Is it possible to disable logging on Linux (Ubuntu)?
Need to turn off the svn
, jabber
, apache
, proftpd
, sendmail
, ssh
, vpn
, mysql
and all system logs.
Is it possible to disable logging on Linux (Ubuntu)?
Need to turn off the svn
, jabber
, apache
, proftpd
, sendmail
, ssh
, vpn
, mysql
and all system logs.
Syslog has been replaced by rsyslog on numerous OS. So, on Debian > 5, Ubuntu > 11.2, Centos 6.x the following command line would stop it:
service rsyslog stop
Then, you can disable it at boot:
systemctl disable rsyslog
to enable it again at boot:
systemctl enable rsyslog
rsyslog.service
has an alias syslog.service
which triggers automatic socket activation through syslog.socket
. On such systems, an additional systemctl stop syslog.socket
and systemctl disable syslog.socket
are needed.
If you went disable syslog, please running this command:
sudo systemctl disable rsyslog
Stop Log Daemon syslogd.
For example by using init-scripts:
/etc/init.d/syslogd stop
Depending on your Linux-Dist this can be achived in different ways. For disable logging permanantly (embedded system with low disk space) remove loggind deamons, edit /etc/defaults or remove init scripts from the rc (runlevel-configuration) directories.
Edit: much more of interest would be, what causes your latency problems. I do not believe the logs would cause this. Run "top -d1" and check the most upper processes. A network home server for example would probably not need the XWindow System. If you are not running web-development on this machine also Database and Webser will probably be of no need... A lot of processes can cause lags.
systemd
just wasn't the way to go 4 years ago (Debian).
Apr 4, 2017 at 14:40
If (like some of us) you have really old legacy systems:
% /etc/init.d/syslog stop
% chkconfig syslog off