Re: Allocate tty1 for kernel messages

2022-09-30 Thread Greg Wooledge
On Sat, Oct 01, 2022 at 12:43:37AM +0200, Dmitry Katsubo wrote: > I have disabled and stopped this service: > > # systemctl status getty@tty1.service > ● getty@tty1.service - Getty on tty1 > Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/getty@.service; disabled; vendor > preset: enabled) > Drop-In

Re: Allocate tty1 for kernel messages

2022-09-30 Thread Dmitry Katsubo
On 2022-09-25 17:52, basti wrote: > Am 25.09.22 um 17:25 schrieb David Wright: >> On Sun 25 Sep 2022 at 17:01:23 (+0200), Dmitry Katsubo wrote: >>> I am trying to make a following setup on Debian bullseye: >>> >>> * tty1 is used to display kernel messages o

Re: Allocate tty1 for kernel messages

2022-09-25 Thread basti
Am 25.09.22 um 17:25 schrieb David Wright: On Sun 25 Sep 2022 at 17:01:23 (+0200), Dmitry Katsubo wrote: I am trying to make a following setup on Debian bullseye: * tty1 is used to display kernel messages only * tty[2-5] are allocated for login I have modified /etc/default/console-setup so

Re: Allocate tty1 for kernel messages

2022-09-25 Thread David Wright
On Sun 25 Sep 2022 at 17:01:23 (+0200), Dmitry Katsubo wrote: > I am trying to make a following setup on Debian bullseye: > > * tty1 is used to display kernel messages only > * tty[2-5] are allocated for login > > I have modified /etc/default/console-setup so that it reads: &g

Allocate tty1 for kernel messages

2022-09-25 Thread Dmitry Katsubo
Dear Debian users, I am trying to make a following setup on Debian bullseye: * tty1 is used to display kernel messages only * tty[2-5] are allocated for login I have modified /etc/default/console-setup so that it reads: ACTIVE_CONSOLES="/dev/tty[2-5]" and rebooted. What I observe is

Re: Where is a list of kernel messages ?

2021-10-19 Thread Darac Marjal
On 18/10/2021 22:16, C.T.F. Jansen wrote: > Greetings, > > Where is there a list of linux kernel messages ? > So far not found on : > > - google > - Debian linux or kernel documentation, specifically linux-doc etc. > - not seem in /usr/share/doc &

Re: Where is a list of kernel messages ?

2021-10-18 Thread Andrew M.A. Cater
On Tue, Oct 19, 2021 at 10:16:24AM +1300, C.T.F. Jansen wrote: > Greetings, > > Where is there a list of linux kernel messages ? > So far not found on : > > - google > - Debian linux or kernel documentation, specifically linux-doc etc. > - no

Re: Where is a list of kernel messages ?

2021-10-18 Thread Christian Britz
C.T.F. Jansen wrote: Two messages that I'm interested in are :    kernel: [ 6997.564065] sd 3:0:0:0: [sdc] tag#3 data cmplt err -71 uas-tag 4 inflight: CMD    kernel: [ 6997.564108] usb 2-1.4: stat urb: status -71 I did some Google research for you and must confirm that it is really

Where is a list of kernel messages ?

2021-10-18 Thread C.T.F. Jansen
Greetings, Where is there a list of linux kernel messages ? So far not found on : - google - Debian linux or kernel documentation, specifically linux-doc etc. - not seem in /usr/share/doc - www.kernel.org If they are there then it's time for the discovery pr

Re: Ctrl-Alt-F12 to show Kernel messages

2014-11-13 Thread Ron
On Thu, 13 Nov 2014 11:45:10 + Darac Marjal wrote: > > In a distribution I used long ago (Slackware 96 ? Mandrake 6.0 ?) > > Ctrl-Alt-F12 would take you to a screen displaying in real time the kernel > > messages. > > Is that possible in Debian ? > If yo

