Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Ed Greshko
On 03/03/13 08:37, Joe Zeff wrote: > On 03/02/2013 04:31 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: >> On 03/03/13 08:22, Joe Zeff wrote: >>> On 03/02/2013 03:45 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: man journalctl >>> >>> Thanx; that hadn't occurred to me. Checking, I find that it depends on >>> syslog.socket.service, which al

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Reindl Harald
Am 03.03.2013 01:37, schrieb Joe Zeff: > On 03/02/2013 04:31 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: >> On 03/03/13 08:22, Joe Zeff wrote: >>> On 03/02/2013 03:45 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: man journalctl >>> >>> Thanx; that hadn't occurred to me. Checking, I find that it depends on >>> syslog.socket.service, wh

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Garry T. Williams
On 3-2-13 14:40:39 Joe Zeff wrote: > On 03/02/2013 02:34 PM, G.Wolfe Woodbury wrote: > > systemd provides a new command for some startup logging: journalctl > > Just out of curiosity, I checked to see if that's active: > > [root@khorlia joe]# systemctl status journalctl.service > journalctl.servi

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Joe Zeff
On 03/02/2013 04:31 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: On 03/03/13 08:22, Joe Zeff wrote: On 03/02/2013 03:45 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: man journalctl Thanx; that hadn't occurred to me. Checking, I find that it depends on syslog.socket.service, which also failed. I'll start a new thread for that because I

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Ed Greshko
On 03/03/13 08:22, Joe Zeff wrote: > On 03/02/2013 03:45 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: >> man journalctl > > Thanx; that hadn't occurred to me. Checking, I find that it depends on > syslog.socket.service, which also failed. I'll start a new thread for that > because I don't think it's related to the OP

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Joe Zeff
On 03/02/2013 03:52 PM, Tod Thomas wrote: On 03/02/2013 05:40 PM, Joe Zeff wrote: On 03/02/2013 02:34 PM, G.Wolfe Woodbury wrote: systemd provides a new command for some startup logging: journalctl Just out of curiosity, I checked to see if that's active: [root@khorlia joe]# systemctl status

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Joe Zeff
On 03/02/2013 03:45 PM, Ed Greshko wrote: man journalctl Thanx; that hadn't occurred to me. Checking, I find that it depends on syslog.socket.service, which also failed. I'll start a new thread for that because I don't think it's related to the OP's question. -- users mailing list users@li

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Garry T. Williams
On 3-2-13 18:08:38 I wrote: > Try this (probably as root unless you're in the adm group): > > journalctl --this-boot --full Oh, it's been a while since I learned about the journal so I forgot to mention that you can make its stuff persistent. You may be interested in this: http://0pointe

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Tod Thomas
On 03/02/2013 05:40 PM, Joe Zeff wrote: On 03/02/2013 02:34 PM, G.Wolfe Woodbury wrote: systemd provides a new command for some startup logging: journalctl Just out of curiosity, I checked to see if that's active: [root@khorlia joe]# systemctl status journalctl.service journalctl.service

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Ed Greshko
On 03/03/13 06:40, Joe Zeff wrote: > On 03/02/2013 02:34 PM, G.Wolfe Woodbury wrote: >> systemd provides a new command for some startup logging: journalctl > > Just out of curiosity, I checked to see if that's active: > > [root@khorlia joe]# systemctl status journalctl.service > journalctl.service

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Garry T. Williams
On 3-2-13 10:22:49 Tod Thomas wrote: > Ok, old school here, Saturday morning hacking. What is the new method > for managing system services? That would be systemctl(1). See man systemctl. > Could someone point me to some good > documentation? http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/syste

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Joe Zeff
On 03/02/2013 02:34 PM, G.Wolfe Woodbury wrote: systemd provides a new command for some startup logging: journalctl Just out of curiosity, I checked to see if that's active: [root@khorlia joe]# systemctl status journalctl.service journalctl.service Loaded: error (Reason: No such file

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread G.Wolfe Woodbury
On 03/02/2013 10:22 AM, Tod Thomas wrote: > Ok, old school here, Saturday morning hacking. What is the new method > for managing system services? Could someone point me to some good > documentation? The reason I ask is nothing is being written to > /var/log/messages and /etc/init.d/ doesn't seem to

Re: rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Mateusz Marzantowicz
On 02.03.2013 16:22, Tod Thomas wrote: > Ok, old school here, Saturday morning hacking. What is the new method > for managing system services? Could someone point me to some good > documentation? The reason I ask is nothing is being written to > /var/log/messages and /etc/init.d/ doesn't seem to be

rsyslogd and services in general

2013-03-02 Thread Tod Thomas
Ok, old school here, Saturday morning hacking. What is the new method for managing system services? Could someone point me to some good documentation? The reason I ask is nothing is being written to /var/log/messages and /etc/init.d/ doesn't seem to be a viable option anymore. I tried: /sbin