On 07/27/2017 09:13 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Wed, 26 Jul 2017 11:28:43 -0400
> Tom H wrote:
>
>> I've just tried
>>
>> - install "rsyslog"
>> - enable "rsyslog.service"
>> - set "Storage=none" and "ForwardToSyslog=yes" in 
>> "/etc/systemd/journald.conf"
>>
>> and it worked.
> It sorta worked for me. There aren't any recently updated files under
> /var/log/journal, so the old binary files are no longer being
> created, and I have lots and lots of /var/log/messages from booting,
> but the last message in the log is:
>
> Jul 27 09:01:24 tomh systemd-journald: Journal stopped
>
> So it apparently decided to stop logging once the system booted :-(.
>
> There is a /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-journald process running
> and rsyslog appears to be active:
>
> [root@tomh ~]# systemctl status rsyslog
> ● rsyslog.service - System Logging Service
>    Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/rsyslog.service; enabled; vendor 
> pres
>    Active: active (running) since Thu 2017-07-27 09:01:28 EDT; 5min ago
>      Docs: man:rsyslogd(8)
>            http://www.rsyslog.com/doc/
>  Main PID: 811 (rsyslogd)
>     Tasks: 3 (limit: 4915)
>    CGroup: /system.slice/rsyslog.service
>            └─811 /usr/sbin/rsyslogd -n
>
> I'm just no longer getting any log messages.
>
> Anyone know how to get logging to continue after booting?

OK you see a /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-journald process running but you also say 
you
have  "Journal stopped".

So, what is "systemctl status systemd-journald.service" telling you?


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