If I’m using Arch or another minimal distro, is it a good idea to install a syslog daemon? Or can I go without?
If you’re on arch you use redhat’s garbage. On non-corpo linux syslog can be disabled if you want, though I’d prefer to just symlink/mount /var/log to a memory filesystem instead.
On non-corpo linux syslog can be disabled
systemctl disable --now systemd-journald
I’d prefer to just symlink/mount /var/log to a memory filesystem instead
Set Storage=volatile
in /etc/systemd/journald.conf
Like how you cropped my message to make it seem like I was implying you couldn’t disable logging on systemd
Then what’s the meaning of this whole part?
On non-corpo linux syslog can be disabled if you want, though I’d prefer to just symlink/mount /var/log to a memory filesystem instead.
Is it just a random tidbit that could be replaced with a blueberry muffin recipe without any change of meaning of the whole comment? Because it sure won’t help OP at all with their Arch-specific question, so it’s either that, or it provides contrast to the “corpo Linux”, which is how I interpreted it.
And here’s the remaining part of your comment I left out, just to make sure people won’t lose the context between two three sentence long comments (for those without any attention span, it comes before the previous quoted part):
If you’re on arch you use redhat’s garbage.