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Squeezebox Controller Messages File

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There are system log messages stored in a file on the Squeezebox Controller. These are often useful for debugging things.

Contents

Sample code

 122539:3718 INFO (NetworkThread.lua:249) - NOTIFY: serverDisconnected(SlimServer {DaddyMac-313.local}, 1)
 122539:3718 INFO (SlimDiscoveryApplet.lua:422) - serverDisconnected SlimServer {DaddyMac-313.local}
 122539:3718 INFO (SlimBrowserApplet.lua:533) - _connectingToPlayer popup show
 122539:3719 INFO (AppletManager.lua:235) - Registering: SetupDateTime
 122539:3719 INFO (AppletManager.lua:235) - Registering: SelectPlayer
 122539:3733 INFO (AppletManager.lua:235) - Registering: SetupWallpaper
 122539:3742 INFO (AppletManager.lua:445) - Loaded: SetupWallpaper
 122539:3742 INFO (SetupWallpaperApplet.lua:361) - SetupWallpaper, setting wallpaper for wallpaper
 122539:3752 INFO (AppletManager.lua:586) - Freeing: SetupWallpaper
 122539:3753 INFO (AppletManager.lua:445) - Loaded: SetupWallpaper
 122539:3753 INFO (AppletManager.lua:445) - Loaded: SelectPlayer
 122539:3753 INFO (AppletManager.lua:235) - Registering: SetupSqueezebox
 122539:3753 INFO (AppletManager.lua:235) - Registering: DesktopJive
 122539:3753 INFO (AppletManager.lua:235) - Registering: SetupAppletInstaller
 122539:3753 INFO (AppletManager.lua:235) - Registering: LogSettings
 122539:3753 INFO (AppletManager.lua:235) - Registering: InfoBrowser
 122539:3754 INFO (AppletManager.lua:235) - Registering: BlankScreen

Within an applet, if you load in the log methods

 local log = require('jive.utils.log').logger("applets.misc")

Where applets.misc is a category for logging described in jive.utils.log (aka jive/utils/log.lua, or full path on a running controller /usr/share/jive/jive/utils/log.lua)

Then anywhere in your code where you want a log message to print to the messages file, you call a logging method like so:

  log:warn('This is a warning')

Where "warn" is a logging level. Supported logging levels are debug, info, warn, and error. The log level for a given category is described at jive.utils.log, and can be changed by either editing that file, or (if an SD card is present in the controller), by navigating to Settings->Advanced->Logging

Viewing Additions to the Messages File on a Controller in Real-Time

  • Enable ssh by navigating to Settings->Advanced->Remote Login. After checking the checkbox for enabling remote login, there will be a help message that tells you the IP address of the controller. Note this address.
  • SSH into the machine using an SSH client (on Linux or OS X, just open a terminal and type `ssh root@<ip address of controller noted in previous step>`, on Windows putty.exe is a good client to use, or use cygwin)
  • default password of controller is `1234`
  • use the tail command with the -f flag to view the message file as it is written. From the tail man page:
    -f      The -f option causes tail to not stop when end of file is reached, but rather to wait for additional data to be appended to the
            input.  The -f option is ignored if the standard input is a pipe, but not if it is a FIFO.
  • messages file is typically at either /var/log/messages, or if you have an SD card inserted that has a log subdirectory, /mnt/mmc/log/messages
   tail -f /var/log/messages

Extracting the Messages File from a Controller

Getting the messages file off the controller is not difficult, and there are two typical ways of doing it.

SD card

Create a top-level directory called "log" on an SD card, then insert it into the controller. The log file will then be written to the SD card at /media/.../log/messages, and can be browsed to when mounting the SD card back to a PC.

SCPing the file

Enable remote login as described in a section of this page above, then use scp (aka secure copy) to copy the file over ssh to your local PC. Again, on Linux and OS X, command-line scp will work fine:

   scp root@<your controller ip address>:/var/log/messages /some/local/path/messages

On Windows, try Cygwin or Filezilla for your SCPing needs.