What the title basically says. Is there a way to read the startup logs of my OS (running openSUSE tumbleweed)? There are some errors while starting my system but can’t read them since they are scrolling too fast.
Have you tried a search engine?
Edit: I apologize, that was mean and pointless. 😬
This gives a detailed breakdown: https://www.suse.com/c/system-logs-understand-linux-system/
Back to the old days of forum discourse? If you have nothing of value to add it’s best to stay silent.
Yeah you’re right. I’m sorry. 🙈
Respect for the apology and edit.
Have you tried putting vinegar on your eggs?
Brb
Have you? Not being a dick here, it’s legit delicious!
Are we talking pickled eggs or just putting vinegar on them? You’ve piqued my interest.
Yes! Asiany quick pickled soy eggs? Great!
Eggs pickled with dill, garlic and chilies? Also…believe it or not…fuckin great!
Eggs hard/soft boiled halved with a sprinkle of dill, a touch of cheese and a light drizzle of vinegar? Brilliant little snack!
i dont know suse, but try “dmesg” or look at /var/log/messages (or maybe /var/log/syslog)… just poke around the log directory.
dmesg
You may need to run it as root
Thank you.
deleted by creator
-b gets all logs for the current boot, -k shows kernel messages (what dmesg gives).
The dmesg command via either sudo or root can show a lot of that output. If your system did not have rsyslog or the syslog-ng packages installed any more then you’d only have systemd journal but you can, depending on your Linux distribution, install these logging applications. Back in the days when Linux users would not always use a graphical display manager, you could actually use shift and page up and page down to scroll through the kernel boot up messages.
Thank you.