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# SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1-or-later # Message catalog for systemd's own messages # The catalog format is documented on # https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/catalog # For an explanation why we do all this, see https://xkcd.com/1024/ -- f77379a8490b408bbe5f6940505a777b Subject: The journal has been started Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The system journal process has started up, opened the journal files for writing and is now ready to process requests. -- d93fb3c9c24d451a97cea615ce59c00b Subject: The journal has been stopped Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The system journal process has shut down and closed all currently active journal files. -- ec387f577b844b8fa948f33cad9a75e6 Subject: Disk space used by the journal Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support @JOURNAL_NAME@ (@JOURNAL_PATH@) is currently using @CURRENT_USE_PRETTY@. Maximum allowed usage is set to @MAX_USE_PRETTY@. Leaving at least @DISK_KEEP_FREE_PRETTY@ free (of currently available @DISK_AVAILABLE_PRETTY@ of disk space). Enforced usage limit is thus @LIMIT_PRETTY@, of which @AVAILABLE_PRETTY@ are still available. The limits controlling how much disk space is used by the journal may be configured with SystemMaxUse=, SystemKeepFree=, SystemMaxFileSize=, RuntimeMaxUse=, RuntimeKeepFree=, RuntimeMaxFileSize= settings in /etc/systemd/journald.conf. See journald.conf(5) for details. -- a596d6fe7bfa4994828e72309e95d61e Subject: Messages from a service have been suppressed Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: man:journald.conf(5) A service has logged too many messages within a time period. Messages from the service have been dropped. Note that only messages from the service in question have been dropped, other services' messages are unaffected. The limits controlling when messages are dropped may be configured with RateLimitIntervalSec= and RateLimitBurst= in /etc/systemd/journald.conf or LogRateLimitIntervalSec= and LogRateLimitBurst= in the unit file. See journald.conf(5) and systemd.exec(5) for details. -- e9bf28e6e834481bb6f48f548ad13606 Subject: Journal messages have been missed Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Kernel messages have been lost as the journal system has been unable to process them quickly enough. -- fc2e22bc6ee647b6b90729ab34a250b1 Subject: Process @COREDUMP_PID@ (@COREDUMP_COMM@) dumped core Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: man:core(5) Process @COREDUMP_PID@ (@COREDUMP_COMM@) crashed and dumped core. This usually indicates a programming error in the crashing program and should be reported to its vendor as a bug. -- 5aadd8e954dc4b1a8c954d63fd9e1137 Subject: Core file was truncated to @SIZE_LIMIT@ bytes. Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: man:coredump.conf(5) The process had more memory mapped than the configured maximum for processing and storage by systemd-coredump(8). Only the first @SIZE_LIMIT@ bytes were saved. This core might still be usable, but various tools like gdb(1) will warn about the file being truncated. -- 8d45620c1a4348dbb17410da57c60c66 Subject: A new session @SESSION_ID@ has been created for user @USER_ID@ Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: sd-login(3) A new session with the ID @SESSION_ID@ has been created for the user @USER_ID@. The leading process of the session is @LEADER@. -- 3354939424b4456d9802ca8333ed424a Subject: Session @SESSION_ID@ has been terminated Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: sd-login(3) A session with the ID @SESSION_ID@ has been terminated. -- fcbefc5da23d428093f97c82a9290f7b Subject: A new seat @SEAT_ID@ is now available Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: sd-login(3) A new seat @SEAT_ID@ has been configured and is now available. -- e7852bfe46784ed0accde04bc864c2d5 Subject: Seat @SEAT_ID@ has now been removed Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: sd-login(3) A seat @SEAT_ID@ has been removed and is no longer available. -- c7a787079b354eaaa9e77b371893cd27 Subject: Time change Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The system clock has been changed to @REALTIME@ microseconds after January 1st, 1970. -- 45f82f4aef7a4bbf942ce861d1f20990 Subject: Time zone change to @TIMEZONE@ Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The system timezone has been changed to @TIMEZONE@. -- b07a249cd024414a82dd00cd181378ff Subject: System start-up is now complete Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support All system services necessary queued for starting at boot have been started. Note that this does not mean that the machine is now idle as services might still be busy with completing start-up. Kernel start-up required @KERNEL_USEC@ microseconds. Initrd start-up required @INITRD_USEC@ microseconds. Userspace start-up required @USERSPACE_USEC@ microseconds. -- eed00a68ffd84e31882105fd973abdd1 Subject: User manager start-up is now complete Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The user manager instance for user @_UID@ has been started. All services queued for starting have been started. Note that other services might still be starting up or be started at any later time. Startup of the manager took @USERSPACE_USEC@ microseconds. -- 6bbd95ee977941e497c48be27c254128 Subject: System sleep state @SLEEP@ entered Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The system has now entered the @SLEEP@ sleep state. -- 8811e6df2a8e40f58a94cea26f8ebf14 Subject: System sleep state @SLEEP@ left Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The system has now left the @SLEEP@ sleep state. -- 98268866d1d54a499c4e98921d93bc40 Subject: System shutdown initiated Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support System shutdown has been initiated. The shutdown has now begun and all system services are terminated and all file systems unmounted. -- c14aaf76ec284a5fa1f105f88dfb061c Subject: System factory reset initiated Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support System factory reset has been initiated. The precise operation this executes is implementation-defined, but typically has the effect of reverting the system's state and configuration to vendor defaults. -- 7d4958e842da4a758f6c1cdc7b36dcc5 Subject: A start job for unit @UNIT@ has begun execution Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support A start job for unit @UNIT@ has begun execution. The job identifier is @JOB_ID@. -- 39f53479d3a045ac8e11786248231fbf Subject: A start job for unit @UNIT@ has finished successfully Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support A start job for unit @UNIT@ has finished successfully. The job identifier is @JOB_ID@. -- be02cf6855d2428ba40df7e9d022f03d Subject: A start job for unit @UNIT@ has failed Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support A start job for unit @UNIT@ has finished with a failure. The job identifier is @JOB_ID@ and the job result is @JOB_RESULT@. -- de5b426a63be47a7b6ac3eaac82e2f6f Subject: A stop job for unit @UNIT@ has begun execution Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support A stop job for unit @UNIT@ has begun execution. The job identifier is @JOB_ID@. -- 9d1aaa27d60140bd96365438aad20286 Subject: A stop job for unit @UNIT@ has finished Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support A stop job for unit @UNIT@ has finished. The job identifier is @JOB_ID@ and the job result is @JOB_RESULT@. -- d34d037fff1847e6ae669a370e694725 Subject: A reload job for unit @UNIT@ has begun execution Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support A reload job for unit @UNIT@ has begun execution. The job identifier is @JOB_ID@. -- 7b05ebc668384222baa8881179cfda54 Subject: A reload job for unit @UNIT@ has finished Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support A reload job for unit @UNIT@ has finished. The job identifier is @JOB_ID@ and the job result is @JOB_RESULT@. -- 641257651c1b4ec9a8624d7a40a9e1e7 Subject: Process @EXECUTABLE@ could not be executed Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The process @EXECUTABLE@ could not be executed and failed. The error number returned by this process is @ERRNO@. -- 0027229ca0644181a76c4e92458afa2e Subject: One or more messages could not be forwarded to syslog Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support One or more messages could not be forwarded to the syslog service running side-by-side with journald. This usually indicates that the syslog implementation has not been able to keep up with the speed of messages queued. -- 1dee0369c7fc4736b7099b38ecb46ee7 Subject: Mount point is not empty Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The directory @WHERE@ is specified as the mount point (second field in /etc/fstab or Where= field in systemd unit file) and is not empty. This does not interfere with mounting, but the pre-exisiting files in this directory become inaccessible. To see those over-mounted files, please manually mount the underlying file system to a secondary location. -- 24d8d4452573402496068381a6312df2 Subject: A virtual machine or container has been started Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The virtual machine @NAME@ with its leader PID @LEADER@ has been started is now ready to use. -- 58432bd3bace477cb514b56381b8a758 Subject: A virtual machine or container has been terminated Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The virtual machine @NAME@ with its leader PID @LEADER@ has been shut down. -- 36db2dfa5a9045e1bd4af5f93e1cf057 Subject: DNSSEC mode has been turned off, as server doesn't support it Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: