top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

Ubuntu: Disable the Graphic Picture and see the kernel messages on boot

+1 vote
302 views

I use Ubuntu Raring and I need to be able to see the kernel messages on boot. How do I disable the default graphic Ubuntu picture with a console displaying the kernel messages?

posted Jan 11, 2014 by Deepak Dasgupta

Share this question
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button
If you just want to analyse kernel messages, read /var/log/syslog

1 Answer

+2 votes

Edit /etc/default/grub and remove quiet splash from GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT then run

sudo update-grub

check the following link https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2

answer Jan 11, 2014 by Majula Joshi
Similar Questions
+2 votes

I installed the NUT monitor from the Ubunut Software Center. The Ubuntu Software Center lists version 2.6.4-2.3ubuntu2 but when I look at the NUT Monitor ABOUT the program has version 1.3!

I am replacing an old computer running OS/2 as a file and print server for my home LAN with a new computer running Ubuntu. I moved the UPS serial connection from the old computer to the new one but am having problems getting UPS logging to work. When I boot the computer UPSLOG starts but is not finding the UPS so the log is full of useless data. How do I find which file starts the UPSLOG?

As a side problem it appears that the UPSLOG does not operate as the documentation describes. I added a file for the logrotate program which does rotate the log but other than that does not appear to work. When the logrotate program runs the logger stops when it gets the "kill -HUP" signal instead of continuing with the new log file.

I have read the readme file but there is not much about installation. I have looked at some documentation on the internet trying to get this installed but the documentation does not match the configuration files I have on my system. Anyone know where I can find documentation that matches the version I have?

+1 vote

I want to get rid of mac os x but it seem the mac os firmware are not compatible with current linux? So I have to keep the mac os partition and mac os.
Is there anyone who managed to remove mac os x entirely and will 16.04 be able to do this?

0 votes

I am running Ubuntu 12.04.2 and run the updates manually on a regular basis from the command line. I noticed that the Kernel gets updated too often...
I know I am supposed to reboot the machine after a Kernel update, but that means rebooting every two days. One of the things I like to do is run the uptime command and smile :-)
1. Why does the Kernel get updated so often?
2. How do I find the change log, so I can decide if I need to update / restart the machine?

+1 vote

Ubuntu 13.04 (Gnome) is telling me that my /boot partition on (/dev/sda1) is 96% full.

Is the best option to boot from Knoppix & resize the partition or is it safe to delete all the old kernels to free up the space? If I can safely delete the kernels, what's the best way to go about it?

+2 votes

I have installed Ubuntu 13.04 with Window 7 but it is not appear in boot menu and window 7 is running as before installation of Ubuntu. I have installed Ubuntu using partition option.

...