> 
> Even better. I rebooted.

By doing ps ax | grep syslogd you can see if the -m0 option is attached, if
not you are still startuing syslogd without options.
 On Redhat 6.0 the default is -m0
Check /etc/rc.d/rc3.d/S30syslog

Slackware starts syslogd in /etc/rc.d/rc.M

> 
> > ----------
> > From:       Marc Mutz[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent:       29 July 1999 19:23
> > To:         [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Cc:         no To-header on input; '@MailingList: Linux-Newbie'
> > Subject:    Re: -- MARK --
> > 
> > Have you sent syslogd the SIGHUP signal so that it re-reads it's
> > conf-files?
> > 
> > Marc
> > 
> > -- 
> > Marc Mutz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>                    http://marc.mutz.com/
> > University of Bielefeld, Dep. of Mathematics / Dep. of Physics
> > 
> > PGP-keyID's:   0xd46ce9ab (RSA), 0x7ae55b9e (DSS/DH)
> > 
> 


-- 
Regards Richard.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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