Robert Nesius: > My one thought is to check syslogd.conf (usually in /etc) and make sure > syslogd is configured to log the messages your program is sending. If not > configured properly, syslogd will drop them. I don't have an /etc/syslogd.conf or /etc/syslog.conf. I read somewhere that they changed the name of /etc/syslog.conf to /etc/rsyslog.conf and I do have that file. I sent a copy of that file to the user and asked him to compare it to his copy -- although I'm not sure if he has that file on his machine. He checked yesterday though on his machine and he didn't have /etc/syslog.conf file either. My guess is this is on the right track, but have no idea how the default configurations differ between the distributions. Brian -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20110622/2ceaa978/attachment.html>