'\" t .TH "SD_JOURNAL_GET_CURSOR" "3" "" "systemd 230" "sd_journal_get_cursor" .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- .\" * Define some portability stuff .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- .\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .\" http://bugs.debian.org/507673 .\" http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/groff/2009-02/msg00013.html .\" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .ie \n(.g .ds Aq \(aq .el .ds Aq ' .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- .\" * set default formatting .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- .\" disable hyphenation .nh .\" disable justification (adjust text to left margin only) .ad l .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- .\" * MAIN CONTENT STARTS HERE * .\" ----------------------------------------------------------------- .SH "NAME" sd_journal_get_cursor, sd_journal_test_cursor \- Get cursor string for or test cursor string against the current journal entry .SH "SYNOPSIS" .sp .ft B .nf #include .fi .ft .HP \w'int\ sd_journal_get_cursor('u .BI "int sd_journal_get_cursor(sd_journal\ *" "j" ", char\ **" "cursor" ");" .HP \w'int\ sd_journal_test_cursor('u .BI "int sd_journal_test_cursor(sd_journal\ *" "j" ", const\ char\ *" "cursor" ");" .SH "DESCRIPTION" .PP \fBsd_journal_get_cursor()\fR returns a cursor string for the current journal entry\&. A cursor is a serialization of the current journal position formatted as text\&. The string only contains printable characters and can be passed around in text form\&. The cursor identifies a journal entry globally and in a stable way and may be used to later seek to it via \fBsd_journal_seek_cursor\fR(3)\&. The cursor string should be considered opaque and not be parsed by clients\&. Seeking to a cursor position without the specific entry being available locally will seek to the next closest (in terms of time) available entry\&. The call takes two arguments: a journal context object and a pointer to a string pointer where the cursor string will be placed\&. The string is allocated via libc \fBmalloc\fR(3) and should be freed after use with \fBfree\fR(3)\&. .PP Note that \fBsd_journal_get_cursor()\fR will not work before \fBsd_journal_next\fR(3) (or related call) has been called at least once, in order to position the read pointer at a valid entry\&. .PP \fBsd_journal_test_cursor()\fR may be used to check whether the current position in the journal matches the specified cursor\&. This is useful since cursor strings do not uniquely identify an entry: the same entry might be referred to by multiple different cursor strings, and hence string comparing cursors is not possible\&. Use this call to verify after an invocation of \fBsd_journal_seek_cursor\fR(3) whether the entry being sought to was actually found in the journal or the next closest entry was used instead\&. .SH "RETURN VALUE" .PP \fBsd_journal_get_cursor()\fR returns 0 on success or a negative errno\-style error code\&. \fBsd_journal_test_cursor()\fR returns positive if the current entry matches the specified cursor, 0 if it does not match the specified cursor or a negative errno\-style error code on failure\&. .SH "NOTES" .PP The \fBsd_journal_get_cursor()\fR and \fBsd_journal_test_cursor()\fR interfaces are available as a shared library, which can be compiled and linked to with the \fBlibsystemd\fR\ \&\fBpkg-config\fR(1) file\&. .SH "SEE ALSO" .PP \fBsystemd\fR(1), \fBsd-journal\fR(3), \fBsd_journal_open\fR(3), \fBsd_journal_seek_cursor\fR(3)