Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Red Hat or CentOS CMD
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Red Hat or CentOS CMD Post 302546653 by alister on Thursday 11th of August 2011 07:22:18 PM
Old 08-11-2011
Disclaimer: It has been approximately 7 years since I used Linux regularly. However, I would be surprised if any of what follows is no longer applicable.

You should be aware that dmesg simply prints out the contents of a kernel log buffer. It is a ring buffer and it's not very large. New messages overwrite older ones once the buffer has been filled. If your kernel is feeling chatty, you could very well miss messages if you depend on dmesg.

dmesg can be convenient to check the latest kernel messages, but I would not consider it a comprehensive reporting tool in and of itself. For that you need to look elsewhere.

For example, soon after booting a linux machine, dmesg will print out all the startup messages spat out by the kernel during its initialization and hardware detection routines. Try dmesg a day later (or a minute later if the kernel has encountered some issue) and it's possible that the boot messages are now gone (they should still be available in a log file, even if they've been overwritten in the kernel buffer read by dmesg).

Regards,
Alister
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Red Hat 7.2.....

I just installed red hat 7.2 on my laptop. it's dual booted with xp and red hat. when i boot in to linux it boots up to the screen to ask me my name and pass....i put in root and my password. after this it goes to a blue screen and sits there. the after about 2 minutes it comes up with a fatal... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: muzscman
1 Replies

2. Linux

Red Hat?

I have a Red Hat upgrade disk. I installed it and it corrupted my entire hard drive! I had gotten the disks out of a Dummy's book at my local library. Trying to install 'Red Hat', has cost me $100.00 in damages. (The cool part is my friend gave me that $100.00 part) Ah...A 120gig Hard Drive. Just... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: hdk_mkr
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Red Hat 9 help

please help me how to install softwares in linux.i have a ethernet internet connection.i try to open the site on LAN to download internet client.but i cannot as our lan supports only internet explorer....i downloaded the linux client by booting thru XP......but i cannot c my NTFS partition thru... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: shobhit143
0 Replies

4. Linux

red hat ee 2.6.9-42

hello. I would be greatfull if someone could tell me how will i see what dns server and gateway my red hat server uses. I tryied to find out by typing ifconfig command but i got : -bash: ifconfig: command not found , although man ifonconfig gives output with info about using that command. Is... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tonijel
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

telnet shell script on red hat 9 cmd line only

i would like to make a shell script (red hat 9 cmd line only) to telnet to my local isp's webmail server on port 25 and send it commands such as helo :) help would be much appreciated, and i found no posts similar that answered my question... the closest i've gotten to an answer from about 8... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kypeswith
3 Replies

6. Red Hat

Red Hat E 3

I'm am working with a Red Hat Enterprise 3 server. This is a dedicated server that is supposedly dedicated to one domain, but I have been tasked with trying to figure out if there are files on this system that are being accessed by other IP's. Does anyone know if how I would go about finding... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: chrisPlusPlus
0 Replies

7. Red Hat

Red-hat

Hello, How do I see what IP addresses are connected to my machine? thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sonomao
2 Replies

8. Linux

Red Hat cluster

hi... I'm new to clustering concept, there was a issue in redhat clustering as "unable to load cluster.xml no such file or directory".. this issue restrict me from starting the cluster services and too execution of clustat command .. myself using vmware work station for the cluster setup with... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sriniv666
4 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to know if i use "Red Hat Enterprise Linux" or "Red Hat Desktop" ?

how to know if i use "Red Hat Enterprise Linux" or "Red Hat Desktop" ? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ahmedamer12
2 Replies
DMESG(1)							   User Commands							  DMESG(1)

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 sup- ported 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 alert 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. -P, --nopager Do not pipe output into a pager. A pager is enabled by default for --human output. -r, --raw Print the raw message buffer, i.e. do not strip the log-level prefixes. Note that the real raw format depends on the method how dmesg(1) reads kernel messages. The /dev/kmsg device uses a different for- mat 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. -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 for- mat 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). -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. SEE ALSO
terminal-colors.d(5), syslogd(8) AUTHORS
Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com> dmesg was originally written by Theodore Ts'o <tytso@athena.mit.edu> AVAILABILITY
The dmesg command is part of the util-linux package and is available from Linux Kernel Archive <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils /util-linux/>. util-linux July 2012 DMESG(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:20 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy