emacs/var/elfeed/db/data/4c/4c411525f55c1908167abaedbfb4df6214b21e0a
2022-01-03 12:49:32 -06:00

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<!-- SC_OFF --><div class="md"><p>Hej fellow guix,</p> <p>TL;DR: On Guix, is there anything equivalent to journalctl? If so, where can I find resources on it?</p> <p>I am experiencing more or less frequent lockups which force me to hard reboot my machine (not only on guix, also on manjaro).</p> <p>I&#39;d love to know why that is so that I can try and change stuff. On manjaro, I use journalctl -r to find out the culprit. Is there anything equivalent to this on guix? I&#39;ve tried to find stuff on my own but have so far not been successful.</p> <p>Any suggestions/tips are very welcome. That would be one further step towards my migration process ;-)</p> <p>Have a good day, fellows :)</p> <p><strong>EDIT</strong>: I found out that Guix uses syslog(d). The logs are stored under <code>/var/log</code>. </p> <p>Still, I am wondering in which particular log I would find information about a crash and/or hard reboot. For people interested in knowing why the initial boot process has failed - sometimes that happens to me and there&#39;s a kind of kernel panic - you can invoke <code>dmesg</code> (you will probably need to be super user for that).</p> <p>Also, I&#39;d be interested in how you people browse your logs. One thing I am really missing from systemd/journalctl is its highlighting of some of the messages (dunno if it&#39;s faulty or not). This way it seems like it is just a long, undiscernible mess.</p> </div><!-- SC_ON --> &#32; submitted by &#32; <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/olivuser"> /u/olivuser </a> <br/> <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/GUIX/comments/q9bwvs/how_does_logging_work_on_guix/">[link]</a></span> &#32; <span><a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/GUIX/comments/q9bwvs/how_does_logging_work_on_guix/">[comments]</a></span>