Hi Marco,
In my opinion, I think we should install rsyslog above on the container. You could create a new image for ubuntu 18.04 for never do it again.
Like what I said, could be it happened on the image of Proxmox, so you should install the newest package of rsyslog on the container.
By default, Ubuntu 18.04 rsyslogd version is rsyslogd 8.32.0.
This is a result after upgrade:
$ rsyslogd -version rsyslogd 8.40.0, compiled with: PLATFORM: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu PLATFORM (lsb_release -d): FEATURE_REGEXP: Yes GSSAPI Kerberos 5 support: No FEATURE_DEBUG (debug build, slow code): No 32bit Atomic operations supported: Yes 64bit Atomic operations supported: Yes memory allocator: system default Runtime Instrumentation (slow code): No uuid support: Yes systemd support: Yes Number of Bits in RainerScript integers: 64
See https://www.rsyslog.com for more information.
Hi Marco,
In my opinion, I think we should install rsyslog above on the container. You could create a new image for ubuntu 18.04 for never do it again.
Like what I said, could be it happened on the image of Proxmox, so you should install the newest package of rsyslog on the container.
By default, Ubuntu 18.04 rsyslogd version is rsyslogd 8.32.0.
This is a result after upgrade:
$ rsyslogd -version
rsyslogd 8.40.0, compiled with:
PLATFORM: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
PLATFORM (lsb_release -d):
FEATURE_REGEXP: Yes
GSSAPI Kerberos 5 support: No
FEATURE_DEBUG (debug build, slow code): No
32bit Atomic operations supported: Yes
64bit Atomic operations supported: Yes
memory allocator: system default
Runtime Instrumentation (slow code): No
uuid support: Yes
systemd support: Yes
Number of Bits in RainerScript integers: 64
See https:/ /www.rsyslog. com for more information.