Are you shure you have any daemons started in your rc-update? You might have to do something like:
rc-update add syslog-ng default I don't use syslog, I use metalog myself, but I assume it's the same idea. rc-update show Will show all the things you have started and at what runlevel > -----Original Message----- > From: C. Beamer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Saturday, September 17, 2005 8:11 PM > To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org > Subject: [gentoo-user] ntsysv equivalent > > Hi all, > > When I installed Gentoo, I chose syslog-ng as my system > logger. It was > suggested that I install logrotate to prevent my logfiles > from becoming > unmanagageably large. I did this. However, my /var/log/messages file > includes logging from the first day that Gentoo was running > on my system > and that's now about 2 weeks. > > Is there a default length of time before logrotate will rotate the log > files? > > This is a gentoo user list, right? That's what I am - a > user. So don't > laugh at this question. I was using Fedora Core, so all these things > were automatically set up for me. I'm not stupid. Heck, I got Gentoo > installed with only a few hitches, so I can be taught. However, if > logrotate requires some configuration, I have no idea how to do it, so > would appreciate some help. > > Also, does Gentoo have an equivalent to ntsysv where you can set > services to stop and start? I assume that when you issue the command > rc-update add <program name> default that this essentially is telling > some service to start at boot time. However, if there is > something like > ntsysv available where you can see the services that are running, I > would appreciate being told what it is. > > Regards, > > Colleen > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > > -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list