Re: Ctrl-Alt-F12 to show Kernel messages

2014-11-13 Thread Simon Brandmair
On 11/13/2014 11:50 AM, Renaud (Ron) OLGIATI wrote: > In a distribution I used long ago (Slackware 96 ? Mandrake 6.0 ?) > Ctrl-Alt-F12 would take you to a screen displaying in real time the kernel > messages. > > Is that possible in Debian ? Yes. With syslog-ng, you can u

Re: Ctrl-Alt-F12 to show Kernel messages

2014-11-13 Thread Darac Marjal
On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 07:47:44AM -0300, Renaud OLGIATI wrote: > In a distribution I used long ago (Slackware 96 ? Mandrake 6.0 ?) > Ctrl-Alt-F12 would take you to a screen displaying in real time the kernel > messages. > > Is that possible in Debian ? If you're using

Ctrl-Alt-F12 to show Kernel messages

2014-11-13 Thread Ron
In a distribution I used long ago (Slackware 96 ? Mandrake 6.0 ?) Ctrl-Alt-F12 would take you to a screen displaying in real time the kernel messages. Is that possible in Debian ? Cheers, Ron. -- Boob's Law:

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-14 Thread Ralf Jung
Hi, > >From the reporter POV, I'd say it is justified to report anything we > consider is not normal or that it should not be present. I wouldn't worry > about that, devels and packagers take the appropiate steps, that is, if > there is no real bug to worry about, they will just ignore your report

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-12 Thread Camaleón
On Wed, 10 Aug 2011 20:44:15 +0200, Ralf Jung wrote: >> On Tue, 09 Aug 2011 13:26:46 +0200, Ralf Jung wrote: >> > every time I boot my laptop (HP Compaq 615) into Debian testing, some >> > kernel messages are printed on the boot console: [0.470960] >> > p

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-11 Thread Ralf Jung
Hi, > In the old days when we all used command line style screens and when all > output was appended at the bottom of the screen.. I joined the Unix/Linux train in 2007, so I never saw those times ;-) > The scrool lock key still has a function when using spreadsheets. Normaly > when you press

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-11 Thread Bonno Bloksma
Hi Ralf, The Scroll Lock key. wow, you finally solved the something that puzzled me for some years now: What the heck is the point of that key! Thanks :D In the old days when we all used command line style screens and when all output was appended at the bottom of the screen.. The scroo

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-10 Thread Ralf Jung
Hi, > On Tue, 09 Aug 2011 13:26:46 +0200, Ralf Jung wrote: > > every time I boot my laptop (HP Compaq 615) into Debian testing, some > > kernel messages are printed on the boot console: > > [0.470960] pci_root PNP0A03:00: address space collision: host bridge >

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-10 Thread Ralf Jung
Hi, > The Scroll Lock key. wow, you finally solved the something that puzzled me for some years now: What the heck is the point of that key! Thanks :D Kind regards, Ralf -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-10 Thread Wayne Topa
On 08/09/2011 12:37 PM, abdelkader belahcene wrote: *Hi, by the way how to stop/start the " Kernel messages during startup", to have enough time to read on the fly, what it is doing thanks * The Scroll Lock key. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.o

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-09 Thread John L. Cunningham
Thanks, Ralf! I've wondered about that since 1999. John On Tue, Aug 09, 2011 at 07:04:28PM +0200, Ralf Jung wrote: > Hi, > > > *Hi, > > by the way how to stop/start the " Kernel messages during startup", > > to have enough time to read on the

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-09 Thread Ralf Jung
Hi, > *Hi, > by the way how to stop/start the " Kernel messages during startup", > to have enough time to read on the fly, what it is doing > > thanks > * that depends on which messages you mean: The messages coming from the kernel (recognisable by the [timestam

Re: Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-09 Thread abdelkader belahcene
*Hi, by the way how to stop/start the " Kernel messages during startup", to have enough time to read on the fly, what it is doing thanks *

