Quote from Bruce Ferrel: "There are actually a couple of ways around
the SD wear issue, even though people seem to dearly LOVE SSDs with
the exact same issue;
1.) Use a USB drive.
2.) Somewhat more esoteric, PXE boot and run from an NFS image."
[/Quote]
You are right, people love SD Cards, not f
Hi,
Any way to disable elogind from filling up the message logs? I think all
these messages are happening because I have cron jobs running frequently.
I could possibly tell rsyslog to file these in cron.log (if it is cron)
but there is still the problem of excess logging taking up disk space.
Hal,
On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 04:35:14AM -0600, hal wrote:
> Hi,
> Any way to disable elogind from filling up the message logs? I think all
> these messages are happening because I have cron jobs running frequently.
>
> I could possibly tell rsyslog to file these in cron.log (if it is cron) but
>
On 11/13/19 12:26 AM, Edward Bartolo via Dng wrote:
Quote from Bruce Ferrel: "There are actually a couple of ways around
the SD wear issue, even though people seem to dearly LOVE SSDs with
the exact same issue;
1.) Use a USB drive.
2.) Somewhat more esoteric, PXE boot and run from an NFS image
On Tue, 12 Nov 2019 10:31:27 +0100
Edward Bartolo via Dng wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> The Raspberry Pi is very frequency used with an SD Card which is
> highly intolerant of frequent writes as these are limited. My first SD
> Card became read only after about six weeks with Devuan running. Using
> Rasp
On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 07:27:03PM -0500, Steve Litt wrote:
> On Tue, 12 Nov 2019 10:31:27 +0100
>
> Regarding eliminating the journal, you bring up a good point. But so
> did some other people arguing the opposite. I suggest an installation
> that gives the following choices:
>
> * Don't use a j