to with the libsystemd pkg-config
(1) file.
Смотри также (See also)
systemd(1), sd-journal(3), systemd-journald.service(8),
sd_journal_next(3), sd_journal_get_data(3)