Hi:
when I type "dmesg" I saw it is fulled by systemd-journald
rotating message like below. is there parameter to prevent the
rotating warning?
[708993.589762] systemd-journald[515]: Data hash table of
/run/log/journal/93f434f608654cf990b2e70c656dfacd/system.journal has a
fill level at 75.1
Am Mi., 5. Okt. 2022 um 13:28 Uhr schrieb František Šumšal
:
>
> On 10/5/22 11:56, Marc wrote:
> > I have seen that, but is that not something like 'accepting log entries and
> > sending data to /dev/null'? I am looking for an option that does not
> > process anything.
>
> Not really, as the man
I've just setup a new system running Debian Bookworm, so it has the
Debian systemd 251.4-3 packages installed. There's a bonded network
interface setup with systemd-networkd.
During boot, networkd attempts to send a router solicitation but fails
with "No buffer space available". I don't know why
On 10/5/22 11:56, Marc wrote:
I have seen that, but is that not something like 'accepting log entries and
sending data to /dev/null'? I am looking for an option that does not process
anything.
Not really, as the man page (that Michael already linked) states [0] using
Storage=volatile will
I have seen that, but is that not something like 'accepting log entries and
sending data to /dev/null'? I am looking for an option that does not process
anything.
> https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/journald.conf.html#Stor
> age=
>
> → volatile
>
> >
> >
> > Hello,
> >
> > I
https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/journald.conf.html#Storage=
→ volatile
Am Mi., 5. Okt. 2022 um 11:40 Uhr schrieb Marc :
>
>
> Hello,
>
> I have started to upgrade a few machines from CentOS7 to recent versions of
> CentOS/Rocky. However I don't really get why there is a
Hello,
I have started to upgrade a few machines from CentOS7 to recent versions of
CentOS/Rocky. However I don't really get why there is a systemd-journald
process writing stuff to disk while I have explicitly configured that logs
should go to a remote syslog server.
Reading such pages [1]