On Tue, Dec 1, 2020 at 1:46 PM Paul Menzel < pmenzel+systemd-de...@molgen.mpg.de> wrote:
> > At least to me, some of the entries with timestamps from resuming should > have timestamps from suspending. Is the reason, that “suspend message“ > was only written to the journal after resume? > Probably because the journald process (like all other userspace processes) had already been frozen when those messages were written to dmesg, so it couldn't really receive them. > > Is there a way to access the Linux kernel timestamp from within the > journal? > Yes, as the _SOURCE_MONOTONIC_TIMESTAMP field. (It's stored in microseconds, while dmesg shows it in seconds.) journalctl -o json _TRANSPORT=kernel | jq -r '"[\(._SOURCE_MONOTONIC_TIMESTAMP | tonumber / 1000000)] \(.MESSAGE)"' Note that the kernel uses the monotonic clock for dmesg messages, which does not advance at all while the system is suspended -- so trying to convert it to realtime will often give wrong results (the same problem as in 'dmesg -e') unless you do something smart with combining it with journald's __REALTIME_TIMESTAMP. -- Mantas Mikulėnas
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