Agreed sometimes it is important to launch a long term campaign on the logs. Sometimes this might take longer then days. It is not abnormal to observe logs for weeks or even months. It depends on the situation.Sometimes you just want to let things sit/settle for a few hours, or a day... then check back to see how things are working. Many times, log aggregation is done at intervals throughout the day... not something you would see immediately.
OK one day later, logfile 0 bytes, I decided to remove Skynet, remove the swap file, restart router, install Skynet, unfortunately the log stays 0
I'm a relative noob, can anyone please point me in the right direction, below the message after installation regarding the swapfile
View attachment 56202
Thanks @Viktor JaepTake a look at your /tmp/mnt/<USBDRIVELABEL>/skynet/skynet.cfg file... look under the "syslogloc=" and "syslog1loc=" items. Do these paths/locations point to the correct locations where your syslogs are located?
If not, look under Firewall -> option 11 (settings) -> option 10 (syslog location)... and correct the locations/paths. See if that does the trick?
Sorry for the misunderstanding... but you want to put the correct paths to your syslog in these fields. Most likely /jffs/syslog.log and /jffs/syslog.log-1? But it could be a different path.Thanks @Viktor Jaep
I went to Firewall -> option 11 (settings) -> option 10 (syslog location)... and corrected both locations/paths to /tmp/mnt/Skynet_fire/mtswap.swp
So far no changes, logfile doesn't grow and No data to display
You can also have Skynet remove its log entries from syslog: option 12 followed by 3.Due to many syslog rows generated while blocking connections, that much that it made other trial and error in syslog harder, I tried to disable logging (temporary until I know what my issue actually is). But when trying turning it off, the cli pretty much just restarts.
Can anyone turn off and on the logs normally?
So if I get a random reboot, I do that and can recover all the logs rows that happened like 6h ago inside General log/System log window? As it is, Skynet can fill that window in like 10 minutes ;-)You can also have Skynet remove its log entries from syslog: option 12 followed by 3.
Turn off Skynet logging for a bit?So if I get a random reboot, I do that and can recover all the logs rows that happened like 6h ago inside General log/System log window? As it is, Skynet can fill that window in like 10 minutes ;-)
Exactly what I did before.Turn off Skynet logging for a bit?
OK I let Skynet do it's thing all night, log file is still 0 bytes, in my old router the files grew before your eyes, HELP pleaseThanks @Viktor Jaep , I have no idea what I'm doing, I'm flying blind here
I changed both locations to :
/jffs/syslog.log
/jffs/syslog.log-1
Rebooted the router, I will wait till tomorrow midday for anything to show up in the log and it grows beyond 0 bytes
Looks like you need to go back to this post and find out where your log files actually are:OK I let Skynet do it's thing all night, log file is still 0 bytes, in my old router the files grew before your eyes, HELP please
syslogloc="/opt/var/log/skynet-0.log"
syslog1loc="/tmp/syslog.log-1"
Does the new router get a real public IP?OK I let Skynet do it's thing all night, log file is still 0 bytes, in my old router the files grew before your eyes, HELP please
iptables -t raw -nvL
Because you have scribe installed.I did this and in my case my logs are located in different places to the default.
It seems like your router isn’t directly facing the internet. What is the first part of your WAN IP address?
The router is connected to a cable modem from my provider, first part of the WAN IP is 85.147.It seems like your router isn’t directly facing the internet. What is the first part of your WAN IP address?
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