>>> Dave Howorth <systemd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> schrieb am 14.05.2020 um 17:11 in Nachricht <13203_1589469111_5EBD5FB7_13203_37_1_20200514161137.1d96762f@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > On Thu, 14 May 2020 16:12:49 +0300 > Mantas Mikulėnas <grawity@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 3:55 PM Dave Howorth <systemd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >> wrote: >> >> > What do --Reboot-- lines in the journal mean and how do they get >> > there? >> > >> > I can't find any explanation on >> > https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/journalctl.html or >> > related pages I've tried. >> > >> > I should explain why I'm interested. On my openSUSE box, I can see >> > for example: >> > >> > # journalctl --list-boots >> > -1 3c9ab70ade084dfab277efe733e18949 Mon 2020-03-02 23:44:11 GMT—Sun >> > 2020-03-29 08:54:38 BST >> > 0 c56183ea7877444a8252dd89a32b31f3 Sun 2020-03-29 09:15:30 BST—Thu >> > 2020-05-14 13:16:49 BST >> > # journalctl | grep Reboot >> > -- Reboot -- >> > # >> > >> > Which looks fairly sane with what I think I should expect. But on >> > two Raspberry pis that I have with persistent logging enabled they >> > both have a huge excess of --Reboot-- lines. For example: >> > >> > $ sudo journalctl --list-boots >> > -3 a9346655ca5d4700ab470bfd1b94d5da Thu 2019-02-14 10:11:59 GMT—Wed >> > 2020-05-13 18:31:22 BST >> > -2 c4f8ab5ec73b40818b1607b3436b90b5 Wed 2020-05-13 18:32:51 BST—Wed >> > 2020-05-13 18:46:29 BST >> > -1 0af9c854355f4a12a64dd00e6d3d98c1 Wed 2020-05-13 19:32:57 BST—Wed >> > 2020-05-13 22:33:24 BST >> > 0 fc5b35dbb3604dfbb4e2cdc99e117a75 Wed 2020-05-13 22:33:24 BST—Thu >> > 2020-05-14 12:46:07 BST >> > $ sudo journalctl | grep Reboot | wc >> > 1667 5047 22095 >> > $ >> > >> > What do the apparently excess 1664 --Reboot-- messages mean? >> > >> >> The "--Reboot--" line is simply shown every time the _BOOT_ID field >> changes between two entries -- even if it changes to a previously >> seen boot ID (which shouldn't happen normally, but *might* be caused >> by lack of a RTC?). >> >> Meanwhile --list-boots has a bit more complex logic for discovering >> the boots, and it also stops the search completely if it finds a boot >> ID that it has already seen. >> >> (What do you get from, let's say, `journalctl -o json | jq -r >> "._BOOT_ID" | uniq -c`? Does it show several distinct ranges for each >> boot ID?) > > Thanks for the reply. A lot of lines similar to this (from start): > > 2 4449e609d5144646b1bf70028bf8f1d0 > 59 bc489744282a46ffbc28fd31de4c6aa9 > 62 3164d610039145b4a1f7bc964eaaa85b > 450 a9346655ca5d4700ab470bfd1b94d5da > 1 4449e609d5144646b1bf70028bf8f1d0 > 27 4e807f1301de45dfb4e13551ae10a287 > 1 bc489744282a46ffbc28fd31de4c6aa9 > 2 4e807f1301de45dfb4e13551ae10a287 > 1 4449e609d5144646b1bf70028bf8f1d0 > 2 4e807f1301de45dfb4e13551ae10a287 > > I've attached the complete list, FWIW > > I've never even heard of a _BOOT_ID before, so it seems I'll need to do > some reading to answer my original questions. Where's a good place to > start? It's a kernel feature, so docs should come from the kernel. As a quick start: ;-) cat /proc/sys/kernel/random/boot_id Regards, Ulrich > >> -- >> Mantas Mikulėnas _______________________________________________ systemd-devel mailing list systemd-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/systemd-devel