The iPhone Wiki is no longer updated. Visit this article on The Apple Wiki for current information. |
Difference between revisions of "System Log"
(noting coreutils) |
(more detail) |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
This method will constantly write syslog output to a file. This is not recommended as it is slower, and can become fairly large. Install "syslog to /var/log/syslog" from [[saurik]]'s repo and reboot your device. <tt>/var/log/syslog</tt> will now be appended to automatically, and you can watch it like so: |
This method will constantly write syslog output to a file. This is not recommended as it is slower, and can become fairly large. Install "syslog to /var/log/syslog" from [[saurik]]'s repo and reboot your device. <tt>/var/log/syslog</tt> will now be appended to automatically, and you can watch it like so: |
||
tail -f /var/log/syslog |
tail -f /var/log/syslog |
||
− | (The "tail" command is in the package "Core Utilities" (coreutils) in Cydia/Telesphoreo.) If you keep your device full of data, be careful you don't fill the disk. Unix systems tend to break when they can't write to the syslog. Keep an eye on it or employ some log rotation. |
+ | (The "tail" command is in the package "Core Utilities" (coreutils) in the Cydia/Telesphoreo repository.) If you keep your device full of data, be careful you don't fill the disk. Unix systems tend to break when they can't write to the syslog. Keep an eye on it or employ some log rotation. |
To disable syslog writing, run: |
To disable syslog writing, run: |
Revision as of 20:24, 10 February 2014
Contents
Reading syslog
On-device
As iOS is Unix based, it comes as no surprise that its syslog can be read using the same tools desktop Unix and Linux power users use; provided the tools are compiled for ARM. The most common tool is socat(1)
[man]. If you don't have it yet, just run an apt-get
on the package socat
. In order to use it, just connect to the syslog socket with the following command:
socat - UNIX-CONNECT:/var/run/lockdown/syslog.sock
This gives an interactive shell with the syslog daemon (no need to enable file output). If you execute the watch
command, a backlog of messages will be printed and new messages will be printed as they arrive.
On OS X through lockdownd
A binary (and its source code) to view ASL messages from Mac using the MobileDevice.framework has been made available on http://newosxbook.com/index.php?page=downloads. Ryan Petrich's deviceconsole also provides the same functionality with useful color-coding.
On Windows through lockdownd
Apple's iPhone Configuration Utility can display the syslog on Windows.
bgm's trick for enabling system log
This method will constantly write syslog output to a file. This is not recommended as it is slower, and can become fairly large. Install "syslog to /var/log/syslog" from saurik's repo and reboot your device. /var/log/syslog will now be appended to automatically, and you can watch it like so:
tail -f /var/log/syslog
(The "tail" command is in the package "Core Utilities" (coreutils) in the Cydia/Telesphoreo repository.) If you keep your device full of data, be careful you don't fill the disk. Unix systems tend to break when they can't write to the syslog. Keep an eye on it or employ some log rotation.
To disable syslog writing, run:
rm /var/log/syslog; mknod /var/log/syslog c 3 2
This will delete (rm) the file and create a /dev/null. (mknod *** c 3 2)
To re-enable syslog writing, run:
rm /var/log/syslog touch /var/log/syslog
This will delete (rm) the file and and make a blank regular file. (touch)
SBSettings Toggle
An SBSettings toggle for enabling/disabling the syslog in this way is available at BigBoss' Cydia repository. Ensure "syslog to /var/log/syslog" is installed - the toggle package hasn't marked it as a dependency.