Re: Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-09 Thread Camaleón
On Tue, 09 Aug 2011 13:26:46 +0200, Ralf Jung wrote: > every time I boot my laptop (HP Compaq 615) into Debian testing, some > kernel messages are printed on the boot console: > [0.470960] pci_root PNP0A03:00: address space collision: host bridge > window [mem 0x000cc00

Kernel messages during startup

2011-08-09 Thread Ralf Jung
Hi list, every time I boot my laptop (HP Compaq 615) into Debian testing, some kernel messages are printed on the boot console: [0.470960] pci_root PNP0A03:00: address space collision: host bridge window [mem 0x000cc000-0x000c] conflicts with Video ROM [mem 0x000c-0x000ce9ff

external USB harddrive produces lots of kernel messages

2006-05-18 Thread Jonas Meurer
hello, i get USB kernel messages printed to the console regularely: usb 1-5.4: reset high speed USB device using ehci_hcd and address 3 in past, i used the onboard USB controller with a via chipset, and additional to the messages, i had read/write errors. then someone told me, that the via USB

RE: two scary syslog kernel messages

2005-09-20 Thread Alejandro Bonilla
> On 2005-09-20 14:30:10 -0500, "Alejandro Bonilla" > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > > >> I'm running Debian Testing with the following kernel: > >> Linux marvin 2.6.11-1-686-smp #1 SMP Mon Jun 20 20:18:45 MDT > >> 2005 i686 > >> GNU/Linux > >> > >> My system is a 2.8Ghz Intel P4 with hyper threading

Re: two scary syslog kernel messages

2005-09-20 Thread Sean
On 2005-09-20 14:30:10 -0500, "Alejandro Bonilla" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: I'm running Debian Testing with the following kernel: Linux marvin 2.6.11-1-686-smp #1 SMP Mon Jun 20 20:18:45 MDT 2005 i686 GNU/Linux My system is a 2.8Ghz Intel P4 with hyper threading enabled, 2GB RAM, and 2 SATA dr

RE: two scary syslog kernel messages

2005-09-20 Thread Alejandro Bonilla
> I'm running Debian Testing with the following kernel: > Linux marvin 2.6.11-1-686-smp #1 SMP Mon Jun 20 20:18:45 MDT > 2005 i686 > GNU/Linux > > My system is a 2.8Ghz Intel P4 with hyper threading enabled, 2GB RAM, > and 2 SATA drives running in software RAID-1 (everything is mirrored > including

two scary syslog kernel messages

2005-09-20 Thread Sean
I'm running Debian Testing with the following kernel: Linux marvin 2.6.11-1-686-smp #1 SMP Mon Jun 20 20:18:45 MDT 2005 i686 GNU/Linux My system is a 2.8Ghz Intel P4 with hyper threading enabled, 2GB RAM, and 2 SATA drives running in software RAID-1 (everything is mirrored including the boot

trapping kernel messages

2004-11-13 Thread Hugo Vanwoerkom
Hi Debian! I get lots of these: Nov 13 11:30:01 debian kernel: nasd: page allocation failure. order:4, mode:0x21 Nov 13 11:30:01 debian kernel: [__alloc_pages+449/848] __alloc_pages+0x1c1/0x350 Nov 13 11:30:01 debian kernel: [__get_free_pages+31/64] __get_free_pages+0x1f/0x40 They are page a

Re: reiserfs kernel messages

2004-04-21 Thread Luke Reeves
Yes, your filesystem probably has some corruption. To fix it up, the quickest way would be to boot into single-user mode. If you're using LILO, append the options to your kernel "single ro". For example, if your current image name is "linux" type "linux single ro" at the LILO prompt (which w

reiserfs kernel messages

2004-04-21 Thread Rainer Köcher
Hello all, I am using a vaio notebook with debian woody. I am using reiserfs for the root filesystem. i am getting strange kernel messeges which are looking like this: Apr 21 06:36:29 notebook kernel: vs-5150: search_by_key: invalid format found in block 18973. Fsck? Apr 21 06:36:29 notebook

reiserfs kernel messages

2004-04-20 Thread Rainer Köcher
Hello all, I am using a vaio notebook with debian woody. I am using reiserfs for the root filesystem. i am getting strange kernel messeges which are looking like this: Apr 21 06:36:29 notebook kernel: vs-5150: search_by_key: invalid format found in block 18973. Fsck? Apr 21 06:36:29 notebook

