On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 12:25 PM, Jonathan Neuschäfer <[email protected] > wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 04:38:03PM -0700, Vaibhav Jain wrote: > > On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 3:24 PM, Ramesh.P <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Hi Vaibhav, > > > > > > Try /etc/rsyslog.conf. However you should be using > > > /proc/sys/kernel/printk to really configure printk. > > > > [snip] > > > > Hi Ramesh, > > > > As I mentioned /etc/syslog.conf is not there on my system. Could you > please > > tell me if the name has changed for the file in 2.6 kernel ? Also, does > > /proc/sys/kernel/printk provides for the same level of control ? > > Syslog is a user space program, that collects the kernel messages. > So if you don't have /etc/syslog.conf on your system, it likely just > means that you don't have a standard installation of the syslog program, > which can have different reasons. AFAIK, syslog has been replaced by > rsyslog or syslog-ng on modern desktop linux distros. > > BTW, Ramesh told you to try /etc/rsyslog.conf (note the 'r'), not > /etc/syslog.conf. > > HTH, > Jonathan Neuschäfer > Hi, Thanks for reply! I found the rsyslog.conf on my system. But I am finding it hard to configure it. Actually I made some changes but they are not working. I made some changes to the kernel and wanted that they appear at either the console or some other file. However the changes don't work. I tried adding the following lines (one at a time) kern.* /dev/console kern.* <file in my home directory> but on making these changes other kernel messages also stop showing up. Can you please give me some idea as to why this might happen ? -Thanks Vaibhav Jain
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