DMESG
Section: User Commands (1)
Updated: July 2012
Page Index
NAME
dmesg - print or control the kernel ring buffer
SYNOPSIS
dmesg
[options]
dmesg --clear
dmesg --read-clear [options]
dmesg --console-level level
dmesg --console-on
dmesg --console-off
DESCRIPTION
dmesg
is used to examine or control the kernel ring buffer.
The default action is to display all messages from the kernel ring buffer.
OPTIONS
The
--clear,
--read-clear,
--console-on,
--console-off,
and
--console-level
options are mutually exclusive.
- -C, --clear
-
Clear the ring buffer.
- -c, --read-clear
-
Clear the ring buffer after first printing its contents.
- -D, --console-off
-
Disable the printing of messages to the console.
- -d, --show-delta
-
Display the timestamp and the time delta spent between messages. If used
together with
--notime
then only the time delta without the timestamp is printed.
- -E, --console-on
-
Enable printing messages to the console.
- -e, --reltime
-
Display the local time and the delta in human-readable format. Be aware that
conversion to the local time could be inaccurate (see -T for more
details).
- -F, --file file
-
Read the syslog messages from the given
file.
Note that -F does not support messages in kmsg format. The old syslog format is supported only.
- -f, --facility list
-
Restrict output to the given (comma-separated)
list
of facilities. For example:
-
dmesg --facility=daemon
-
will print messages from system daemons only. For all supported facilities
see the
--help
output.
- -H, --human
-
Enable human-readable output. See also --color, --reltime
and --nopager.
- -k, --kernel
-
Print kernel messages.
- -L, --color[=when]
-
Colorize the output. The optional argument when
can be auto, never or always. If the when argument is omitted,
it defaults to auto. The colors can be disabled; for the current built-in default
see the --help output. See also the COLORS section below.
- -l, --level list
-
Restrict output to the given (comma-separated)
list
of levels. For example:
-
dmesg --level=err,warn
-
will print error and warning messages only. For all supported levels see the
--help
output.
- -n, --console-level level
-
Set the
level
at which printing of messages is done to the console. The
level
is a level number or abbreviation of the level name. For all supported
levels see the
--help
output.
For example,
-n 1
or
-n emerg
prevents all messages, except emergency (panic) messages, from appearing on
the console. All levels of messages are still written to
/proc/kmsg,
so
syslogd(8)
can still be used to control exactly where kernel messages appear. When the
-n
option is used,
dmesg
will
not
print or clear the kernel ring buffer.
- --noescape
-
The unprintable and potentially unsafe characters (e.g., broken multi-byte
sequences, terminal controlling chars, etc.) are escaped in format \x<hex> for
security reason by default. This option disables this feature at all. It's
usable for example for debugging purpose together with --raw. Be
careful and don't use it by default.
- -P, --nopager
-
Do not pipe output into a pager. A pager is enabled by default for --human output.
- -p, --force-prefix
-
Add facility, level or timestamp information to each line of a multi-line message.
- -r, --raw
-
Print the raw message buffer, i.e., do not strip the log-level prefixes, but
all unprintable characters are still escaped (see also --noescape).
Note that the real raw format depends on the method how
dmesg(1)
reads kernel messages. The /dev/kmsg device uses a different format than
syslog(2).
For backward compatibility,
dmesg(1)
returns data always in the
syslog(2)
format. It is possible to read the real raw data from /dev/kmsg by, for example,
the command 'dd if=/dev/kmsg iflag=nonblock'.
- -S, --syslog
-
Force dmesg to use the
syslog(2)
kernel interface to read kernel messages. The default is to use /dev/kmsg rather
than
syslog(2)
since kernel 3.5.0.
- -s, --buffer-size size
-
Use a buffer of
size
to query the kernel ring buffer. This is 16392 by default. (The default
kernel syslog buffer size was 4096 at first, 8192 since 1.3.54, 16384 since
2.1.113.) If you have set the kernel buffer to be larger than the default,
then this option can be used to view the entire buffer.
- -T, --ctime
-
Print human-readable timestamps.
-
Be aware that the timestamp could be inaccurate!
The
time
source used for the logs is
not updated after
system
SUSPEND/RESUME.
Timestamps are adjusted according to current delta between boottime and monotonic
clocks, this works only for messages printed after last resume.
- -t, --notime
-
Do not print kernel's timestamps.
- --time-format format
-
Print timestamps using the given format, which can be
ctime,
reltime,
delta
or
iso.
The first three formats are aliases of the time-format-specific options.
The
iso
format is a
dmesg
implementation of the ISO-8601 timestamp format. The purpose of this format is
to make the comparing of timestamps between two systems, and any other parsing,
easy. The definition of the iso timestamp is:
YYYY-MM-DD<T>HH:MM:SS,<microseconds><-+><timezone offset from UTC>.
-
The
iso
format has the same issue as
ctime:
the time may be inaccurate when a system is suspended and resumed.
- -u, --userspace
-
Print userspace messages.
- -w, --follow
-
Wait for new messages. This feature is supported only on systems with
a readable /dev/kmsg (since kernel 3.5.0).
- -W, --follow-new
-
Wait and print only new messages.
- -x, --decode
-
Decode facility and level (priority) numbers to human-readable prefixes.
- -V, --version
-
Display version information and exit.
- -h, --help
-
Display help text and exit.
COLORS
Implicit coloring can be disabled by an empty file
/etc/terminal-colors.d/dmesg.disable.
See
terminal-colors.d(5)
for more details about colorization configuration.
The logical color names supported by
dmesg
are:
- subsys
-
The message sub-system prefix (e.g., "ACPI:").
- time
-
The message timestamp.
- timebreak
-
The message timestamp in short ctime format in --reltime
or --human output.
- alert
-
The text of the message with the alert log priority.
- crit
-
The text of the message with the critical log priority.
- err
-
The text of the message with the error log priority.
- warn
-
The text of the message with the warning log priority.
- segfault
-
The text of the message that inform about segmentation fault.
EXIT STATUS
dmesg
can fail reporting permission denied error. This is usually caused by
dmesg_restrict
kernel setting, please see
syslog(2)
for more details.
AUTHORS
Karel Zak
dmesg
was originally written by
Theodore Ts'o
SEE ALSO
terminal-colors.d(5),
syslogd(8)
AVAILABILITY
The dmesg command is part of the util-linux package and is available from
Linux Kernel Archive