Re: kernel messages in active virtual console

2004-02-25 Thread Chris
On Wed, 2004-02-25 at 22:47, Serge Tensen wrote: > Hello, > > I'm using a very default Debian 3.0r2 system. Every time something happens > with my NIC's (plug 'em in and out a hub) this generates a message in the > active virtual console. In /var/log/messages these messages are said to come >

kernel messages in active virtual console

2004-02-25 Thread Serge Tensen
Hello, I'm using a very default Debian 3.0r2 system. Every time something happens with my NIC's (plug 'em in and out a hub) this generates a message in the active virtual console. In /var/log/messages these messages are said to come from the kernel. How do I get those messages from my consoles?

Re: Redirecting kernel messages

2004-01-19 Thread Nano Nano
On Tue, Jan 20, 2004 at 04:59:36PM +1100, Cameron Hutchison wrote: > (and on the fast machines of today, a glance is all you get before X > starts :-) Yeah, if glance == 35 seconds. Probably 10 seconds of that is USB hotplugging doing some while it sync [001 002 003 001 002 003]. Dunno what that

Redirecting kernel messages

2004-01-19 Thread Cameron Hutchison
I'm looking to clean up my display as my machine boots. Up until the time init(8) starts, everything is fine. After that point, kernel messages and init script messages become interleaved, and I find it difficult to tell at a glance if something has gone wrong on startup (and on the fast mac

Re: kernel messages to virtual console instead of to log file/etc.

2003-10-01 Thread Larry Holish
On Wed, Oct 01, 2003 at 01:41:15AM -0400, Daniel B. wrote: > Although I have /etc/syslog.conf set up to send most messages elsewhere, > I still get messages like: > > EXT2-fs: Unrecognized mount option bs > > and > > EXT2-fs: blocksize too small for device. > > dumped directly to the curren

kernel messages to virtual console instead of to log file/etc.

2003-09-30 Thread Daniel B.
Although I have /etc/syslog.conf set up to send most messages elsewhere, I still get messages like: EXT2-fs: Unrecognized mount option bs and EXT2-fs: blocksize too small for device. dumped directly to the current virtual console (when I'm in a text console). (This is on woody with kernel

Re: syslog-ng gets no kernel messages --- SOLVED

2002-06-05 Thread Martin Hermanowski
og-ng [or sysklogd] and klogd, > as the documentation says, work closely with each other. > The package klogd sends kernel logs > (including my wanted iptables firewall logs) to the syslog daemon. I had the same problem (no kernel messages) - restarting sysklogd and klogd in this order so

syslog-ng gets no kernel messages --- SOLVED

2002-06-04 Thread Jameson C. Burt
I installed the package "syslog-ng", replacing the package "sysklogd". After this, my kernel logs (including my "iptables" logs) no longer went to /var/log/{kern,debug,messages}, or any other file in /var/log. Syslog-ng would log the usual daemon messages. After spending 5 hours alterning the new

Re: Problem with syslog/kernel messages

2002-05-28 Thread Oki DZ
On 2002.05.28 16:51 Martin Hermanowski wrote: I got a problem with syslog on Woody. I have several machines on which kernel messages do *not* get logged to syslog. In the syslog.conf, the first line is: | *.* -/var/log/syslog I don't think that you nee

Problem with syslog/kernel messages

2002-05-28 Thread Martin Hermanowski
Hello, I got a problem with syslog on Woody. I have several machines on which kernel messages do *not* get logged to syslog. In the syslog.conf, the first line is: | *.* -/var/log/syslog `dmesg' does show the kernel messages, but I can't find them in /var/

