--- page_title: "Machine Readable Output - Command-Line Interface" sidebar_current: "cli-machinereadable" --- # Machine Readable Output Every Vagrant commands accepts a `--machine-readable` flag which enables machine readable output mode. In this mode, the output to the terminal is replaced with machine-friendly output. This mode makes it easy to programmatically execute Vagrant and read data out of it. This output format is protected by our [backwards compatibility](/v2/installation/backwards-compatibility.html) policy. Until Vagrant 2.0 is released, however, the machine readable output may change as we determine more use cases for it. But the backwards compatibility promise should make it safe to write client libraries to parse the output format.

Advanced topic! This is an advanced topic for use only if you want to programmatically execute Vagrant. If you're just getting started with Vagrant, you may safely skip this section.

## Format The machine readable format is a line-oriented, comma-delimeted text format. This makes it extremely easy to parse using standard Unix tools such as awk or grep in addition to full programming languages like Ruby or Python. The format is: ``` timestamp,target,type,data... ``` Each component is explained below: * **timestamp** is a Unix timestamp in UTC of when the message was printed. * **target** is the target of the following output. This is empty if the message is related to Vagrant globally. Otherwise, this is generally a machine name so you can relate output to a specific machine when multi-VM is in use. * **type** is the type of machine-readable message being outputted. There are a set of standard types which are covered later. * **data** is zero or more comma-seperated values associated with the prior type. The exact amount and meaning of this data is type-dependent, so you must read the documentation associated with the type to understand fully. Within the format, if data contains a comma, it is replaced with `%!(VAGRANT_COMMA)`. This was preferred over an escape character such as \' because it is more friendly to tools like awk. Newlines within the format are replaced with their respective standard escape sequence. Newlines become a literal `\n` within the output. Carriage returns become a literal `\r`. ## Types This section documents all the available types that may be outputted with the machine-readable output.
Type Description
provider-name The provider name of the target machine. targetted
state The state ID of the target machine. targetted
state-human-long Human-readable description of the state of the machine. This is the long version, and may be a paragraph or longer. targetted
state-human-short Human-readable description of the state of the machine. This is the short version, limited to at most a sentence. targetted