так все таки в fstab ниче не менять не надо?
proc /proc proc defaults 0 0
UUID=254060a0-73e5-4791-b07e-bbab5b113bba / ext3 relatime,errors=remount-ro,noatime,data=writeback 0 1
UUID=b92ba0f8-9619-4ac7-83d7-41c289faba0d none swap sw 0 0
tmpfs /tmp tmpfs defaults,noatime,mode=1777 0 0
tmpfs /var/log tmpfs defaults 0 0
tmpfs /tmp tmpfs defaults 0 0
tmpfs /var/tmp tmpfs defaults 0 0
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Пользователь решил продолжить мысль 21 Апреля 2010, 22:37:27:
Нашел вот это:
If you really wanted to disable your system logs, I suppose you could reconfigure /etc/syslog.conf so it didn't bother writing out any received messages. Doing that is absolutely not recommended though.
If what you're interested in doing is reducing disk accesses, you should probably consider storing /var/log in RAM, rather than on flash memory. You could then reconfigure logrotate to write your logs to disk all in one go (on shutdown, for example). Another alternative would be to write log data to another computer's syslog, or perhaps a remote MySQL database.
One thing worth noting is that syslog won't necessarily give you 100% coverage of all your log files, since applications aren't obliged to use the facility. Samba is a common example of one that tends not to, unless you make it. Whatever solution you choose, you'll have to experiment a bit to make sure you're intercepting all your logs.
подходит ли это?