Re: kernel messages

2002-02-05 Thread Mark Ferlatte
On Tue, Feb 05, 2002 at 12:37:42AM -0800, Osamu Aoki wrote (0.77): > Garbage display by klogd daemon can be annoying. Set KLOGD="-c 4" in > /etc/init.d/klogd solved this problem on Linux 2.4.17-686 iptables > on Debian woody. This is the best solution. '-c 4' tells klogd to tell the kernel to onl

Re: kernel messages

2002-02-05 Thread Osamu Aoki
On Tue, Feb 05, 2002 at 10:17:16AM +0300, Alexey wrote: > > Subj. "kernel messages" is derived from "simple questions" > > > > MSDOS FS: Using codepage 866 > > > MSDOS FS: IO charset koi8-r > > > This is kernel messages. > > Yo

kernel messages

2002-02-05 Thread Alexey
Subj. "kernel messages" is derived from "simple questions" > > MSDOS FS: Using codepage 866 > > MSDOS FS: IO charset koi8-r > This is kernel messages. > You can't hide them on a console. > > Romuald. > Thanks. Can I compile my ker

Re: HDD Kernel messages...

2001-09-23 Thread Eamon Roque
On Sun, Sep 23, 2001 at 11:51:54AM +0200, Sven Gaerner wrote: > Hi, > > I got the following kernel messages mainly after boot up. > > kernel: hda: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error } > kernel: hda: dma_intr: error=0x84 { DriveStatusError BadCRC } > >

Re: HDD Kernel messages...

2001-09-23 Thread Rossy Roman Salgado
On Sun, 23 Sep 2001, Sven Gaerner wrote: > Hi, > > I got the following kernel messages mainly after boot up. > > kernel: hda: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error } > kernel: hda: dma_intr: error=0x84 { DriveStatusError BadCRC } > > My kernel is 2.4.9

Re: HDD Kernel messages...

2001-09-23 Thread Jason Boxman
On Sunday 23 September 2001 05:51 am, Sven Gaerner wrote: > Hi, > > I got the following kernel messages mainly after boot up. > > kernel: hda: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error } > kernel: hda: dma_intr: error=0x84 { DriveStatusError BadCRC } Oh no. :(

HDD Kernel messages...

2001-09-23 Thread Sven Gaerner
Hi, I got the following kernel messages mainly after boot up. kernel: hda: dma_intr: status=0x51 { DriveReady SeekComplete Error } kernel: hda: dma_intr: error=0x84 { DriveStatusError BadCRC } My kernel is 2.4.9 and is configured to use multi mode (CONFIG_IDEDISK_MULTI_MODE=y). My harddisk is

Kernel messages on console

2001-08-08 Thread Jordi S . Bunster
How can I prevent kernel messages from showing up on certain ttys? I have tons of samba messages on the screen but the SMB mount are in fact working ok, and the messages are annoying. The message follows: smb_request: result -32, setting invalid smb_retry: sucessful, new pid=23748

IDE kernel messages after potato install

2001-07-17 Thread Brian P. Flaherty
Hello, I have had two messages in kern.log since installing potato 2.2-r3 yesterday. First, brief background: Gateway Solo 9300 with a 450 Mhz Pentium, 288 MB RAM, 12 GB IDE hd and IDE CDROM. Phoenix BIOS 16.53. Windows 98 currently resides on /dev/hda1, but I haven't added it back to lilo yet.

Where to find the mailink-list kernel messages archived wuth search

1999-12-12 Thread Paulo Henrique Baptista de Oliveira
Thanks, PH -- Abraços,PH Paulo Henrique Baptista de Oliveira -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] Information Technology Consultant Linux Solutions -- http://www.linuxsolutions.com.br Av. Presidente Vargas, 509/4o andar - 852-4564 - Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil

RE: more kernel messages ...

