On Fri, 28 Sep 2001, Cort Dougan wrote: > Do you mean linux or rtlinux? You can disable the console print for > RTLinux by setting the module parameter 'quiet' to 1. > > For Linux itself, there's no easy way. You can control run-time messages > with syslog but boot-time messages are a different story.
I suppose if one were so inclined, it might not be that big a deal to mess around with the linux source to get boot messages to go away. One could try strange things like disabling the console vga driver and enabling it only right before starting the init process.. although that's only a guess solution and might be impossible for practical reasons... > > } Is there a good way to disable all the boot time messages? > } > } thanks, > } Dan Peters > } > } > } -- [rtl] --- > } To unsubscribe: > } echo "unsubscribe rtl" | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] OR > } echo "unsubscribe rtl <Your_email>" | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] > } -- > } For more information on Real-Time Linux see: > } http://www.rtlinux.org/ > -- [rtl] --- > To unsubscribe: > echo "unsubscribe rtl" | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] OR > echo "unsubscribe rtl <Your_email>" | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- > For more information on Real-Time Linux see: > http://www.rtlinux.org/ > -- [rtl] --- To unsubscribe: echo "unsubscribe rtl" | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] OR echo "unsubscribe rtl <Your_email>" | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- For more information on Real-Time Linux see: http://www.rtlinux.org/
