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I searched the manual for the log files individually, but there is nothing. Absolutely nothing.
Freedom is impossible to conceive.
Books that help:
Dale Carnegie's How To Win Friends And Influence People and Emilie Post's Etiquette In Society, In Business, In Politics, And At Home
There is no 1-to-1 correlation between display and logs. A correlation exists but is loose. Some messages may be displayed but not in logs, or the other way around.
The messages in your screen shots are kernel messages. You can find them in kern.log, and also in syslog (among messages from other sources). Most are ACPI errors (usually harmless), others are related to missing firmware files for the ATI/AMD GPU and a bluetooth controller. You need to install the firmware-amd-graphics package.
p.H wrote:There is no 1-to-1 correlation between display and logs. A correlation exists but is loose. Some messages may be displayed but not in logs, or the other way around.
Is this not an irrational design? A rational design would have been to log all errors to individual log files exhaustively. Wouldn't it be? Just rhetorically speaking, of course.
Thank you for the rest lines. Actually, Debian works without my installing the graphics card. So I didn't install the driver.
Freedom is impossible to conceive.
Books that help:
Dale Carnegie's How To Win Friends And Influence People and Emilie Post's Etiquette In Society, In Business, In Politics, And At Home
bkpsusmitaa wrote:Is this not an irrational design?
No.
Displayed are not all errors.
There is a lot of information which is logged but not displayed for clarity.
Some errors cannot be logged because they happen before the logging facility is active.
Agreed that logging is not always possible and also optimised for effeciency and speed, Also possibly for real-time errors.
But shouldn't the control to log extensively, whichever processes practicable, lie at the hands of users, especially for problem-solving?
You need not post a reply, as this is just a rhetorical statement / thinking aloud.
Freedom is impossible to conceive.
Books that help:
Dale Carnegie's How To Win Friends And Influence People and Emilie Post's Etiquette In Society, In Business, In Politics, And At Home