1999-01-29 Thread john
Hi Shaleh, > > I changed '/etc/modules'. Now it says 'auto'. I also compiled the > > auto module loader into the kernel. When mounting my WinNT drive > > through '/etc/fstab' it notices that vfat.o must be loaded. When > > doing this I get some 'module not found' errors. Where did I screw > >

RE: more kernel messages ...

1999-01-29 Thread john
Hi Shaleh, > > I changed '/etc/modules'. Now it says 'auto'. I also compiled the > > auto module loader into the kernel. When mounting my WinNT drive > > through '/etc/fstab' it notices that vfat.o must be loaded. When > > doing this I get some 'module not found' errors. Where did I screw > >

RE: more kernel messages ...

1999-01-25 Thread Shaleh
On 25-Jan-99 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > All, > > I changed '/etc/modules'. Now it says 'auto'. I also compiled the > auto module loader into the kernel. When mounting my WinNT drive > through '/etc/fstab' it notices that vfat.o must be loaded. When > doing this I get some 'module not found' er

more kernel messages ...

1999-01-25 Thread john
All, I changed '/etc/modules'. Now it says 'auto'. I also compiled the auto module loader into the kernel. When mounting my WinNT drive through '/etc/fstab' it notices that vfat.o must be loaded. When doing this I get some 'module not found' errors. Where did I screw things up? Loading module

Re: kernel messages

1999-01-22 Thread Sanzo Miyazawa
I forgot to say: If this script is run on another pc with the same os, ( Tyan Titan Pro, Pentium Pro 200Mhz x 2, FastPage with parity) there is always no problem. >From [EMAIL PROTECTED] Fri Jan 22 10:22:53 1999 >Does anyone understand what caused the following error m

kernel messages

1999-01-22 Thread Sanzo Miyazawa
Does anyone understand what caused the following error messages? I was running the following script on my system, which reads file names and check whether thse files in a directory exist. This directory includes a lot of files, more than 5000. #! /bin/sh while read f do

Strange kernel Messages

1997-12-15 Thread Kevin Traas
Help!!! My system went down this morning and coming back up, I'm getting the following on my console, syslog, kern.log, debug, and messages file. It's filling up my logs, filling my drives, and creating all kinds of havoc. I haven't modified my kernel in any way and what shows below is all I'm g

Re: End of device [was Re: kernel messages]

1997-10-31 Thread Torsten Hilbrich
Corey A <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > a Similar thin happened to a good friend of mine, the problem was resolved > by dd'in /dev/null to the partition > > dd if=/dev/null of=/dev/hdax > where x is the partition # /dev/null will not work, use /dev/zero instead. Torsten -- !07/11 PDP a

Re: End of device [was Re: kernel messages]

1997-10-29 Thread Corey A
a Similar thin happened to a good friend of mine, the problem was resolved by dd'in /dev/null to the partition dd if=/dev/null of=/dev/hdax where x is the partition # take care At 09:32 PM 10/28/97 -0800, Mike Orr wrote: >On Sun, Oct 26, 1997 at 09:14:56PM -0500, Thalia L. Hooker wrote: >> Hi, >>

End of device [was Re: kernel messages]

1997-10-29 Thread Mike Orr
On Sun, Oct 26, 1997 at 09:14:56PM -0500, Thalia L. Hooker wrote: > Hi, > > I was just noticed in my log files that I have these messages in my > /var/adm/kern.log: > attempt to access beyond end of device > 03:02: rw=0, want 707406379, limit 1433376 > > This message is repeated several times and

kernel messages [WAS: Sig 11 problems...]

1997-10-27 Thread Thalia L. Hooker
Hi, I was just noticed in my log files that I have these messages in my /var/adm/kern.log: attempt to access beyond end of device 03:02: rw=0, want 707406379, limit 1433376 This message is repeated several times and ultimately the computer locks up. Does someone have an idea what is causing these