Am Montag, 2. August 2004 13:42 schrieb Andreas Janssen:
Hallo
Patrick C.D. ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
2.) Gibt es die Möglichkeit eine Boot-Log zu bekommen (bei SuSE
war das glaube ich /var/log/boot.msg)? Gibt es vllt einen Deamon,
der das übernehmen kann, oder etwas in der Art
I have added the following line Xfree86.config
Option UseFBDev true
and at boot prompt added vga=normal and it seems to have worked
at least for now g
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On Thu, Mar 18, 2004 at 10:40:13PM -0600, Brad Sims wrote:
On Thursday 18 March 2004 9:50 pm, Paul Johnson wrote:
From what I've noticed, some video cards just plain don't like
switching between graphical and text modes and pretty much just crash
while switching modes.
Hrm, weird... I
Brad Sims [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
My virtual consoles (ie F1-whatever) after a short period
will go screwy and show what looks like boot logs or
multi-color flashing garbage... I tried /c and even the reset
command to no avail... They are fine after a hardware reboot
but this is
Hello
Brad Sims ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
My virtual consoles (ie F1-whatever) after a short period
will go screwy and show what looks like boot logs or
multi-color flashing garbage... I tried /c and even the reset
command to no avail... They are fine after a hardware reboot
but this is
Andreas Janssen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hello
Brad Sims ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
My virtual consoles (ie F1-whatever) after a short period
will go screwy and show what looks like boot logs or
multi-color flashing garbage... I tried /c and even the reset
command to no avail... They are
Hello
Jorge Santos ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Andreas Janssen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Brad Sims ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
My virtual consoles (ie F1-whatever) after a short period
will go screwy and show what looks like boot logs or
multi-color flashing garbage... I tried /c and even
On Friday 19 March 2004 10:11 am, Andreas Janssen wrote:
Do you use any framebuffer driver? I had the same problem switching from
XFree to a console using rivafb. Vesafb of plain text mode work
Hrm how do I tell what framebuffer I am using? I have the following line
commented out in
Hrm, I rebooted and added the phrase vga=normal and uncommented the
line in config about Option UseFBDev true... We'll see if that fixed it g
It's nice to know I wasn't the only one with that problem g
--
I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the
government from wasting
My virtual consoles (ie F1-whatever) after a short period
will go screwy and show what looks like boot logs or
multi-color flashing garbage... I tried /c and even the reset
command to no avail... They are fine after a hardware reboot
but this is annoying... SSH works just fine, as does XFree86.
I
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Brad Sims [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
My virtual consoles (ie F1-whatever) after a short period
will go screwy and show what looks like boot logs or
multi-color flashing garbage... I tried /c and even the reset
command to no avail... They are fine
On Thursday 18 March 2004 9:50 pm, Paul Johnson wrote:
From what I've noticed, some video cards just plain don't like
switching between graphical and text modes and pretty much just crash
while switching modes.
Hrm, weird... I never had any problems with SuSE 7.3 doing this... (same hw)
and
Florian Ernst wrote:
Hello Peter!
On Tue, Jan 06, 2004 at 07:49:44PM -0500, Peter McAlpine wrote:
On Tue, 2004-01-06 at 19:01, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
I no longer have a /var/log/boot although I remember having one, what
does its presence depend on?
Hugo.
[19:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ dpkg -S
Hello Hugo!
- bootlogd...
On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 07:59:14AM -0600, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
None of that exists in Woody 3.0r1. And you cannot use apt-file with
CD's. So a possibility is changing sources.list to Woody, getting rid
of the CD entries, doing an update and then using apt-file and then
Florian Ernst wrote:
Hello Hugo!
- bootlogd...
On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 07:59:14AM -0600, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
None of that exists in Woody 3.0r1. And you cannot use apt-file with
CD's. So a possibility is changing sources.list to Woody, getting rid
of the CD entries, doing an update and then
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Hugo Vanwoerkom [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
None of that exists in Woody 3.0r1. And you cannot use apt-file with
CD's. So a possibility is changing sources.list to Woody, getting rid of
the CD entries, doing an update and then using apt-file and then putting
Hello,
I recently deleted /var/log/boot, and then did a touch
/var/log/boot. However, I have rebooted multiple times and the log
remains empty. Does anyone have ideas where I could start looking for
solutions to this problem?
ls excerpt:
-rw-r--r--1 root root0 Jan 5 16:11
Peter McAlpine wrote:
Hello,
I recently deleted /var/log/boot, and then did a touch
/var/log/boot. However, I have rebooted multiple times and the log
remains empty. Does anyone have ideas where I could start looking for
solutions to this problem?
ls excerpt:
-rw-r--r--1 root root
On Tue, 2004-01-06 at 19:01, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
I no longer have a /var/log/boot although I remember having one, what
does its presence depend on?
