Am 22.10.20 um 16:55 schrieb Dave Howorth:
On Thu, 22 Oct 2020 15:27:58 +0200
Reindl Harald <h.rei...@thelounge.net> wrote:
Am 22.10.20 um 12:59 schrieb Lennart Poettering:
On Do, 22.10.20 11:11, David C. Partridge
(david.partri...@perdrix.co.uk) wrote:
        1) Is there any way in journald.conf to perform a
message
suppression
similar to the one I used for syslog? If not should there be
one?
No.

Does that mean no there isn't and also that there should not be,
or are you open to considering allowing a suppression mechanism
similar to that available in rsyslogd?

Not a fan of such hacks. Fix the programs or filter during display,
don't suppress at time of collection.

it's not a matter of fan or not

it just makes sense to filter out things one *never* want to see at
all instead store it

I think Lennart's point is that whatever happened to cause something in
the system to make a log entry happened, and that should be recorded.
Even though you may never want to see such evidence somebody, somewhere
might want it as part of an investigation, so it's better that it's
captured and preserved. The space will eventually be reclaimed so
there's no harm done.

And as he suggests, if you never want to see it, then filter it out on
display.

different mindshapes which shouldn't even need a long discussion, there are people with different preferences and it's not too hard to implement a filter

nobody needs to use it
it's not in use as default

i personally hate it that i have to apply filters at display time again and again for stuff i don't care about

a lot fo software logs informational stuff nobody cares most of the time and all that noise burries rellay relevant stuff - in the best case i don't see anything at all in logs which don't need attention

again: if there is a config everyone is happy

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