[Bug 1618188] Re: systemd journal should be persistent by default: /var/log/journal should be created; remove rsyslog from default installs
Bryan Quigley
bryan.quigley at canonical.com
Mon Feb 13 17:22:38 UTC 2017
Given the discussions on ubuntu-devel/discuss, the controversial part
seemed to be more around removing rsyslog, and we haven't gotten (or I
haven't seen) any pushback on just doing both for now.
dino99>the actual 'non permanent' journal by default is that most users prefer;
Why do you believe that? The permanent journal has real support/logging benefits.
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1618188
Title:
systemd journal should be persistent by default: /var/log/journal
should be created; remove rsyslog from default installs
Status in systemd package in Ubuntu:
Triaged
Status in ubuntu-meta package in Ubuntu:
Triaged
Bug description:
After upgrading 14.04 -> 16.04, key services are now running on
systemd and using the systemd journal for logging. In 14.04, key
system logs like /var/log/messages and /var/log/syslog were
persistent, but after the upgrade to 16.04 there has a been a
regression of sorts: Logs sent to systemd's journald are now being
thrown away during reboots.
This behavior is controlled by the `Storage=` option in
`/etc/systemd/journald.conf`. The default setting is `Storage=auto`
which will persist logs in `/var/log/journal/`, *only if the directory
already exists*. But the directory was not created as part of the
14.04 -> 16.04 upgrade, so logging was being lost for a while before I
realized what was happening.
This issue could be solved by either creating /var/log/journal or
changing the default Storage behavior to `Storage=persistent`, which
would create the directory if need be.
## Related reference
* `systemd` currently compounds the issue by having ["journal --disk-usage" report memory usage as disk usage](https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/4059), giving the impression that the disk is being used for logging when it isn't.
* [User wonders where to find logs from previous boots, unaware that the logs were thrown away](http://askubuntu.com/questions/765315/how-to-find-previous-boot-log-after-ubuntu-16-04-restarts)
## Recommended fix
Restoring persistent logging as the default is recommended.
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