man:systemd-resolved.service(8) Documentation: man:resolved.conf(5) The resolver service (systemd-resolved.service) has detected that the configured DNS server does not support DNSSEC, and DNSSEC validation has been turned off as result. This event will take place if DNSSEC=allow-downgrade is configured in resolved.conf and the configured DNS server is incompatible with DNSSEC. Note that using this mode permits DNSSEC downgrade attacks, as an attacker might be able turn off DNSSEC validation on the system by inserting DNS replies in the communication channel that result in a downgrade like this. This event might be indication that the DNS server is indeed incompatible with DNSSEC or that an attacker has successfully managed to stage such a downgrade attack. -- 1675d7f172174098b1108bf8c7dc8f5d Subject: DNSSEC validation failed Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: man:systemd-resolved.service(8) A DNS query or resource record set failed DNSSEC validation. This is usually indication that the communication channel used was tampered with. -- 4d4408cfd0d144859184d1e65d7c8a65 Subject: A DNSSEC trust anchor has been revoked Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: man:systemd-resolved.service(8) A DNSSEC trust anchor has been revoked. A new trust anchor has to be configured, or the operating system needs to be updated, to provide an updated DNSSEC trust anchor. -- 5eb03494b6584870a536b337290809b3 Subject: Automatic restarting of a unit has been scheduled Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Automatic restarting of the unit @UNIT@ has been scheduled, as the result for the configured Restart= setting for the unit. -- ae8f7b866b0347b9af31fe1c80b127c0 Subject: Resources consumed by unit runtime Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The unit @UNIT@ completed and consumed the indicated resources. -- 7ad2d189f7e94e70a38c781354912448 Subject: Unit succeeded Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The unit @UNIT@ has successfully entered the 'dead' state. -- 0e4284a0caca4bfc81c0bb6786972673 Subject: Unit skipped Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The unit @UNIT@ was skipped due to an ExecCondition= command failure, and has entered the 'dead' state with result '@UNIT_RESULT@'. -- d9b373ed55a64feb8242e02dbe79a49c Subject: Unit failed Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The unit @UNIT@ has entered the 'failed' state with result '@UNIT_RESULT@'. -- 98e322203f7a4ed290d09fe03c09fe15 Subject: Unit process exited Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support An @COMMAND@= process belonging to unit @UNIT@ has exited. The process' exit code is '@EXIT_CODE@' and its exit status is @EXIT_STATUS@. -- 50876a9db00f4c40bde1a2ad381c3a1b Subject: The system is configured in a way that might cause problems Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The following "tags" are possible: - "split-usr" — /usr is a separate file system and was not mounted when systemd was booted - "cgroups-missing" — the kernel was compiled without cgroup support or access to expected interface files is restricted - "var-run-bad" — /var/run is not a symlink to /run - "overflowuid-not-65534" — the kernel user ID used for "unknown" users (with NFS or user namespaces) is not 65534 - "overflowgid-not-65534" — the kernel group ID used for "unknown" users (with NFS or user namespaces) is not 65534 Current system is tagged as @TAINT@. -- fe6faa94e7774663a0da52717891d8ef Subject: A process of @UNIT@ unit has been killed by the OOM killer. Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support A process of unit @UNIT has been killed by the Linux kernel out-of-memory (OOM) killer logic. This usually indicates that the system is low on memory and that memory needed to be freed. A process associated with @UNIT@ has been determined as the best process to terminate and has been forcibly terminated by the kernel. Note that the memory pressure might or might not have been caused by @UNIT@. -- b61fdac612e94b9182285b998843061f Subject: Accepting user/group name @USER_GROUP_NAME@, which does not match strict user/group name rules. Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: https://systemd.io/USER_NAMES The user/group name @USER_GROUP_NAME@ has been specified, which is accepted according the relaxed user/group name rules, but does not qualify under the strict rules. The strict user/group name rules written as regular expression are: ^[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_-]{0,30}$ The relaxed user/group name rules accept all names, except for the empty string; names containing NUL bytes, control characters, colon or slash characters; names not valid UTF-8; names with leading or trailing whitespace; the strings "." or ".."; fully numeric strings, or strings beginning in a hyphen and otherwise fully numeric. -- 1b3bb94037f04bbf81028e135a12d293 Subject: Failed to generate valid unit name from path '@MOUNT_POINT@'. Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The following mount point path could not be converted into a valid .mount unit name: @MOUNT_POINT@ Typically this means that the path to the mount point is longer than allowed for valid unit names. systemd dynamically synthesizes .mount units for all mount points appearing on the system. For that a simple escaping algorithm is applied: the absolute path name is used, with all "/" characters replaced by "-" (the leading one is removed). Moreover, any non-alphanumeric characters (as well as any of ":", "-", "_", ".", "\") are replaced by "\xNN" where "NN" is the hexadecimal code of the character. Finally, ".mount" is suffixed. The resulting string must be under 256 characters in length to be a valid unit name. This restriction is made in order for all unit names to also be suitable as file names. If a mount point appears that — after escaping — is longer than this limit it cannot be mapped to a unit. In this case systemd will refrain from synthesizing a unit and cannot be used to manage the mount point. It will not appear in the service manager's unit table and thus also not be torn down safely and automatically at system shutdown. It is generally recommended to avoid such overly long mount point paths, or — if used anyway – manage them independently of systemd, i.e. establish them as well as tear them down automatically at system shutdown by other software. -- b480325f9c394a7b802c231e51a2752c Subject: Special user @OFFENDING_USER@ configured, this is not safe! Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Documentation: https://systemd.io/UIDS-GIDS The unit @UNIT@ is configured to use User=@OFFENDING_USER@. This is not safe. The @OFFENDING_USER@ user's main purpose on Linux-based operating systems is to be the owner of files that otherwise cannot be mapped to any local user. It's used by the NFS client and Linux user namespacing, among others. By running a unit's processes under the identity of this user they might possibly get read and even write access to such files that cannot otherwise be mapped. It is strongly recommended to avoid running services under this user identity, in particular on systems using NFS or running containers. Allocate a user ID specific to this service, either statically via systemd-sysusers or dynamically via the DynamicUser= service setting. -- 1c0454c1bd2241e0ac6fefb4bc631433 Subject: systemd-udev-settle.service is deprecated. Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support Usage of the systemd service unit systemd-udev-settle.service is deprecated. It inserts artificial delays into the boot process without providing the guarantees other subsystems traditionally assumed it provides. Relying on this service is racy, and it is generally a bug to make use of it and depend on it. Traditionally, this service's job was to wait until all devices a system possesses have been fully probed and initialized, delaying boot until this phase is completed. However, today's systems and hardware generally don't work this way anymore, hardware today may show up any time and take any time to be probed and initialized. Thus, in the general case, it's no longer possible to correctly delay boot until "all devices" have been processed, as it is not clear what "all devices" means and when they have been found. This is in particular the case if USB hardware or network-attached hardware is used. Modern software that requires some specific hardware (such as a network device or block device) to operate should only wait for the specific devices it needs to show up, and otherwise operate asynchronously initializing devices as they appear during boot and during runtime without delaying the boot process. It is a defect of the software in question if it doesn't work this way, and still pulls systemd-udev-settle.service into the boot process. Please file a bug report against the following units, with a request for it to be updated to operate in a hotplug fashion without depending on systemd-udev-settle.service: @OFFENDING_UNITS@ -- 7c8a41f37b764941a0e1780b1be2f037 Subject: Initial clock synchronization Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support For the first time during the current boot an NTP synchronization has been acquired and the local system clock adjustment has been initiated. -- 3f7d5ef3e54f4302b4f0b143bb270cab Subject: TPM PCR Extended Defined-By: systemd Support: https://www.debian.org/support The string '@MEASURING@' has been extended into Trusted Platform Module's (TPM) Platform Configuration Register (PCR) @PCR@, on banks @BANKS@. Whenever the system transitions to a new runtime phase, a different string is extended into the specified PCR, to ensure that security policies for TPM-bound secrets and other resources are limited to specific phases of the runtime.