09-20-2014, 04:12 PM
I had the exact same problem.
After digging around, the problem was surprisingly simple:
All the log files in /var/log affected, were owned by root.
simply changing them to syslog.adm fixed the issue. I went throug the settings file /etc/rsyslog.d/50-defaout.conf and modified the ownership of each file listed.
There!
After digging around, the problem was surprisingly simple:
All the log files in /var/log affected, were owned by root.
simply changing them to syslog.adm fixed the issue. I went throug the settings file /etc/rsyslog.d/50-defaout.conf and modified the ownership of each file listed.
There!