General :: Where Kernel Logs Are Stored
May 6, 2010where kernel logs are stored in linux
View 5 Replieswhere kernel logs are stored in linux
View 5 RepliesI am new to linux and I am running Postfix as my Mail server. Comcast customers are not receiving mail that is sent from my server. I need to check the logs. I can't seem to find them. Can somebody point me in the right direction.
View 1 Replies View RelatedI am backing up my data to a remote disk and would like to back up my chat logs from Empathy.
View 2 Replies View RelatedI have machine that I used to VNC to on my network with Remote Desktop Viewer from my Fedora 12. When I first connected I checked the checkbox that I wanted to store the pw. Now the pw on the other machine has changed but Remote Desktop Viewer does not ask for a new password, it just gives me a black screen, like I am connected but I can't see anything. I'd like to know if anyone knows where this pw data is stored on the system so I can start fresh. I already tried uninstalling Remote Desktop Viewer and installing it again.
View 1 Replies View RelatedWhere is a typical Linux program installed Where does a program install on linux?
In Windows it's clear - Program files - all programs are there. But where are programs in linux stored?
When I try to login as me - it gets pretty far but then something happens and automatically logs out. This happens in Gnome, Kde too. Now - I have no problem logging in a Root. Is there a way I can try to stop the login process before it kicks me out, or is there a way to look at some files to tell me what's going on?
View 3 Replies View RelatedI was reading through the link on journaling-filesystems and i would like to know where exactly is the journal stored in my Harddisk.
View 1 Replies View RelatedI've installed Postfix MTA in Xubuntu. Where are all the emails stored in my Postfix server?
View 2 Replies View Relatedwhere the Kooka settings file(s) are stored? I screwed up the appearance of my Kooka window, and have been unable to revert, so I would like to delete the Kooka settings file in hopes of starting over. (I tried uninstalling Kooka, but it didn't help--the settings weren't deleted.) I only know it's somewhere in my home folder, because I opened Kooka in another user account, and found the default settings there.
View 5 Replies View RelatedWhat directories are often stored on their own partitions?
View 2 Replies View RelatedI was using a customized version of ubuntu 10.04 earliervideos which I use to stream were stored in /tmpA week before I switched to 10.10 Now the problem is that the streamed videos are not getting stored in the /tmpsomebody help me with this ... is there any other place where the videos are getting stored.if so, please tell me .... is there any other way by which I can download the videos
View 3 Replies View RelatedUbuntu 9.04 on a Dell Netbook
While studying where all my (16 GB solid state) disk space is used with Disk Usage Analyzer I found that about a half gigabyte was under sys/devices/pci0000:00/pci0000:00:01.0. In fact it was taken up by two files resource2 and resource2_wc. Both files are dated today.
Can anyone enlighten me to what these subdirectories and files are? My desktop with conventional rotating hard drives do not have any space used under /sys/devices so I am guessing the subdirectories and files are related to the Solid State drive.
If we login in to linux we are getting the following last login information
login as: root
root@192.168.3.16's password:
Last login: Fri Feb 26 16:09:20 2010 from 192.168.3.187
[root@dblinux ~]#
tell me where this information is stored exactly.
3.State what kinds of files are stored in the following directories. Give any ONE file that can be found in these directories.
a. /etc/
b. /proc/
c. /sbin/
Where is the login password stored in Ubuntu? What is that file? Can I open that file?
View 6 Replies View RelatedI have added an identity to ssh-agent
Code:
ssh-agent /bin/bash
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_dsa
After restarting the machine. I removed all the identities by
[Code].....
I am using Broadband Internet through Auto Ethernet! I forgot the User name and password for the broadband! Is there any Linux command to get the user name and password stored in the modem memory??
View 3 Replies View RelatedI was installing some software on my linux system and then i get long list of errors. Now i can go up and see when did it starts so i want to know the log file where the full error gets stored so that i can look when it started
View 1 Replies View RelatedFor example, when using bash you can use
Code:
to execute the previous command or
Code:
!<number> to execute the Nth command(use history to see the list). Or you can use
Code:
cd !-2:1
to cd into the value in the first field that was executed 2 commands ago Anyhow, say I run a command and the output is a path. Any way to cd and then some variable where OUTPUT of the previous command was stored? A variable that always stores the OUTPUT of the last command.
