From Fedora Project Wiki
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# If necessary, reboot your system after the installation. | # If necessary, reboot your system after the installation. | ||
|actions= | |actions= | ||
# If you are | # If you are using a graphical environment, open a terminal window. | ||
# Check if system logging facility is working ({{command|tail}} can be replaced with {{command|less}} in the following): | # Check if system logging facility is working ({{command|tail}} can be replaced with {{command|less}} in the following): | ||
## {{command| tail /var/log/messages}} | ## {{command| su -c 'tail /var/log/messages'}} | ||
## {{command| tail /var/log/secure}} | ## {{command| su -c 'tail /var/log/secure'}} | ||
|results= | |results= |
Revision as of 18:59, 24 June 2011
Description
This test case tests if system logging infrastructure is available and working as expected.
Setup
- Install Fedora using one of the following methods:
- Boot ISO: QA/TestCases/InstallSourceBootIso
- DVD: QA/TestCases/InstallSourceDvd
- Live Image: QA:TestCases/Install_Source_Live_Image
- If necessary, reboot your system after the installation.
How to test
- If you are using a graphical environment, open a terminal window.
- Check if system logging facility is working (
tail
can be replaced withless
in the following):su -c 'tail /var/log/messages'
su -c 'tail /var/log/secure'
Expected Results
- Log files should not be empty.
- The last entries in logs should correspond to the current date and time.