On Mon, Apr 23, 2001 at 03:00:07PM -0700, Chris Majewski wrote:
Well, if you don't find a nicer solution, you could write a bit of C
code to read the /var/log/X*.log file and copy it to one of the syslog
facilities. See also the syslog manpage.
That's not the problem. There are no X* files
Hi *,
how to enable XFree86 4.0.2/syslogd to log msgs from XFree86?
TIA
MfG/Regards, Willi
--
...is a registered (#210445) user of:Debian 2.2r3 GNU/Linux
icq# 49564994###AIM: wdyck###GnuPG-Key: 1024D/8BFCA69B
Fingerprint: DAD2 E564 B725 E6A3 5A0F 1497 4411 F30F 8BFC A69B
Well, if you don't find a nicer solution, you could write a bit of C
code to read the /var/log/X*.log file and copy it to one of the syslog
facilities. See also the syslog manpage.
-chris
Willi Dyck [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hi *,
how to enable XFree86 4.0.2/syslogd to log msgs from
line looks like:
Apr 11 07:14:01 garrison rnews: rejected connection What server?
'garrison' is the hostname of the machine. It's connected 24/7 to the
net so it looks like someone is trying to make a news connection, but
whoever is logging this activity (ippl?) isn't telling me where it's
coming
Hi all,
This is just something that's getting slightly annoying - iptables is refusing
to log to /var/log/*. Runnning dmesg I can see all the iptables reports, so its
logging to the kernel, just syslog is ignoring it (?).
My /var/log/messages entry in /etc/syslog.conf is as follows:
*.=info
- iptables is refusing
to log to /var/log/*. Runnning dmesg I can see all the iptables reports, so
its
logging to the kernel, just syslog is ignoring it (?).
My /var/log/messages entry in /etc/syslog.conf is as follows:
*.=info;*.=notice;*.=warn;\
auth,authpriv.none;\
cron
I have a question about makeconfig on the kernel. I am a habitual logger,
but I don't know how to log the build of a new kernel. What I really want is
to get not only the stdout and stderr (which I get by redirection (21),
but also the stdin, so I can get a recording of all the choices I make
DR == Darryl RЖthering [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
DR I have a question about makeconfig on the kernel. I am a habitual
DR logger, but I don't know how to log the build of a new kernel. What I
DR really want is to get not only the stdout and stderr (which I get by
DR redirection
Darryl Röthering [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I have a question about makeconfig on the kernel. I am a habitual
logger, but I don't know how to log the build of a new kernel. What I
really want is to get not only the stdout and stderr (which I get by
redirection (21), but also the stdin
You
Having replaced exim with qmail yesterday, I'd like to deal with the
loggin issues, since qmail's logging is quite verbose. I notice that
it logs seemingly identical information to all of the:
/var/log/syslog
/var/log/mail.info
/var/log/mail.log
and it logs identical error messages to both
On Tue, Mar 13, 2001 at 08:35:44AM -0500, Arcady Genkin wrote:
Having replaced exim with qmail yesterday, I'd like to deal with the
loggin issues, since qmail's logging is quite verbose. I notice that
it logs seemingly identical information to all of the:
/var/log/syslog
/var/log/mail.info
Hello.
Does anyone know if FTP-transfers/connections are logged?
I tried to find any logging info in the syslog/daemon.log but it seems
like it doesn't log anything.
Also the documentation in /usr/doc/ftpd did not gave any hints either.
Regards...
Andreas
PS: please CC any answers
Does anyone know if FTP-transfers/connections are logged?
I'll try to answer this.
I tried to find any logging info in the syslog/daemon.log but it seems
like it doesn't log anything.
sure it does (kinda) the only it logs in the file /var/log/syslog:
Dec 12 22:45:00 debian in.ftpd[4509
If anyone is on an Apache list that this seems appropriate to please
forward it there or reply to me with the list name, I do not know of
one.
In my Apache log files with Referrer and User-Agent turned on a
significant proportion (around 25%) of the referer logs appear as -.
Can anyone tell me
On Tue, Nov 07, 2000 at 11:38:43PM +, Jeff Green wrote:
If anyone is on an Apache list that this seems appropriate to please
forward it there or reply to me with the list name, I do not know of
one.
