47

I want to know the uptime since the last wake from standby.

The command uptime only shows the difference between current time minus the last startup time.

15 Answers 15

31

In /var/log/pm-suspend.log, look for the last line looking like this one:

Sun Dec 16 09:30:31 CET 2012: Awake.

That's your last wakeup time. You can calculate your uptime since then the way Paul suggested.

Periodically your logrotate will "rotate" logs to prevent them from growing too big, so you may find an empty pm-suspend.log file. In this case, just look for the pm-suspend.log.1 file (you may find also other log files named like pm-suspend.log.2.gz and so on; you can examine them using zcat or zless).

5
  • this worked for me Jun 26, 2014 at 15:58
  • 6
    What if pm-suspend.log is empty? :(
    – cprn
    Oct 27, 2015 at 12:50
  • 1
    If you also care about suspend timestamp, use: cat /var/log/pm-suspend.log /var/log/pm-suspend.log.1 | grep -B1 Awake; echo "--"; zcat /var/log/pm-suspend.log.*.gz | grep -B1 Awake Nov 5, 2016 at 0:33
  • 3
    No such file in my computer (running Ubuntu 16.04 LTS) Oct 1, 2017 at 13:46
  • File is present only if you installed the pm-suspend. But for example Kubuntu goes to suspended state also after I close the notebook. Then the pm-suspend file is empty.
    – dmatej
    Oct 3, 2017 at 11:51
28

The pm-suspend program is not the only option how to suspend the computer. My log of this program is now empty, but I have found more reliable command:

cat /var/log/syslog | grep 'systemd-sleep'

You can then filter by messages like resumed or Suspending, by adding another grep.

And the output is:

Oct  2 09:11:48 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[931]: Suspending system...
Oct  2 09:53:10 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[931]: System resumed.
Oct  2 15:02:48 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[27516]: Suspending system...
Oct  2 16:07:19 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[27516]: System resumed.
Oct  2 16:32:48 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[29622]: Suspending system...
Oct  2 17:16:41 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[29622]: System resumed.
Oct  3 00:24:58 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[21316]: Suspending system...
Oct  3 08:17:22 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[21316]: System resumed.
Oct  3 09:09:25 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[24739]: Suspending system...
Oct  3 09:50:47 dmatej-lenovo systemd-sleep[24739]: System resumed.

On newer versions of Ubuntu, this may instead look like:

Feb 14 16:42:03 ThinkPad-P15v-Gen-1 systemd-sleep[30594]: Entering sleep state 'suspend'...
Feb 14 18:37:55 ThinkPad-P15v-Gen-1 systemd-sleep[30594]: System returned from sleep state.
Feb 15 17:14:06 ThinkPad-P15v-Gen-1 systemd-sleep[3441]: Entering sleep state 'suspend'...
Feb 16 09:36:36 ThinkPad-P15v-Gen-1 systemd-sleep[3441]: System returned from sleep state.
3
  • 1
    I had to add -a to grep because I was getting grep: (standard input): binary file matches and some latest records were not shown. So the command which worked for me was - cat /var/log/syslog | grep -a 'systemd-sleep' | grep "Suspending\|resumed" Dec 23, 2021 at 12:05
  • 1
    In Ubuntu 22.04, I had to update to cat /var/log/syslog | grep -a 'systemd-sleep' | grep "Entering sleep state\|System returned from sleep" May 3, 2022 at 15:28
  • 1
    Yes, this is super useful. Sometimes the computer would have earlier logs renamed to syslog.1 and so on. May 19, 2022 at 3:35
25

None of these answers worked for me. But I usefully found sleep.target which is made for exactly this:

$ journalctl -n4 -u sleep.target
nov. 17 17:16:37 kaa systemd[1]: Reached target Sleep.
nov. 17 18:46:22 kaa systemd[1]: Stopped target Sleep.
nov. 17 19:27:31 kaa systemd[1]: Reached target Sleep.
nov. 17 19:45:21 kaa systemd[1]: Stopped target Sleep.
6
  • 4
    that's the only one that worked for me, too (using Linux Mint 19 Cinnamon)
    – Suzana
    Jan 16, 2020 at 14:26
  • 2
    @Suzana came with a tip for calculating the time since: $ datediff -f%H:%M:%S $(journalctl -n4 -u sleep.target -o short-iso | tail -n 1 | cut -d' ' -f 1) now -> 5:38:48 (fresse.org/dateutils) Mar 12, 2020 at 12:58
  • kinda useless use of tail and cut there, but ohwell ;) Mar 12, 2020 at 12:59
  • 1
    @Suzana cut might be required here, but you can just use -n1 to remove the tail, maybe also add -q so journal doesn't add warning messages messing up. It's also possible to use JSON and jq instead of cut: journalctl -q -n1 -u sleep.target -o json | jq -r ._SOURCE_REALTIME_TIMESTAMP Mar 14, 2020 at 10:36
  • 2
    journalctl -n1 works only if you also add -r to get the newest timestamp but you are right, that's shorter.
    – Suzana
    Mar 17, 2020 at 14:55
24

For desktops/servers running systemd, while there is no direct command that will tell the info directly (as far as I am aware), all the data is captured in the journal.

