Linux logs are one of the most important tools for troubleshooting and debugging systems. In this video, you will learn how Linux logs work and how system administrators use them to investigate crashes, monitor system health, and debug problems.
Logs act like a recorder that keeps track of everything happening inside your Linux system — from system activity and user actions to application errors and security events.
In this lesson we will cover:
• What Linux logs are and why they are important
• Where logs are stored in Linux systems
• Understanding the /var/log directory
• The modern logging system: systemd and journalctl
• System logs vs application logs
• Authentication and security logs
• Web server logs (Apache and Nginx)
• Package manager logs
• Log rotation and why logs don’t grow forever
You will also learn the real debugging mindset used by Linux administrators and DevOps engineers, including how to identify problems and read logs efficiently.
Commands covered in this video include:
journalctl
journalctl -xe
journalctl -u nginx
tail -f /var/log/syslog
grep "error" /var/log/syslog
By the end of this video, you will understand how to use logs to investigate errors, monitor services, and debug Linux systems like a professional.
This video is part of a Linux learning series designed to help beginners build real system administration and DevOps skills.
📚 Video Chapters
00:00 What Are Logs in Linux
00:30 Why Are Logs So Important
01:09 Location of Logs in Linux
01:42 Types of Logs in Linux
02:15 System Logs vs Application Logs
03:18 How to Debug Using Logs (Step-by-Step)
#linux #linuxlogs #journalctl #syslog #devops #linuxadmin #linuxforbeginners
En esta página del sitio puede ver el video en línea Linux Logs Explained | /var/log, journalctl & Real Debugging Guide | Linux Tutorial de Duración hora minuto segunda en buena calidad , que subió el usuario MaxOps 05 marzo 2026, comparta el enlace con amigos y conocidos, en youtube este video ya ha sido visto 432 veces y le gustó 18 a los espectadores. Disfruta viendo!