"systemd-analyze time" directly provides time.
I don't know about journalctl MESSAGE_ID.
On Mon, 28 Jan 2019, 5:40 pm Mantas Mikulėnas On Mon, Jan 28, 2019 at 11:22 AM deepan muthusamy
> wrote:
>
>> My target(RCAR-H3) runs with yocto project have boot up time of 13
>> seconds before init starts
The systems version is "systemd 230".
I'm not sure about what the container is. My system having only one user
(root). No other users.
On Mon, 28 Jan 2019, 2:56 pm Jérémy ROSEN What version of systemd are you using ?
>
> Kernel time is usually not displayed when systemd is run inside a
> contain
On Mon, Jan 28, 2019 at 11:22 AM deepan muthusamy
wrote:
> My target(RCAR-H3) runs with yocto project have boot up time of 13 seconds
> before init starts as of my observation. because I am starting Weston in
> basic.target which is starting after 13 seconds from the time I pressed
> power button
Looks like
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/9801
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What version of systemd are you using ?
Kernel time is usually not displayed when systemd is run inside a container
(since it makes no sense). There might be something wrong with container
detection here, though...
Le lun. 28 janv. 2019 à 10:22, deepan muthusamy a
écrit :
> My target(RCAR-H3) r
My target(RCAR-H3) runs with yocto project have boot up time of 13 seconds
before init starts as of my observation. because I am starting Weston in
basic.target which is starting after 13 seconds from the time I pressed
power button.
Note: I am booting the board from SD card(The image is in SD car