SOLVED
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 10:28 PM, James A. Peltier jpelt...@sfu.ca wrote:
- Original Message -
| On Wed, Aug 06, 2014 at 04:50:41PM +, Tony Mountifield wrote:
|
| Probably rsyslog is being started before /var/log is mounted, and
| so it
| is opening files within
On 08/07/2014 05:48 AM, Arun Khan wrote:
SOLVED
On Wed, Aug 6, 2014 at 10:28 PM, James A. Peltier jpelt...@sfu.ca wrote:
- Original Message -
| On Wed, Aug 06, 2014 at 04:50:41PM +, Tony Mountifield wrote:
|
| Probably rsyslog is being started before /var/log is mounted, and
The system is an AWS Instance based on a community CentOS 6.4 AMI snapshot.
The vdisk is as follows as shown below [1]
The root LVM contains /var/log/
I have attached another block device with ext4 FS.
I copied the files from /var/log to this device (mounted on /mnt) and
then changed
/etc/fstab
In article cahhm8gd+hfduyy7uah3kx2h37ca5fdbbwtjwyckv9tp3_4n...@mail.gmail.com,
Arun Khan knu...@gmail.com wrote:
The system is an AWS Instance based on a community CentOS 6.4 AMI snapshot.
The vdisk is as follows as shown below [1]
The root LVM contains /var/log/
I have attached another
On Wed, Aug 06, 2014 at 04:50:41PM +, Tony Mountifield wrote:
Probably rsyslog is being started before /var/log is mounted, and so it
is opening files within /var/log on the root device.
rsyslog should start after local mounts are finished.
I suspect it's selinux; /var/log should have a
- Original Message -
| On Wed, Aug 06, 2014 at 04:50:41PM +, Tony Mountifield wrote:
|
| Probably rsyslog is being started before /var/log is mounted, and
| so it
| is opening files within /var/log on the root device.
|
| rsyslog should start after local mounts are finished.
|
|
In article 20140806165735.gd10...@frodo.gerdesas.com,
John R. Dennison j...@gerdesas.com wrote:
On Wed, Aug 06, 2014 at 04:50:41PM +, Tony Mountifield wrote:
Probably rsyslog is being started before /var/log is mounted, and so it
is opening files within /var/log on the root device.
On 2014-08-06, John R. Dennison j...@gerdesas.com wrote:
On Wed, Aug 06, 2014 at 04:50:41PM +, Tony Mountifield wrote:
Probably rsyslog is being started before /var/log is mounted, and so it
is opening files within /var/log on the root device.
rsyslog should start after local mounts are
On Wed, Aug 06, 2014 at 10:20:38AM -0700, Keith Keller wrote:
It certainly can't hurt to check both cases: make sure rsyslog is
starting after the proper filesystem with /var/log is mounted, and check
the selinux contexts to make sure they're correct.
rsyslog is started with a start priority
9 matches
Mail list logo