Hugo.
[19:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ dpkg -S /var/log/boot
dpkg: /var/log/boot not found.
oh.
Maybe when I dist-upgraded to unstable it
Hello Peter!
On Tue, Jan 06, 2004 at 07:49:44PM -0500, Peter McAlpine wrote:
On Tue, 2004-01-06 at 19:01, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
I no longer have a /var/log/boot although I remember having one, what
does its presence depend on?
Hugo.
[19:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ dpkg -S /var/log/boot
dpkg:
On Fri, Nov 28, 2003 at 04:45:53AM +0100, Christian Schnobrich wrote:
On Thu, 2003-11-27 at 19:08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text
that printout during startup, but they quickly scroll
off the screen.
just type 'dmesg'. Once done, you maybe
Type dmesg at the command prompt. Then use Shift-Page Up to scroll
upward.
On Thu, 2003-11-27 at 10:08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text
that printout during startup, but they quickly scroll
off the screen.
Are they logged in a file or files in
On Thu, Nov 27, 2003 at 10:08:50AM -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text that printout
during startup, but they quickly scroll off the screen.
Are they logged in a file or files in /var/log or somewhere else?
Yes. Sometimes subsquent kernel
Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text
that printout during startup, but they quickly scroll
off the screen.
Are they logged in a file or files in /var/log or
somewhere else?
__
Do you Yahoo!?
Free Pop-Up Blocker - Get it now
On Thu, 2003-11-27 at 19:08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text
that printout during startup, but they quickly scroll
off the screen.
just type 'dmesg'. Once done, you maybe want to type 'dmesg | less' :)
HTH,
Schnobs
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Hi,
is there a log file where I can find all boot messages?
Or, if not, is there a possibility to make them written into a log file?
Florian.
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Florian Sukup said:
Hi,
is there a log file where I can find all boot messages?
Or, if not, is there a possibility to make them written into a log file?
kernel boot messages from the last boot are stored in /var/log/dmesg
messages from daemons starting as far as I know are not logged.
if
From: Florian Sukup, Wednesday, January 29, 2003 10:25 AM
is there a log file where I can find all boot messages?
Or, if not, is there a possibility to make them written into
a log file?
There is better than that.
prompt dmesg
This will show you the boot messages, but it will also
This one time, at band camp, Florian Sukup said:
Hi,
is there a log file where I can find all boot messages?
Or, if not, is there a possibility to make them written into a log file?
/var/log/dmesg
Can be viewed with `dmesg | $pager`
HTH,
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On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 04:15:16PM +0100, Florian Sukup wrote:
is there a log file where I can find all boot messages?
Or, if not, is there a possibility to make them written into a log file?
/var/log/dmesg contains boot messages.
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El Wednesday 29 January 2003 16:15, Florian Sukup escribió:
Hi,
is there a log file where I can find all boot messages?
Or, if not, is there a possibility to make them written into a log file?
Florian.
Try dmesg | more it may help
Cheers
==
Felipe Martínez
: boot log
Hi,
is there a log file where I can find all boot messages?
Or, if not, is there a possibility to make them written into
a log file?
Florian.
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[EMAIL PROTECTED
On Wed, Jan 29, 2003 at 04:15:16PM +0100, Florian Sukup wrote:
Hi,
is there a log file where I can find all boot messages?
Try dmesg | less, or just look in /var/log. But some stuff never gets
written there and is inevitably lost. Search the list for the past
month or so; this has been
Try dmesg | less, or just look in /var/log. But some stuff never gets
written there and is inevitably lost. Search the list for the past
month or so; this has been mentioned a few times.
If you want to just look at the messages you can use the scrollback
buffer: have the system boot in runlevel
Bruce Burhans [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
$dmesg will read out *most* of your last boot-time
messages.However, if you want to see them ALL,
before you login, or right after,do Shift+PageUp/PageDown and it will
scrollback a halfscreen at a time.This is without
X.
Hi,
Prior to the debian 2.0 installation I used to have a detail boot log
on /usr/adm/messages.
Where is it on the 2.0 version. the /var/log/messages is very abbreviated
the /var/log/syslog is also very abbreviated
-Oz
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EMAIL [EMAIL PROTECTED
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