úÎTà     None ;A structured object of properties to log. You generally don' t construct N this yourself, but you use the monoid instance and smart constructors below.  For example, C logProperties (message "Oh god, it burns!" <> priority Emergency)  Construct a  0 by converting to uppercase, as required by the  journal. IThe human readable message string for this entry. This is supposed to be P the primary text shown to the user. It is usually not translated (but might be A in some cases), and is not supposed to be parsed for meta data. IA 128bit message identifier ID for recognizing certain message types, if K this is desirable. Developers can generate a new ID for this purpose with  journalctl --new-id. 'A priority value compatible with syslog's priority concept. .The source code file generating this message. 5The source code line number generating this message. 7The source code function name generating this message. IThe low-level Unix error number causing this entry, if any. Contains the  numeric value of errno(3). Syslog compatibility field. Syslog compatibility field. Syslog compatibility field. &Log a message to the systemd journal. CLog a message and supply extra metadata. All metadata keys will be ! converted to uppercase for you.  Note: The Message4 meta-data property will be replaced with the first ' parameter to this function. If you don't want this, use logMap             libsystemd-journal-1.0.0Systemd.Journal hsyslog-1.6System.Posix.Syslog EmergencyAlertCriticalErrorWarningNoticeInfoDebugPriority LogPropertiesLogKeymkLogKeymessage messageIdprioritycodeFilecodeLinecodeFuncerrnosyslogFacilitysyslogIdentifier syslogPid logMessagelogMessageWith logPropertiessdJournalSendV$fIsStringLogKey