4-14
October, 1998
GRF 400/1600 Getting Started - 1.4 Update 2
Initial System Set-up
Installing a PCMCIA device
5
If you had previously configured your GRF to log messages to a directory other than
/var/log
, you changed settings in
/etc/grclean.conf
and
/etc/grclean.logs.conf
files. Go back into those files now and change the log
directory.
Modify
/etc/grclean.conf
and
/etc/grclean.logs.conf
to reflect the new log
directory.
The
/etc/grclean.conf
file specifies which log and dump files the grclean program
compresses, archives, and deletes.
The
/etc/grclean.conf
file entries should look like the following:
##################################################################
# port card dump files.
##################################################################
hold=4
size=1
remove=y
local=y
logfile=/var/portcards/grdump.*
##################################################################
# cleanup our own log file, if necessary.
##################################################################
DEFAULTS
hold=2
local=y
size=10000
logfile=/var/log/grclean.log
The
/etc/grclean.logs.conf
file is used to set size limits on log files. Here are some
sample entries:
******************************************************************
* Log files that used to be archived by the
/etc/{daily|weekly|monthly}
* scripts.
*****************************************************************
size=150000
logfile=/var/log/gr.console
size=11000
logfile=/var/log/gr.boot
6
Save all changes and reboot:
# grwrite -v
# reboot -i
7
Verify that the PCMCIA interface and device are up. The csconfig command returns
information about both external ports:
# csconfig -a
Slot 0: flags=0x3<UP,RUNNING>
Attached device: wdc2