In my Apache log files with Referrer and User-Agent turned on a
significant proportion
Greetings,
sitting in my box, checking my logs...
and trying to log from Host A to Host B with tcp i always get some strange
error Messages when starting my syslog-ng with option -d:
Error Creating AF_INET socket (Operation now in progress)
The log are setup up as in the demo configuratuion
.
# Options for start/restart the daemons~
# For remote UDP logging use SYSLOGD=-r~
#~
SYSLOGD=-r~
BTW, this is from a potato box.
--
Mike Fedyk They that can give up essential liberty
Information Systems to obtain a little temporary safety
Match Mail Productions Inc
On Wed, 06 Sep 2000 18:11:13 PST [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hmm, that's odd I tried to set up wvdial just now and it's saying
that
/dev/mouse is linked to ttyS0, and sure enough it does seem to
could this be causing some of my problems? Is that something
that's safe to manually
On Wed, 06 Sep 2000 18:11:13 PST [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hmm, that's odd I tried to set up wvdial just now and it's saying
that
/dev/mouse is linked to ttyS0, and sure enough it does seem to could
this be causing some of my problems? Is that something that's safe to
manually unlink
On Tue, Sep 05, 2000 at 09:22:12AM -0400 or thereabouts, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Is there a way to log the interaction between minicom and modem
similar to what chat sends to ppp.log and syslog?
Ever since I upgraded to potato last weekend chat hasn't gotten along
with my modem
Date sent: Tue, 5 Sep 2000 16:06:24 +0200
From: Harald Thingelstad [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:Re: logging interaction between minicom and modem
Send reply to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 05 Sep
Is there a way to log the interaction between minicom and modem
similar to what chat sends to ppp.log and syslog?
Ever since I upgraded to potato last weekend chat hasn't gotten along
with my modem (external 57600 USR sportster)
when I look in ppp.log or syslog I see things about chat
On Tue, 05 Sep 2000 15:22:12 you wrote:
Is there a way to log the interaction between minicom and modem
similar to what chat sends to ppp.log and syslog?
Ever since I upgraded to potato last weekend chat hasn't gotten along
with my modem (external 57600 USR sportster)
when I look in
Harald writes:
Something seems to go wrong when using slink setup with potato pppconfig.
And that's my two cents.
This is the first I've heard of this. Pleas file a bug against pppconfig
detailing as muxh as you can reconstruct of what you did and what happened.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL
Montag, 28. August 2000 / 09:20 Uhr
Hey everyone,
instead of the typical gray color of my foreground I want to use a
Matrix-green foreground... I know that I can do this with the setterm
-foreground green-command, but may I enable this at boot time for all
+ Oliver Schoenknecht [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Besides I want to put my /var/log/messages- and /var/log/maillog-files
in style of the tail -f-command on tty11 and tty12 - also enabled at
boot time - is this possible as well ?
If you use potato you should have a look at /etc/syslog.conf. There is a
ok, i got syslogd working it is recieving log entries from my router, now
im curious how i would redirect those to a dedicated file? i tried various
things in /etc/syslog.conf and the log file is empty still. I'd like to
redirect everything from 10.10.10.1 to /var/log/dsl.log
sample log entries:
On Wed, 02 Aug 2000 22:45:59 PDT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
ok, i got syslogd working it is recieving log entries from my router, now
im curious how i would redirect those to a dedicated file? i tried various
things in /etc/syslog.conf and the log file is empty still. I'd like to
redirect
Connection Timeout^M
Aug 2 15:28:05 10.10.10.1 000:23:33:10 PPPInfo PPP Down
Event on wan0-0^M
any ideas ??
Use /etc/syslog.conf to control where logging goes.
This allows you to specify things by facility and priority.
Your router should allow you specify the syslog facility
On Wed, Aug 02, 2000 at 10:45:59PM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
things in /etc/syslog.conf and the log file is empty still. I'd like to
redirect everything from 10.10.10.1 to /var/log/dsl.log
The standard syslog doesn't support that, although I don't know about
others. If you need the
ok, i did see some stuff on it when using syslog-ng, i'll play around more
with that tomorrow night -- thanks!!
nate
On Thu, 3 Aug 2000, Mark Brown wrote:
brooni On Wed, Aug 02, 2000 at 10:45:59PM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
brooni
brooni things in /etc/syslog.conf and the log file is
Hello, Has anyone had to log printer usage? I am trying to locate a package
that would be capable of such. All it needs to do is simply pass PS traffic
from one nic to another, after asking the user to enter a job number or
such. I have considered using a proxy package for this, but it seems to
On Thu, May 25, 2000 at 08:34:30PM +0200, Tamas Nagy wrote:
Could you recommend any good online documentation about the logging under
Linux?
