On Tuesday, 16 September 2025 23:25:35 British Summer Time Wol wrote:
> On 16/09/2025 12:36, Michael wrote:
> > I had deleted it in the past while I was testing sddm with X and Wayland
> > and in both cases the log file was recreated when I logged in again.
> 
> When you log in, the Xserver by default creates a new log file,
> something like "~/.Xserver.0.log", and renumbers all the older logs to
> .1, .2 etc. I think it went up to .9, giving you a maximum of ten log files.
> 
> So logging out and back in *should* rotate the log for you.
> 
> I've got a feeling it might be set not to create a new log file if it
> can't find an old one, so deleting them all *might* stop new ones being
> created.
> 
> There's so many weird and wonderful ways these things can be done :-)
> and XOrg is directly descended from XFree86, which is directly descended
> from something else, so the code base probably goes back to the 80s -
> and quite possibly beyond ... I wonder what standard practice was back then!
> 
> Cheers,
> Wol

The problem Dale came up to and this thread did not involve /var/log/
Xorg.0.log, but the sddm created file ~/.local/share/sddm/xorg-session.log.

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