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LPI Exam 101-500 Topic 2 Question 85 Discussion

Actual exam question for LPI's 101-500 exam
Question #: 85
Topic #: 2
[All 101-500 Questions]

Which command will display messages from the kernel that were output during the normal boot sequence?

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Suggested Answer: B

Contribute your Thoughts:

Salome
2 months ago
Haha, I'm going with dmesg. It's the real 'kernel' of the matter!
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Denny
12 days ago
User 3: Definitely dmesg, it shows kernel messages.
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Viola
13 days ago
User 2: Yeah, dmesg is the command to go with.
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Fatima
18 days ago
User 1: I think it's dmesg too.
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Zack
2 months ago
Aha, dmesg is the one! I bet the kernel team had a real 'kernel' of wisdom when they named that command.
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Charlene
2 months ago
I'm going with dmesg. Who needs /bin/ when you can just keep it simple, right? This question is a real kernel of truth!
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Bette
2 months ago
Hmm, I think /bin/dmesg is the way to go. It's more specific and sounds like it might be the official command.
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Alfreda
4 days ago
Let's try using /bin/dmesg to see the kernel messages during boot.
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Luis
9 days ago
I'm not sure, but I think /bin/dmesg is the right command to view kernel messages.
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Lovetta
1 months ago
I think dmesg is the correct command to use for displaying kernel messages.
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Susy
2 months ago
I agree, /bin/dmesg seems like the official command to display kernel messages.
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Shawnda
2 months ago
Definitely dmesg! That's the classic command to see the kernel messages. Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
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Gerald
2 months ago
I'm not sure, but I think /bin/dmesg might also be the correct answer.
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Audra
2 months ago
I agree with you, Remona. The dmesg command displays kernel messages during boot.
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Remona
2 months ago
I think the answer is A) dmesg
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