What sort of logging in particular? While there are some standards for
logging under Linux (such as the use of /var/log for system logs), and
some
Is IP firewall packet logging available in kernel 2.2.12?
Yes, just add a -l to the end of your ipchains rule and it willbe logged
in syslog..
Ron Rademaker
On Fri, 26 May 2000, Jay Kelly wrote:
Is IP firewall packet logging available in kernel 2.2.12?
--
Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] /dev/null
Could you recommend any good online documentation about the logging under
Linux?
TIA,
Tamas
Is there a way to view/log boot messages besides those generated by the
kernel i.e. besides dmesg? I believe my modules are not loading
correctly at boot. Thanks
Kelly Corbin
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Is there a way to view/log boot messages besides those generated by the
kernel i.e. besides dmesg? I believe my modules are not loading
correctly at boot. Thanks
look at /var/log/kern.log - at least on potato module output it there.
--
Hi! I'm a .signature virus! Copy me into your
Quoting Kelly Corbin ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
Is there a way to view/log boot messages besides those generated by the
kernel i.e. besides dmesg? I believe my modules are not loading
correctly at boot. Thanks
Shift-PageUp (and PageDown)
Cheers,
--
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel: +44 1908 653
Quoting Kelly Corbin ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
Is there a way to view/log boot messages besides those generated by the
kernel i.e. besides dmesg? I believe my modules are not loading
correctly at boot. Thanks
Shift-PageUp (and PageDown)
but note, that this works only, if the virtual
Kelly Corbin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a way to view/log boot messages besides those generated by the
kernel i.e. besides dmesg? I believe my modules are not loading
correctly at boot. Thanks
Use Ctrl-S to pause the output and scroll up and down with Shift-PageUp
and Shift-PageDown.
Phillip Deackes wrote:
OPEN: 62.136.66.48 - 192.168.1.10 UDP, port: 513 - 513
On consulting /etc/sevices I can see that port 513 is used for whod.
I donßt know what whod is, but I´ve stopped this using the following commands
in my
/etc/isdn/device.ippp0
#At the end of the Start section
I have recently changed to an Internet Provider where I do not have to
pay telephone charges on a timed basis, so I decided to initiate dial on
demand on my system since I have an ISDN line.
Everything works very nicely except that my system logs onto the
Internet every 5 minutes or so. I suspect
Further to my previous post, I have discovered the cause of the
connections, but do not know how to stop them. I set isdnctrl to give me
a more verbose log and on doing dmesg | xless I could see the following
immediately before every auto connection:
OPEN: 62.136.66.48 - 192.168.1.10 UDP, port:
Phillip Deackes wrote:
I have recently changed to an Internet Provider where I do not have to
pay telephone charges on a timed basis, so I decided to initiate dial on
demand on my system since I have an ISDN line.
Everything works very nicely except that my system logs onto the
Internet
Phillip Deackes said:
Everything works very nicely except that my system logs onto the
Internet every 5 minutes or so. I suspect Exim, but am not sure what to
change to stop it. I collect mail manually using Fetchmail and have it
passed on to Exim for distribution using .forward.
Perhaps I've
Is there a way to tell boa not to log local connections? I
use boa dwww quite heavily to browse local documentation and
access_log gets filled with this stuff. I'd still like to log
external connections but it seems that it's both or nothing.
Hi all,
I've been setting up a ppp-over-null-modem connection for a friend's Palm, and
its working great, except for one point.
I've created a user called 'palm', with shell /etc/ppp/ppplogin which looks like
this:
#!/bin/sh
mesg n
stty -echo
/usr/bin/sudo /usr/sbin/pppd nodetach passive local
When I disconnect from the Palm, getty ends as expected and pppd shuts down,
but for some reason the 'palm' user doesn't release ttyS0. The permissions are
still set to
you disconnect? i assume, that this means only disconnect, but
not log out. if so, then you have no problem: this is
you disconnect? i assume, that this means only disconnect, but
not log out. if so, then you have no problem: this is intended behaviour
(at least to some point). so it is theoretically possible to reconnect
and continue the session after some time. however, this will possibly
conflict with
Take a look at http://pusa.uv.es/~ulisses/debian
Comments/suggestions wanted
Thanks
Ulisses
Debian/GNU Linux: a dream come true
-
Computers are useless. They can only give answers.
