On 26/01/15 17:27, John R Pierce wrote:
On 1/26/2015 6:54 AM, kqt4at5v@gmail.com wrote:
Is it ok to skip /run/log/journal/ in backups
there is no directory /run/ on a stock centos system.
I think he means /var/run/log/journal/
Which is included on a stock centos system.
Kind Regards, Jake Shipton (JakeMS) GPG Key: 0xE3C31D8F GPG Fingerprint: 7515 CC63 19BD 06F9 400A DE8A 1D0B A5CF E3C3 1D8F
On Mon, Jan 26, 2015 at 05:31:54PM +0000, Jake Shipton wrote:
On 26/01/15 17:27, John R Pierce wrote:
On 1/26/2015 6:54 AM, kqt4at5v@gmail.com wrote:
Is it ok to skip /run/log/journal/ in backups
there is no directory /run/ on a stock centos system.
I think he means /var/run/log/journal/
Which is included on a stock centos system.
/run is standard on CentOS 7. /var/run is a symlink to /run on that OS.
On Mon, 26 Jan 2015, Stephen Harris wrote:
On Mon, Jan 26, 2015 at 05:31:54PM +0000, Jake Shipton wrote:
On 26/01/15 17:27, John R Pierce wrote:
On 1/26/2015 6:54 AM, kqt4at5v@gmail.com wrote:
Is it ok to skip /run/log/journal/ in backups
there is no directory /run/ on a stock centos system.
I think he means /var/run/log/journal/
Which is included on a stock centos system.
/run is standard on CentOS 7. /var/run is a symlink to /run on that OS.
Sorry, yes, can files in /var/run/log/journal be skipped in backups?
On 01/26/2015 06:54 AM, kqt4at5v@gmail.com wrote:
Is it ok to skip /run/log/journal/ in backups
/run is a tmpfs, so all of its contents are lost on every reboot. As a purely technical matter, yes, it's perfectly safe to not back that up, along with other pseudo-filesystems like /dev /sys and /proc.