Tzafrir Cohen skrev: > On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 04:44:07PM +0100, Olof Tångrot wrote: >> Daniel Baumann skrev: >>> Olof Tångrot wrote: >>>> Is there some kind of kernel option that can be set by syslinux or any >>>> other way to suppress the kernel messages? >>> boot with 'quiet' and set a custom printk value in /etc/sysctl.conf. >>> >> Somehow both these suggestions has the unwanted side effect that a >> diskmounter script run from rc.local has become unstable. >> Most of the time it fails to mount the extra partition but if I mounted >> manually before reboot it might pass. >> >> If I restore sysctl.conf or remove quiet from the boot options the >> system behaves as before. >> >> Any tips on what might be wrong are welcome. > > On our system where we have text-based menus on the first console, but > where kernel messages may often be informative, I redirect them to a > different virtual console with setlogcons: > > setlogcons 10 # redirect messages to /dev/tty10 > > If you ever need to restore: > > setlogcons '' # redirect console messages to /dev/tty (the default) > > I do that in a init script script rather late in the boot process. > Thanks, but 'setlogcons n' had not the desired effect. I tried this after boot but the kernel messages still appears on the serial console.
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