On Mon, Apr 03, 2000 at 04:50:09PM +, Jim Breton wrote:
Running current potato and I have the following in /etc/pam.d/passwd:
password required pam_cracklib.so retry=3 minlen=6 difok=4
password required pam_unix.so use_authtok md5
This works well for logging password
Package: libpam-modules
Severity: important
On Mon, Apr 03, 2000 at 08:35:13PM +, Jim Breton wrote:
On Mon, Apr 03, 2000 at 01:31:34PM -0400, Ben Collins wrote:
Install libpam-doc, which is more up-to-date and probably more complete
than the above address. Adding session to the passwd
Is there a way to get a more complete log of the text that scrolls by during
the boot sequence? I'd like to catch some warnings/diagnostics that show up
during that time, but dmesg and /var/log/messages have a very limited
selection of that text...
I'm thinking of something along the lines
is for.
On the other hand, a very quick ckeck of Deja or the mailing list
archives would have answered this question.
I was just wondering if I am logging out of X Windows correctly. When I am
at the log-in screen, I am pressing Ctrl+Alt+Backspace, and then
Ctrl+Alt+Delete. This cleanly unmounts everything
How can I verify whether the hc (hardware clock) is being synchronize to the
system clock every 11 min or so?
Is the sync operation being logged somewhere? Is there any kernel flag that
is being set in order to have this operation done automatically? What util
can read such a flag and optionally
as far as i know hwclock is not updated unless the system restarts, or you
update it manually, and ntpdate does not update the hwclock, i have ntp
update my clock every few hours and it has never updated the hwclock in
over a year. not that it matters i could care less what my hwclock is set
to,
Hi aphro!
On Fri, 14 Jan 2000, aphro wrote:
as far as i know hwclock is not updated unless the system restarts, or you
update it manually, and ntpdate does not update the hwclock, i have ntp
The kernel does sync the RTC to the system clock every 11 minutes if you
tell it to (ntpd does), at
that works..
i suggest you do not use X if you need to exit out of it often though. you
don't have to exit X to reboot(if thats what you want to do)
if you are not logging into X windows as root, launch an x term (so you
get a command prompt)
then type: su
enter the root password when prompted
Hey,
I am sorry for asking so many questions, but I am only fifteen, so I don't
have any sort of large income to spend on books.
I was just wondering if I am logging out of X Windows correctly. When I am
at the log-in screen, I am pressing Ctrl+Alt+Backspace, and then
Ctrl+Alt+Delete
or the mailing list
archives would have answered this question.
I was just wondering if I am logging out of X Windows correctly. When I am
at the log-in screen, I am pressing Ctrl+Alt+Backspace, and then
Ctrl+Alt+Delete. This cleanly unmounts everything, but I was wondering if
their was an easier way
On Thu, 6 Jan 2000, Cameron Matheson wrote:
Hey,
I am sorry for asking so many questions, but I am only fifteen, so I don't
have any sort of large income to spend on books.
I was just wondering if I am logging out of X Windows correctly. When I am
at the log-in screen, I am pressing
Ron Rademaker [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Thu, 6 Jan 2000, Cameron Matheson wrote:
Hey,
I am sorry for asking so many questions, but I am only fifteen, so I don't
have any sort of large income to spend on books.
I was just wondering if I am logging out of X Windows correctly
Package: login
Severity: important
On Mon, Jan 03, 2000 at 04:06:27PM -0500, Salman Ahmed wrote:
I commented out most lines from /etc/securetty so that root is only
allowed to login from tty3. Now I see the following messages when root
tries to login from any other terminals:
Jan 3
**Please CC all replies to me - I'm not currently subscribed**
I would like to log via syslogd whenever a user logs in. How would I
go about doing this?
Furthermore, I might also want to JUST log when root logs in, or when
someone's sus into root - how would I do this?
Thanks in advance,
Neil
**Please CC all replies to me - I'm not currently subscribed**
I would like to log via syslogd whenever a user logs in. How would I
go about doing this?
