On Wed, Jun 12, 2002 at 04:22:09PM -0400, seth vidal wrote: > logging will soon be like this: > > yum -d 0-1 == nothing, only serious errors that cause an exit > yum -d 2 == standard output - just informational messages, questions, > etc > yum -d 3+ == debug - gratuitous output - increasing as the number > increases > > error logs would always get printed and file (syslog-style) logs would > also always occur. > > the -d # would only affect output and debug logs. Let me see if I get this. 1) -d # has no effect on what's printed to the log file 2) -d # has no effect on the printing of errors (they're always printed to stdout or stderr) 3) -d # only effects HOW MUCH stuff gets printed to stdout/stderr Is that right? If so, it sounds good to me. I take it the default is 2 and -d 0 is for things like cron jobs? Is there a difference between 0 and 1? -Michael -- Michael Stenner Office Phone: 919-660-2513 Duke University, Dept. of Physics mstenner@xxxxxxxxxxxx Box 90305, Durham N.C. 27708-0305