When the kernel starts to boot, it does not have yet support for any
filesystem. So you have to write to a raw disk partition (whose sector
address is set ahead of time by a means similar to that of LILO), or
allocate a RAM area (immediately after memory test) to serve as a buffer
for kernel messa
syslogd and klogd will log the messages under /var/log/message (or what-ever file configured in /etc/syslog.conf)
Adding 'dmesg -n 1' to the rc.local will prevent non-critical messages from making their way into a console.
Gilboa
On Wed, 2005-06-22 at 14:49 +0300, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
Hi
Yedidyah Bar-David wrote:
On Wed, Jun 22, 2005 at 02:49:38PM +0300, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
Hi all,
I need to direct the kernel messages to a file, instead of going to a
tty. I know how to direct it to a serial console, but I want it not
displayed on any interactive medium at all.
Is it
On Wed, Jun 22, 2005 at 02:49:38PM +0300, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I need to direct the kernel messages to a file, instead of going to a
> tty. I know how to direct it to a serial console, but I want it not
> displayed on any interactive medium at all.
>
> Is it at all possible?
I
Hi all,
I need to direct the kernel messages to a file, instead of going to a
tty. I know how to direct it to a serial console, but I want it not
displayed on any interactive medium at all.
Is it at all possible?
Shachar
--
Shachar Shemesh
Lingnu Open Source Consulting ltd.
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