sd_journal_seek_head
systemd
Developer
Lennart
Poettering
lennart@poettering.net
sd_journal_seek_head
3
sd_journal_seek_head
sd_journal_seek_tail
sd_journal_seek_monotonic_usec
sd_journal_seek_realtime_usec
sd_journal_seek_cursor
Seek to a position in the
journal
#include <systemd/sd-journal.h>
int sd_journal_seek_head
sd_journal* j
int sd_journal_seek_tail
sd_journal* j
int sd_journal_seek_monotonic_usec
sd_journal* j
sd_id128_t boot_id
uint64_t usec
int sd_journal_seek_realtime_usec
sd_journal* j
uint64_t usec
int sd_journal_seek_cursor
sd_journal* j
const char * cursor
Description
sd_journal_seek_head()
seeks to the beginning of the journal, i.e. the oldest
available entry.
Similar,
sd_journal_seek_tail() may be
used to seek to the end of the journal, i.e. the most
recent available entry.
sd_journal_seek_monotonic_usec()
seeks to the entry with the specified monotonic
timestamp, i.e. CLOCK_MONOOTONIC. Since monotonic time
restarts on every reboot a boot ID needs to be
specified as well.
sd_journal_seek_realtime_usec()
seeks to the entry with the specified realtime
(wallclock) timestamp, i.e. CLOCK_REALTIME. Note that
the realtime clock is not necessarily monotonic. If a
realtime timestamp is ambiguous it is not defined
which position is sought to.
sd_journal_seek_cursor()
seeks to the entry located at the specified cursor
string. For details on cursors see
sd_journal_get_cursor3. If
no entry matching the specified cursor is found the
call will seek to the next closest entry (in terms of
time) instead. To verify whether the newly selected
entry actually matches the cursor use
sd_journal_test_cursor3.
Note that these calls do not actually make any
entry the new current entry, this needs to be done in
a separate step with a subsequent
sd_journal_next3
invocation (or a similar call). Only then entry data
may be retrieved via
sd_journal_get_data3. If
no entry exists that matches exactly the specified
seek address the next closest is sought to. If
sd_journal_next3
is used the closest following entry will be sought to,
if
sd_journal_previous3
is used the closest preceding entry is sought
to.
Return Value
The functions return 0 on success or a negative
errno-style error code.
Notes
The sd_journal_seek_head(),
sd_journal_seek_tail(),
sd_journal_seek_monotonic_usec(),
sd_journal_seek_realtime_usec(),
and sd_journal_seek_cursor()
interfaces are available as shared library, which can
be compiled and linked to with the
libsystemd-journal
pkg-config1
file.
See Also
systemd1,
sd-journal3,
sd_journal_open3,
sd_journal_next3,
sd_journal_get_data3,
sd_journal_get_cursor3,
sd_journal_get_realtime_usec3