Thanks! That looks promising. I was actually fiddling a little with
timesyncd and trying to have it always update its
/var/lib/systemd/timesyncd/clock file. But couldn't get it working. I guess
I had the same problem that the thread mentions regarding startup-order.
//Magnus
On Mon, Sep 21, 2020
Hi,
I am trying to understand behavior that I am seeing with udev and eMMC
partition devices and was hoping that someone here could help.
The system that I am running has an eMMC device with something like 7-8
partitions. The kernel does add block events for the device and each of
it parti
I want to chmod all files and dirs/subdirs in a tree using tmpfiles.
Starting with an example tree
tree -pF /home/test/TEST
/home/test/TEST
└── [dr] topdir/
├── [-r] A.txt
└── [dr]
On So, 20.09.20 16:09, Vitaly Repin (vitaly_re...@fsfe.org) wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Thanks for the answer!
>
> However, it looks like that imjournal module is not an option for me.
>
> rsyslog imjournal module documentation
> (https://www.rsyslog.com/doc/v8-stable/configuration/modules/imjournal.html)
On So, 20.09.20 12:07, Vitaly Repin (vitaly_re...@fsfe.org) wrote:
> Any ideas are appreciated.
Note that you compare apples with oranges. journald spends much time
on collecting log metadata (i.e. process identity, user identity,
cgroup stuff, …), which the others simply don't.
That said, for s
Hm, some performance penalty is certainly expected but 350times slower
looks like something is odd.
Would be interesting to know, if you can reproduce the performance
issue with a more recent version.
Afaik, using imuxsock and syslog forwarding should be more performant
then imjournal (which was su
On Mon, 21 Sep 2020 10:16:38 +0200
Magnus Berglund wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have an embedded system that does not have a real-time clock. I was
> hoping to run journald on it, but have run into some problems.
>
> My problem is that my system currently does not guarantee a
> monotonically increasing
Hello,
I have an embedded system that does not have a real-time clock. I was
hoping to run journald on it, but have run into some problems.
My problem is that my system currently does not guarantee a monotonically
increasing time, and that seems to confuse journald a bit.
Btw: I've tested this o