Furthermore, I might also want to JUST log when root logs in, or when
someone's sus into root - how would I do this?
I did not try
On Sat, 25 Dec 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
**Please CC all replies to me - I'm not currently subscribed**
Furthermore, I might also want to JUST log when root logs in, or when
someone's sus into root - how would I do this?
I believe this is a default in Debian. At least, my system logs
syslog-ng in potato (which replaced syslog) uses
/etc/syslog-ng/syslog-ng.conf instead of /etc/syslog.conf. There is a
sample conf file in usr/share/doc/syslog-ng, but when I tried the ppp
/examples in this, they do not seem to work. Putting a local2 line
in /etc/syslog.conf (which is now
One may easily log an apt-get session,
by starting a script beforehand, then using the --quiet option to apt-get
to suppress the periodic progress reports on downloads.
But when I try to operate dselect within a typescript situation,
all the cursor control characters (ncurses or whatever),
while
That appears to be EXACTLY what I'm looking for... Thanx much!
On Tue, Sep 14, 1999 at 10:41:10AM +0200, Quant-X UNIX and Linux Support wrote:
Not sure if I understood your question. Anyway, if you want to redirect
a particular file in a shell you don't have to know where it's been
directed
This isn't really a Debian issue as such, but I thought that someone
here might be able to point me in the right direction... Hope I'm not
too far off base here :-)
I've got a shell script that I want to have log it's actions on a
selective basis (dependent upon run-time settings). I know it
On Mon, Sep 13, 1999 at 08:18:30PM -0500, Gregory T. Norris wrote:
This isn't really a Debian issue as such, but I thought that someone
here might be able to point me in the right direction... Hope I'm not
too far off base here :-)
I've got a shell script that I want to have log it's actions
Quoting Julian S. Taylor ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
I log in to Sun using a prompt-response method. The server sends down a
random number, I make an entry into a calculator and it gives me the
password for that session. For this reason, I can't hook up using expect
or chat. Using slackware and
On Sat, Aug 14, 1999 at 02:17:06PM +, Julian S. Taylor wrote:
| ~+/usr/sbin/pppd defaultroute ...
|
| When I use cu on Debian I get the messagepppd permission denied. I can
| use wvdial to my ISP but I can't get into Sun now that I've switched to
| Debian. What am I doing wrong?
On Sat, Aug 14, 1999 at 04:55:12PM -0700, Eric G . Miller wrote:
On Sat, Aug 14, 1999 at 02:17:06PM +, Julian S. Taylor wrote:
| ~+/usr/sbin/pppd defaultroute ...
|
| When I use cu on Debian I get the messagepppd permission denied. I can
| use wvdial to my ISP but I can't get into
| When I use cu on Debian I get the messagepppd permission denied. I can
| use wvdial to my ISP but I can't get into Sun now that I've switched to
| Debian. What am I doing wrong?
It may be you need to add the group dialout. By default
regular users don't have permission to
Salutations,
I log in to Sun using a prompt-response method. The server sends down a
random number, I make an entry into a calculator and it gives me the
password for that session. For this reason, I can't hook up using expect
or chat. Using slackware and Caldera, I just log in using cu. Debian's
bruce == bruce [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
bruce I'd suggest it prompt for the login and password and then
bruce dump you with a message as soon as you succeed in logging in.
I've asked the proftpd authors to do tihs.
netgod
* Asterix commits heinous errors of grammar just
It turns out that ProFTPd would not log me in because my login shell was
not listed in /etc/shells . It didn't do anything to _tell_ me that. I'd
suggest it prompt for the login and password and then dump you with a message
as soon as you succeed in logging in.
Thanks
Bruce
succeed in logging in.
That's a feature of every ftpd I've ever used in Unix - if the user's
shell isn't listed in /etc/shells, they don't ftp.
--
Nathan Norman
MidcoNet 410 South Phillips Avenue Sioux Falls, SD
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.midco.net
finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for PGP
would not. I researched this, and discoverd that the issue is some
compile-time
definitions that the newer su.c files need in order to activate syslog
activity.
The makefile doens't enable them, so su doesn't do syslog logging.
There are some bugs filed against this, but I am not sure what
would not. I researched this, and discoverd that the issue is some
compile-time
definitions that the newer su.c files need in order to activate syslog
activity.