My system got crashed yesterday. Before I do any mess up with it I would like to backup some important scripts stored in it. With so many live cds available I am confused which one is to choose. It should not be too big (in terms of mb). Any small Live cd will do.
View 3 Replies View RelatedSyslog is used to store simple log files or we can manage them too? Well, the thing is, that I need to run a software (like syslog) to collect my logs and put them in order and organize them so it makes them "understandable". I have been told that syslog can do the job and that it doesn't need a complex configuration to work.
View 12 Replies View RelatedOn our app server the logs from the Sybase Mobilink service get logged to /var/log because of that I did a chmod a+rx /var/log and all is well until.... the next day QA logs in goes to check the logs and gets:
Quote:
qa@dwdb [~]$ ls /var/log
ls: /var/log: Permission denied
qa@dwdb [~]$
How to find the filesize of a flash which is not exactly stored in the temp but redirected by a fd.
flash31 -> /tmp/FlashXXvsg1uY (deleted) directory is /proc/processid
Chrome is downloading a flash and I can see in the proc directory the flash file, How can I see the current file size of such a file ?
I have an ubuntu (8.04.3) server where I use bacula to make backups of the files stored on the server. Ive been trying to find a solution (with no luck) trying to succesfully implement the following:-
A Backup tape for each day of the week besides Thurs which is resused on a weekly basis. For the thursday tapes we have a backup tape corresponding to the week number that the thursday falls so for the first thursday of the month it would be ThursOne For example. These tapes are resued on a monthly basis. We then have a monthly tape that is used on the last thursday of the month. These tapes will be resused on a yearly basis.
Another requirement is just in case a tape is accidently not changed a backup should still occur regardless of what tape is in the drive (so if its tuesday and mondays tape is still in the tape drive it should rewrite that tape).
I did have this successfully set up where the tape was appended after each use rather than being recycled after the nightly backup. But then after a few weeks I would have to manually purge tapes when they became full (which isnt ideal - as Im not always in the office so in my absence it may be that a backup may not take place), so have been playing around and have now got the tapes to be marked as used after a max of 2 jobs (so the backup of the files and the catalog of the night). I also added this line 'Recycle Current Volume = yes' so that it would hopefully recycle the volume in the drive.
However what I am finding is that the tape that should be recycled is not, but in yesterday case the Mondays tape was recycled rather than the Tuesday although Mondays was the last written so Im not even sure why it choose to recycle this tape.
On my Acer laptop wit ATI Xpress 1100 I have a native resolution of 1280 x 800, and Linux Mint 8 (of the Ubuntu family) offers that resolution without a problem. However, a few days ago I connected my laptop to my TV, and since then the correct resolution setting has been LOST. It doesn't appear anymore in the Display settings and so I had to choose a lesser resolution - I am now looking at a less sharp screen! How can I delete it? I hope that I don't need to reinstall...
View 2 Replies View RelatedWant know the location of the Clamd service database, and also know the extension of these database fies.
View 2 Replies View RelatedI have just upgraded to Ubuntu 10.4 and I need to get my Address Book and saved emails from earlier version.Can someone please tell me where they will be located
View 8 Replies View RelatedI'm trying to recover movie files from my TNT receiver hard drive but it corrupts its FAT32 allocation table (crappy cheap device...)
Using dosfsck is useless because the correct file length is the cluster length, not the (shorter) one in the table, and dosfsck only proposes to shorten the file, which I won't do.
Question: how to recover a file using the FAT cluster chain instead of using the stored length in the FAT table?
where are the interface configurations (set by ifconfig, not the static ones) stored? I'm asking because I'm trying to understand, more broadly, the order of IP address lookup. If I ping the local machine (localhost, or one of the interfaces) no messages get sent out (at least according to wireshark), so some local lookup must be taking place.
View 1 Replies View Related(variable substitution?)
(parameter expansion?)
Code:
run_repeatedly()
{
NUM=0
while [ <irrelevant stuff here> ]
[Code]....
run_repeatedly "programX -o "./messy/path/output-$NUM.txt"" The echo inside the loop prints "...-$NUM.txt"; obviously I'm aiming to have bash substitute the iteration number so that I end up with many output files not 1.