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by seren
4055 days ago
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It is not about reading 40 years old logs, but rather reading logs from today generated by 40 years old system. For example, many nuclear power plant in the west were built 40 years ago. Amongst the myriad of sensors, devices in a power plant, I think that most of them are outputting ASCII logs. There are still readable today. (Same can be said about avionics, space probes, etc.) Now imagine yourself 40 years from now on, trying to fix or reverse engineer a very legacy system, you will have to recompile a journalctl from 40 years ago before being able to read anything. |
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40 years from now, you will probably be able to invoke journalctl on the system and parse the dumped output as plain text. Or call gunzip on the compressed logs, $DEITY knows if we will be still using gzip by then. And if the system does not boot, you won't be able to connect the peripherals anywhere else... :)