This commit is contained in:
Malin Freeborn 2022-01-18 16:28:10 +01:00
parent 30d08edad9
commit 2411171084
Signed by: andonome
GPG Key ID: 52295D2377F4D70F
5 changed files with 2 additions and 79 deletions

View File

@ -1,61 +0,0 @@
---
title: "logs"
tags: [ "Documentation", "basics" ]
---
## Syslog Management Protocols
Let's look at the programs filling in things on our /var/log/ directory.
* rsyslog (common)
* syslog (old)
* syslog-ng (lots of content-based filtering)
* klogd (kernel-focussed)
# `rsyslog`
The config rests in /etc/rsyslog.conf, which then references /etc/rsyslog.d/.
# Systemd
This thing makes its own logs with journald, and the journal's own logging system writes to /var/log/journal/ directory, which is then filled with nonsense.
You can obtain nonsense in systemd's own format by entering:
journalctl -e
This thing generates so much nonsense it can crash your system, but can at least be checked with:
> journalctl --disk-usage
... in case you can't remember the `du` command.
You can limit the nonsense by editing the /etc/systemd/journald.conf file, and finding `#SystemMaxFileSize=`
# Logger
You can log things at any time with the logger:
> logger Server is being a dick!
Put things into a specific log with `-p`. They can enter into, e.g., lpr (printer) log file with a priority of "critical", with:
> logger -p lpr.crit Help!
Logfiles rotate around and eventually get deleted. Rotation means they get compressed.
Edit the config in /etc/logrotate.conf.
A few apps have their own special log rotation rules, kept in /etc/logrotate.d/.
The major variables to change are `weekly`, which compresses log files weekly, and `rotate 4`, which keeps 4 weeks worth of backlogs before deletion.
# Force Log Rotation
> sudo systemctl kill --kill-who=main --signal=SIGUSR2 systemd-journald.service
or just
> sudo systemctl restart systemd-journald.service

View File

@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
---
title: "keymaps"
tags: [ "Documentation", "hardware" ]
---
Find easy-to-read keymapping lists in `/usr/share/X11/xkb/keycodes/symbols/pc`.
If this doesn't work, try keymaps.
Keymaps codes can be found in `/usr/share/X11/xkb/keycodes/evdev`.
Swap the numbers to swap symbols.
Check keymap with:
> setxkbmap -print -verbose 10

View File

@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
--- ---
title: "basics" title: "systemd"
tags: [ "Documentation", "system" ] tags: [ "Documentation", "systemd" ]
--- ---
> systemctl list-units > systemctl list-units