You are right.
When I do not stop mountall /var/log/boot.log gets written without enabling bootlogd in /etc/default/bootlogd.
A minor nit is that the time of the file is wrong, it's two hours behind.
Her the shell output 5 minutes after boot:
# ls -al /var/log/boot.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 19029 2010-04-16 16:50 /var/log/boot.log
# date
Fr 16. Apr 18:55:15 CEST 2010
You are right. bootlogd.
When I do not stop mountall /var/log/boot.log gets written without enabling bootlogd in /etc/default/
A minor nit is that the time of the file is wrong, it's two hours behind.
Her the shell output 5 minutes after boot:
# ls -al /var/log/boot.log
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 19029 2010-04-16 16:50 /var/log/boot.log
# date
Fr 16. Apr 18:55:15 CEST 2010
upstart-udev-bridge is running:
# ls -al /etc/init/ upstart- udev-bridge. conf upstart- udev-bridge. conf
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 313 2009-09-15 15:15 /etc/init/
# status upstart-udev-bridge
upstart-udev-bridge start/running, process 493