Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-29 Thread Jim Woodward
Mike McCarty wrote: Jim Woodward wrote: michael wrote: michael wrote: On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 12:20 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Thanks Obviously, there are some

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-29 Thread michael
On Thu, 2005-09-29 at 11:15 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: Mike McCarty wrote: Jim Woodward wrote: michael wrote: michael wrote: On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 12:20 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-28 Thread Jim Woodward
michael wrote: On Tue, 2005-09-27 at 07:57 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: michael wrote: michael wrote: On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 12:20 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Thanks

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-27 Thread Jim Woodward
michael wrote: michael wrote: On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 12:20 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Thanks enable /etc/default/bootlogd: $ cat /etc/default/bootlogd # Run

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-27 Thread michael
On Tue, 2005-09-27 at 07:57 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: michael wrote: michael wrote: On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 12:20 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Thanks enable

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-27 Thread Mike McCarty
Jim Woodward wrote: michael wrote: michael wrote: On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 12:20 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Thanks Obviously, there are some messages which may be

newbie boot question

2005-09-26 Thread Jim Woodward
How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Thanks -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-26 Thread michael
On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 12:20 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Thanks enable /etc/default/bootlogd: $ cat /etc/default/bootlogd # Run bootlogd at startup ? BOOTLOGD_ENABLE=Yes

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-26 Thread Angelo Bertolli
Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Good question. I'd like to know this too. I always thought that short of puting up an external serial interface, this wasn't possible. Angelo

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-26 Thread Jim
michael wrote: On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 12:20 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Thanks enable /etc/default/bootlogd: $ cat /etc/default/bootlogd # Run bootlogd at startup ?

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-26 Thread Bill Marcum
On Mon, Sep 26, 2005 at 03:52:27PM -0400, Jim wrote: I did the above, rebooted and can't find thelog anywhere. Could you tell me where it should be and what its name is? Thanks Try /var/log/boot. I sometimes use ls -ltr /var/log to look for the most recently modified log files. -- To

Re: newbie boot question

2005-09-26 Thread michael
michael wrote: On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 12:20 -0400, Jim Woodward wrote: How do I retrieve the messages that I see when booting? dmesg does not have all the information. I'm using kernel 2.6.13.2 Thanks enable /etc/default/bootlogd: $ cat /etc/default/bootlogd # Run bootlogd at startup ?

Re: newbie boot log question

2003-11-28 Thread kmark+debian-user
On Fri, Nov 28, 2003 at 04:45:53AM +0100, Christian Schnobrich wrote: On Thu, 2003-11-27 at 19:08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text that printout during startup, but they quickly scroll off the screen. just type 'dmesg'. Once done, you maybe

Re: newbie boot log question

2003-11-28 Thread Arthur Barlow
Type dmesg at the command prompt. Then use Shift-Page Up to scroll upward. On Thu, 2003-11-27 at 10:08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text that printout during startup, but they quickly scroll off the screen. Are they logged in a file or files in

Re: newbie boot log question

2003-11-28 Thread Bill Goudie
On Thu, Nov 27, 2003 at 10:08:50AM -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text that printout during startup, but they quickly scroll off the screen. Are they logged in a file or files in /var/log or somewhere else? Yes. Sometimes subsquent kernel

newbie boot log question

2003-11-27 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text that printout during startup, but they quickly scroll off the screen. Are they logged in a file or files in /var/log or somewhere else? __ Do you Yahoo!? Free Pop-Up Blocker - Get it now

Re: newbie boot log question

2003-11-27 Thread Christian Schnobrich
On Thu, 2003-11-27 at 19:08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hello, I want to review the lines and lines of text that printout during startup, but they quickly scroll off the screen. just type 'dmesg'. Once done, you maybe want to type 'dmesg | less' :) HTH, Schnobs -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to

Re: newbie boot ?

1998-04-18 Thread Hamish Moffatt
On Fri, Apr 17, 1998 at 05:25:06AM -0700, Gil Nielsen wrote: Hi, Am real new to this. Just installed debian base system from floppys. it went fine. I am booting with the custom floppy and it hangs at md driver 0.35 MAX-MD-Dev=4 MAX-REAL=8 for about 10 min. before it continues booting. Is there

newbie boot ?

1998-04-17 Thread Gil Nielsen
Hi, Am real new to this. Just installed debian base system from floppys. it went fine. I am booting with the custom floppy and it hangs at md driver 0.35 MAX-MD-Dev=4 MAX-REAL=8 for about 10 min. before it continues booting. Is there a way to delete this line? or should'nt I? Thanks -- To