Date: Tue, 8 Jul 1997 20:28:10 -0400 From: "Donald J. Maddox" <dmaddox@scsn.net> To: chaos@tgci.com Cc: freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: (Fwd) garbage from syslogd after compiling new kernel Message-ID: <19970708202810.32672@scsn.net> In-Reply-To: <199707082316.QAA14509@train.tgci.com>; from Riley J. McIntire on Tue, Jul 08, 1997 at 04:18:38PM %2B0000 References: <199707082316.QAA14509@train.tgci.com>
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On Tue, Jul 08, 1997 at 04:18:38PM +0000, Riley J. McIntire wrote:
>
> > Riley J. McIntire wrote:
> > >
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > Could the disabling KTRACE cause the syslog output I got below?
>
> snip
>
> > > \^[[m\^[[20;1H\^[[m\^[[21;1H\^[[m\^[[2;1H\^[[m\^[[7m\^[[m\ > wdc0:
> > > disabled, not probed. > ccd0-3: Concatenated disk drivers
> >
> > This looks like the kind of stuff (cursor control sequences, etc.)
> > that
> > doing a visual userconfig might leave in your logs...
> >
> That's most likely it--I used it right after rebuilding this kernel.
>
> I was kinda concerned about disabling KTRACE but couldn't find a
> reason not to. Is there any reason to enable it for "normal" use?
> It *is* enable by default, as are a number off other required
> "options".
As far as I know, there is no reason why you should _need_ KTRACE,
but I recommend keeping it. When a program is doing unexpected things,
the output of 'ktrace -i <prog>; kdump | more' can be very informative...
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