On 23Jan2009 17:34, Peter Teoh <htmldeveloper@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: | I did a simple thing - modified my syslog.conf: | | cat /etc/syslog.conf | mail.none;authpriv.none;cron.none /var/log/messages | | So virtually, there is nothing to go to /var/log/messages, although my | dmesg's output did output a lot of other stuff....as I instrumented | the kernel to do printk()....something like every file traversal will | generate several entries in dmesg output. | | Nevertheless, since /var/log/messages to get, as I check, its content | is always zero (after I did an initial truncation) - why is syslogd | showing such a high performance: [...] | Over a period of time, I observed that klogd and syslogd is toggling | to be among the top few candidate all the time - toggling, meaning | switching between one and another. | | Can someone explained this behavior? Shouldn't the syslogd be | consuming almost zero cpu % since there is zero output to | /var/log/messages? Not really. Your kernel logging is still _all_ going through syslogd, which is quietly deciding not to _copy_ it into the messages file. But it still has to consider and then discard) every kernel message. Cheers, -- Cameron Simpson <cs@xxxxxxxxxx> DoD#743 http://www.cskk.ezoshosting.com/cs/ Anagram: Information superhighway <==> I'm on a huge wispy rhino fart. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines