On Sep 13, 2014, at 9:47 AM, Balint Szigeti <balint.s...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I've just tried to set the Storage entry in /etc/systemd/journald.conf to
> "none" according to manual page and off course no effect.
> Also tried to set LogTarget to "syslog" in /etc/systemd/system.conf and
> reboot (funny, hurray we become Windows......)but no effect.
>
> Needless to say, the logs are being found in journalctl and messages file of
> course. I don't think to raise bug because any time when they hear someone
> doesn't want to use their 'solutions' they refuse/ignore or set the ticket to
> WONTFIX.
I don't understand the problem. You're saying logs are found in journalctl and
messages, so what's the bug/problem?
systemd-journald is expected to always run because it knows a ton of what's
going from the kernel and systemd itself. The traditional syslog needs to be
systemd-journald compatible, and I'm pretty sure rsyslog is. It directly reads
the stream from systemd-journald.
http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/syslog/
http://blog.delouw.ch/2013/07/24/why-journalctl-is-cool-and-syslog-will-survive-for-another-decade/
If you merely delete /var/log/journal, then systemd-journald will log to
/run/log/journal which is not persistent. And a journald compatible syslogger
will read that stream, and log it to /var/log/messages just like before except
it probably contains more information since it should contain all journald
logged events before syslogd started. I don't think none is what you want
because then syslog has nothing available to it to log. At least that's my
understanding of it.
Chris Murphy
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