The makefile doens't enable them, so su doesn't do syslog logging.
There are some bugs filed against this, but I am not sure what
hello list,
does the default syslog.conf log all usage of the su command ? if so
may i knoe where ?
ive been reading the syslod.conf man page but im not sure whether i
understood everything. and if it doesnt, may i knoe how do i tell syslog to
log all usage of the su commang ?
TIA,
chad
I noticed this problem a while back.
There is (was at the time) a bug against su because, somehow, the
compile-time flag needed to enable this logging had been removed.
I noticed this change when I upgraded from hamm to slink.
My solution was to recompile su. It is in the shellutils package
does the default syslog.conf log all usage of the su command ? if so
may i knoe where ?
There is logging of su in /var/log/auth.log
Andrew
---
Andrei S. Ivanov
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
UIN 12402354
ive downloaded the source and unpacked them already, almost ready to
recompile. may i know how/where do I add this removed compile time flag
thats needed to enable this logging ?
chad
There is (was at the time) a bug against su because, somehow, the
compile-time flag needed to enable
From message [EMAIL PROTECTED] :
ive downloaded the source and unpacked them already, almost ready to
recompile. may i know how/where do I add this removed compile time flag
thats needed to enable this logging ?
chad
from su.c:
/* su for GNU. Run a shell with substitute user and group IDs
put a kill or a terminate command in /etc/ppp/ip-down?
On Sun, 9 May 1999, Phillip Deackes wrote:
I use icqnix ans can easily get it to start up when logging on to my IP.
I do not know how to get it to close when I log off however. Can anyone
help, please?
--
Phillip Deackes
[EMAIL
John Galt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
put a kill or a terminate command in /etc/ppp/ip-down?
Thanks, John. This is what I tried to do, but kill needs a pid. If I try
'kill icqnix' nothing happens apart from the system telling me that
there is no such pid. How to I make it so that icqnix will
Try killall instead of kill.
On Mon, 10 May 1999, Phillip Deackes wrote:
John Galt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
put a kill or a terminate command in /etc/ppp/ip-down?
Thanks, John. This is what I tried to do, but kill needs a pid. If I try
'kill icqnix' nothing happens apart from the system
I use icqnix ans can easily get it to start up when logging on to my IP.
I do not know how to get it to close when I log off however. Can anyone
help, please?
--
Phillip Deackes
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Debian Linux v.2.1
Hi there. I'm using the cgiwrap package from stable, and am having some
problems. I hope that someone whose used this package can give me a hand with
it.
Basically I installed the package, and then, as user alan created the directory
/home/alan/public_html/cgi-bin In there I stuck a simple
Does anyone know how to log which user logs into an .htaccess protected
directory?
when
logging in with netscape or an ftp client.
Sarel Botha
I'm trying to install Gnome using the instructions at
http://www.gnome.org/start/getting_debian.shtml
They say to add a line to /etc/apt/sources.list (which I've done); it now
looks like:
deb ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian stable main contrib non-free
deb ftp://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/debian
Hi tony,
you wrote on: 24 Jan 99 at 22:05 (received 25.01.99)
about : _boot messages/logging_
I'm at a loss to find the way to get all the
boot messages logged to a file. Is there a
recommended procedure or configuration file
change that I can make?
After boot, just type
dmesg |
I'm at a loss to find the way to get all the
boot messages logged to a file. Is there a
recommended procedure or configuration file
change that I can make?
thanks,
--
tony mollica
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi Tony,
I'm at a loss to find the way to get all the
boot messages logged to a file. Is there a
recommended procedure or configuration file
change that I can make?
dmesg displays boot messages. It is usually run at system startup and
it's output redirected to /var/log/boot.msg or a similar
On Wed, 2 Dec 1998 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As a new Debian user, I'd kind of like to see what Linux is doing when it
boots up. Is there a way to log the boot up sequence (before the syslog takes
over) so I can peruse it? Unforunately, the Pause key doesn't seem to work...
I'm booting from a
As a new Debian user, I'd kind of like to see what Linux is doing when it
boots up. Is there a way to log the boot up sequence (before the syslog takes
over) so I can peruse it? Unforunately, the Pause key doesn't seem to work...
I'm booting from a floppy if that matters..
Thanks,
Jay
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