The command journalctl is included in systemd and supports selecting messages from the systemd journal by criteria such as time or unit name. The systemd journal is a binary log file that stores system and service messages. The journalctl command can be used to view, filter, export, and manipulate the journal entries. For example, to show all messages from a specific unit, such as sshd.service, the command would be:
journalctl -u sshd.service
To show all messages from a specific time range, such as yesterday, the command would be:
journalctl --since=yesterday
The journalctl command has many options and arguments that can be used to customize the output and perform various operations on the journal. For more information, see the man page of journalctl or the official documentation1. References: [LPI 102-500 Exam Objectives], Topic 106.2: System logging, Weight: 3. [systemd-journald.service(8) — systemd — Debian unstable — Debian Manpages], Section NAME.