You can grep the journal, for example:

echo ">> [SUSPEND] Times during current boot"
journalctl -b 0 |grep "]: Suspending system..."
echo ">> [WAKE] Times during current boot"
journalctl -b 0 |grep "PM: Finishing wakeup"

Or, for fancy output, I wrote a python3 script (runs fine on Fedora 23) Sample output:

Initial Boot Timestamp:  2016-01-15 09:31:32 

     Wake Timestamp     |    Suspend Timestamp   |       Awake Time       |
  --------------------  |  --------------------  |  --------------------  |
   2016-01-15 09:31:32  |   2016-01-15 09:36:03  |          0h  4m        |
   2016-01-15 09:36:22  |   2016-01-15 19:15:04  |          9h 38m        |
   2016-01-15 19:22:21  |   2016-01-15 20:00:05  |          0h 37m        |
   ...
   -------------------  |  --------------------  |  --------------------  | 

Summary: Days Since Boot [8.23] | Days Awake [4.14] | Suspend/Wake Cycles: [28]

The script is in github. link to github repo

4
  • 1
    This worked for me on Ubuntu 16.04
    – raphinesse
    May 10, 2016 at 12:46
  • Good to know that we can check the journal. Aug 31, 2016 at 12:07
  • Use journalctl -b 0 -o short-iso MESSAGE="PM: Finishing wakeup." | tail -1 | cut -d" " -f1 for just the time of the last wakeup
    – raphinesse
    Oct 18, 2016 at 17:10
  • 2
    On Fedora, this worked for me: journalctl -b 0 | grep "System resumed" | tail -1
    – IanB
    Mar 16, 2021 at 9:38
2

I did not have pm-suspend.log on my machine.

This worked for me:

/usr/bin/pmset -g log | grep Wake | grep "due to" | tail -n1

Also says what woke the computer up. :-)

4
  • 1
    What if there's no command pmset found and no such file as pmset and pm-suspend.log is empty? :(
    – cprn
    Oct 27, 2015 at 12:51
  • pm-suspend.log was missing and this works for me (on my iMac)
    – dayuloli
    May 7, 2016 at 13:05
  • 2
    This is for Mac only
    – plaisthos
    Dec 31, 2017 at 14:46
  • show perfectly in MacOs Catalina Dec 11, 2019 at 23:41
1

modified better verision of steps answer

grep ': Awake' /var/log/pm-suspend.log

edit haha thanks for the comments :D

2
  • And you won a useless use of cat point! Jun 26, 2014 at 15:59
  • No upvotes for useless use of 'cat'.
    – Magellan
    Jun 26, 2014 at 16:01
0

What are you using to initiate the standby?

If you can use a script, then after the line

echo -n "standby" > /proc/acpi/sleep

you could have the line

echo `date +%s` >> /var/log/wakeups.log

Or something similar. This would mean that the first thing the machine did when it woke up was to write the current time and date to a log file (n seconds since epoch).

Then tail -1 /var/log/wakeups.log would give you the last time. You could could subtract this from the current time to get seconds since the last wakeup.

0

Search for the last occurence of the string "PM: restore of devices complete" in /var/log/messages. If your machine has been up too long, then the log may be rotated, though.

0

You can use tuptime for track the system startup/shutdown life.

1
  • Does not provide the information the OP requested. Jun 24, 2016 at 8:39
0

Extending Steps answer:

grep Awake /var/log/pm-suspend.log | tail -1

This will get the line with the last wakeup time.

0

I think this is a very solid way to do it:

systemd[1]: Started Run anacron jobs at resume

Search for when the OS starts anacron, will happen however the machine is turned on

0

If you want to know the last wake up time on Ubuntu 19.04 you can also:

grep sleep /var/log/auth.log*

auth.log.1:Feb 29 17:49:12 systemd-logind[694]: Operation 'sleep' finished.
auth.log.1:Mar  1 09:39:01 systemd-logind[694]: Operation 'sleep' finished.

I add this answer because I don't have the pm-suspend file like other answers suggested using.

0

Answer:

journalctl -r -S "1 day ago" | grep "System returned from sleep state" | head -1 | awk '{print $1, $2, $3}' | {read last_wake_up; echo $(($(date --date="now" +%s) - $(date --date="$last_wake_up" +%s)))} | {read sec ; eval "echo $(date -ud "@$sec" +'$((%s/3600/24)) days %H hours %M minutes %S seconds')"}

result:

0 days 07 hours 37 minutes 07 seconds

A bit shorter answer:

journalctl -r -S "1 day ago" | grep "System returned from sleep state" | head -1 | awk '{print $1, $2, $3}' | {read last_wake_up; echo $(( ($(date --date="now" +%s) - $(date --date="$last_wake_up" +%s) )/(60*60) ))"h"}

result:

6h

(tested on Ubuntu 22.04.1 LTS, kernel 5.15).


If you want to see minutes, change (60*60)))"h" to (60)))"m".

If you want to see days, change (60*60)))"h" to (60*60*24)))"d".

If you want to only see last wake up log, use:

journalctl -r -S "1 day ago" | grep "System returned from sleep state" | head -1

Please keep in mind that it's nice to have defined "since" -S in journalctl command, because there are a lot of logs there. On my machine I have 3 905 300 lines, and for the last day it's only 14 733.

"Since" can also be defined as a -S "2022-08-29 12:20".

0

I used the kernel log to get the wakeup time.

wakeup=$(grep 'PM: suspend exit' /var/log/kern.log | tail -n1 | cut -c -15)
awake=$(( $(date +%s) - $(date --date "$wakeup" +%s) ))

This log ought to be pretty small and easy to search.

All the other answers either didn't work on my system (Ubuntu 22.04 LTS) or required installing something else.

-1

on fedora using ripgrep

rg Suspend /var/log/messages

result:

34338:Jul 26 03:03:46 <hostname> systemd-sleep: Suspending system...

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