Guest Posted November 13, 2020 Share Posted November 13, 2020 NQ, how can I disable logs? I stand on my base in space and do nothing, 55-68 megabytes are formed in 5 minutes. I don't want to lose my SSD (3gb logs!!). The logs contain the same phrase. My position: ::pos{0,0,-1048701.6684,429378.2317,-273977.2866} Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted March 3, 2022 Share Posted March 3, 2022 Up Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CptLoRes Posted March 4, 2022 Share Posted March 4, 2022 sigh.. Yet another example in a long list of jankey NQ decisions. Why would anybody write code that output the same data over and over again to a log? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blundertwink Posted March 4, 2022 Share Posted March 4, 2022 5 hours ago, CptLoRes said: Why would anybody write code that output the same data over and over again to a log? Laziness and not caring -- they probably figure since logs are stored client side "why not" log as much as possible. There's two records with exactly the same time stamp in the original post (granted it is old) -- down to the milliseconds. Either timestamps are wrong or it is logging the same thing more than once per frame. It's rare for logging systems to care about logging duplicate data but logging the same thing more than once per frame is odd. The log level is set to "debug" -- that is typically the "lowest" log level that logs in the most excruciating detail. It isn't typically intended for production/clients. It's intended to have so much detail that you can...debug. This goes back to "lazy and not caring" because it's plausible that they could simply change it to log level "error" for production (so they only log actual errors) and only use "debug" as developers... Hopefully someone will make that switch if they haven't already (i haven't paid attention to my logs but probably should ?) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jinxed Posted March 6, 2022 Share Posted March 6, 2022 In windows can you map a folder to /dev/null? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CptLoRes Posted March 6, 2022 Share Posted March 6, 2022 Not easily. Maybe create a ram drive and use subst.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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