Hello, thanks for looking into this.

No I'm not sure this is the situation. I tried to piece together the info I
had available for this report but it's possible I missed something or
misunderstood some aspect of this.

Running that command, I don't have any results

# dpkg -S /etc/rsyslog.d/named.conf
dpkg-query: no path found matching pattern /etc/rsyslog.d/named.conf

It's unlikely that we created that file ourselves. If this isn't a known
file, I don't know what to say. Feel free to close this if you cannot
reproduce the issue or find the related files.

Thanks again,

Jeffrey


On Wed, Oct 24, 2018 at 6:00 PM Michael Biebl <[email protected]> wrote:

> Control: tags -1 moreinfo
>
> Am 24.10.18 um 23:00 schrieb Jeffrey:
> > We found a number of Debian 9 servers that stopped logging after OS
> updates in 2018-06. If my memory serves me (and it probably doesn't), it
> would appear that syslog was removed but rsyslog wasn't installed as a
> replacement. When we installed rsyslog there was an error in the file
> > /etc/rsyslogs/named.conf
> >
> > I don't understand what the error is. We didn't create the file
> manually, it was a part of a Debian package at some point.
>
> Are you sure?
> I don't find any package in the archive which ships that file
> "apt-file search /etc/rsyslog.d/named.conf" doesn't give me any hits.
>
> What I can say for sure is that this file was not shipped by the rsyslog
> package, so there is nothing the rsyslog package can do about this issue.
>
> Can you run
> dpkg -S /etc/rsyslog.d/named.conf
>
> If that turns up a debian package, we can re-assign the bug report.
>
> Michael
> --
> Why is it that all of the instruments seeking intelligent life in the
> universe are pointed away from Earth?
>
>

Reply via email to