Hmm, I don't get it - is that what the 7w indicates? If so, there's no 6w...? syslog-ng 16624 root 0r CHR 1,3 2766 /dev/null syslog-ng 16624 root 1w CHR 1,3 2766 /dev/null syslog-ng 16624 root 2w CHR 1,3 2766 /dev/null syslog-ng 16624 root 3u unix 0xf5977a00 1630663 /dev/log syslog-ng 16624 root 4r REG 0,3 0 4026531989 /proc/kmsg syslog-ng 16624 root 5u IPv4 1630665 UDP *:syslog syslog-ng 16624 root 7w FIFO 0,6 1630666 pipe syslog-ng 16624 root 8u IPv4 1630668 UDP rtpnml-x.x.com:34385->rtpnml-cx.x.com:syslog syslog-ng 16624 root 9w REG 8,1 35140533 589847 /var/log/syslog syslog-ng 16624 root 10w REG 8,1 40295 590246 /var/log/messages syslog-ng 16624 root 11u FIFO 0,14 4729 /dev/xconsole syslog-ng 16624 root 12w REG 8,1 235784055 590214 /var/log/debug syslog-ng 16624 root 13w REG 8,1 24455288 588819 /var/log/auth.log On Mon, Jun 8, 2009 at 3:38 AM, Sandor Geller<Sandor.Geller@morganstanley.com> wrote:
Hi,
On Sun, Jun 7, 2009 at 5:15 PM, Clayton Dukes<cdukes@gmail.com> wrote:
Alrighty! I think I have the culprit...
Are you sure that fd=6 refers to the pipe in question? That can be checked using lsof.
I checked lsof, but didn't find anything other than a pipe (I think)
syslog-ng 1009 root 7w FIFO 0,6 1232190 pipe
You've misinterpreted lsof's output. This is fd 7, not 6. So, what is fd 6 then?
Regards,
Sandor
-- ______________________________________________________________ Clayton Dukes ______________________________________________________________