tracker-daemon
Section: User Commands (1)
Updated: September 2014
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NAME
tracker-daemon - Start, stop, restart and list daemons responsible for indexing content
SYNOPSIS
tracker daemon [options...]
tracker daemon -s | -t [daemons] | -k [daemons] | -l
tracker daemon -f | -w [ontology]
tracker daemon --miner <miner> --pause[-for-process] <reason>
tracker daemon --miner <miner> --resume <cookie>
DESCRIPTION
Tracker has many components to it including a "store" for handling data
set updates and "miners" for handling data mining in their respective
areas.
The tracker daemon command allows for control of these components.
This ranges from starting, stopping and killing processes to pausing
and resuming them.
In addition to all this, there are ways to change the log verbsity for
all processes that generate logs and to follow or watch what is
happening in real time from a top level and right down where the
SPARQL commits are happening too.
If no arguments are provided this command will show the current status
of all Tracker entities (store and all available data miners).
For tracker-store, the status is always "Idle" unless it is
restoring a backup and/or replaying a journal (see also tracker reset
--soft). For a list of common statuses, see
--list-common-statuses.
The data miners can be paused or resumed using this command and you can
also list miners running and available.
OPTIONS
- -p, --list-processes
-
This lists all Tracker processes in the system.
- -k, --kill=[daemons]
-
This uses SIGKILL to stop all Tracker processes found matching the
parameter, if no extra parameter is passed, "all" will be assumed.
This is not advised unless you are having problems stopping Tracker in
the first place. This GUARANTEES death.
The possible daemons options are:
-
•
all
- All daemons.
•
store
- Only the tracker-store.
•
miners
- Only data miners.
- -t, --terminate=[daemons]
-
This uses SIGTERM to stop all Tracker processes found matching the
parameter, if no extra parameter is passed, "all" will be assumed.
This is recommended over --kill because it gives the processes time
to shutdown cleanly.
For a list of possible daemons, see --kill.
- -s, --start
-
Starts all miners. This indirectly starts tracker-store too
because it is needed for miners to operate properly. The store is
started from D-Bus.
- --get-log-verbosity
-
This displays the log verbosity for ALL components using GSettings for
this configuration. For possible values, see
--set-log-verbosity.
- --set-log-verbosity=<verbosity>
-
This sets the log verbosity for ALL daemons using GSettings to store
their "verbosity" configuration.
The possible verbosity options are:
-
•
debug
- Show EVERYTHING, from debug messages to errors. This often includes
actual SQL being executed.
•
detailed
- Show enough detail to understand what is happening.
•
minimal
- Show an overview of what is going on, e.g. stats and when things
start or stop.
•
errors
- Show only warnings, criticals, errors or fatal events.
- -f, --follow
-
Follow status changes to daemons as they happen. This is a top level
view of what is happening. You will see the name for each daemon and a
state with the progress in that state.
This requires Ctrl+C to stop and return to the command line. Each new
status is put on a new line.
- -w, --watch=[ontology]
-
Watch changes that happen to the database in real time. This requires
Ctrl+C to stop and return to the command line.
If ontology is unspecified, all updates are shown. The
ontology can be a comma separated list of shorthand or long hand
ontology properties. For example:
$ tracker-control -w nie:url,nie:mimeType,nfo:fileSize,nie:dataSource
Now listening for resource updates to the database
All nie:plainTextContent properties are omitted
Press Ctrl+C to stop
'nfo:Document'
'nfo:fileSize' = '1770'
'nie:dataSource' = 'http://www.tracker-project.org/ontologies/tracker#extractor-data-source'
'nie:mimeType' = 'text/plain'
'nie:url' = 'file:///home/martyn/.bash_aliases'
'nfo:Document'
'nie:dataSource' = 'http://www.tracker-project.org/ontologies/tracker#extractor-data-source'
...
- --list-common-statuses
-
This will list statuses most commonly produced by miners and the
store. These statuses are not translated when sent over D-Bus and
should be translated by each application. These are not considered
static and are subject to change at any point.
Additionally, these statuses are not the only ones which may be
reported by a miner. There may be other states pertaining to the
specific roles of the miner in question.
- --list-miners-running
-
This will list all miners which have responded to a D-Bus call.
Sometimes it is helpful to use this command with
--list-miners-available.
- --list-miners-available
-
This will list all miners which are available even if they are not
running at the moment.
- --pause-details
-
For listing all miners which are paused and the reasons for being
paused, you can use this. It will also display the application that
requested the pause too.
- --miner=<miner>
-
This argument is used with --pause or --resume to say
which miner you want to pause or resume. You can use the full D-Bus
name, e.g. "org.freedesktop.Tracker1.Miner.Files" OR you can use
the suffix, e.g. "Files".
- --pause=<reason>
-
The reason here is useful to know WHY the miner should be paused. A
miner can be paused many times by multiple applications. Only when all
pauses have been resumed will it continue. If successful, a cookie
will be given to uniquely identify the request. This cookie is used to
resume the pause at a later stage.
- --pause-for-process=<reason>
-
This works exactly the same way as --pause with the exception
that it only keeps the pause active while the calling process is
alive. As soon as you press Ctrl+C the pause is resumed automatically.
- --resume=<cookie>
-
The cookie is given by a successful --pause command. It
is a number which identifies each pause request. When all pauses have
been resumed, the miner will resume working.
SEE ALSO
tracker-store(1).