Logs system messages.
syslogd [-a] [ -d ] [ -s ] [ -f ConfigurationFile ] [ -m MarkInterval ] [ -r ] [ -R ] [ -n ] [ -N ] [ -p LogName ] [ -M all ] [ -A AdditionalLog ] [-e]
The syslogd daemon reads a datagram socket and sends each message line to a destination described by the /etc/syslog.conf configuration file. The syslogd daemon reads the configuration file when it is activated and when it receives a hangup signal.
The syslogd daemon creates the /etc/syslog.pid file, which contains a single line with the command process ID used to end or reconfigure the syslogd daemon.
A terminate signal sent to the syslogd daemon ends the daemon. The syslogd daemon logs the end-signal information and terminates immediately.
Each message is one line. A message can contain a priority code, marked by a digit enclosed in < > (angle braces) at the beginning of the line. Messages longer than 900 bytes may be truncated.
The /usr/include/sys/syslog.h include file defines the facility and priority codes used by the configuration file. Locally written applications use the definitions contained in the syslog.h file to log messages via the syslogd daemon.
Item | Description |
---|---|
-a | Suppresses the reverse host name lookup for the messages coming from the remote host and logs the IP address of the remote host in the log files. |
-d | Turns on debugging. |
-e | Specifies enhanced rotation. All compressed and uncompressed files that are available in the log directory and that are created by the syslogd daemon are considered for rotation. |
-f ConfigurationFile | Specifies an alternate configuration file. |
-m MarkInterval | Specifies the number of minutes between the mark command messages. If you do not use this flag, the mark command sends a message with LOG_INFO priority sent every 20 minutes. This facility is not enabled by a selector field containing an * (asterisk), which selects all other facilities. |
-M all | Specifies not to suppress duplicate messages in logfile. This flag is valid only if used with the all argument. |
-s | Specifies to forward a "shortened" message to another system (if it is configured to do so) for all the forwarding syslog messages generated on the local system. |
-r | Suppresses logging of messages received from remote hosts. |
-R | Disables the facility to receive messages from the network using the internet domain socket. |
-n | Suppresses the "Message forwarded from <log_host_name>: " string added to the beginning of the syslog message that is forwarded to a remote log host. |
-N | Suppresses logging of priority and facility information for each log message. |
-p | Specifies an alternate path name for the UNIX datagram socket. |
-A AdditionalLog | Specifies additional logs that the syslogd daemon checks. By default, the syslogd daemon checks the /dev/log file for messages. If this flag is specified, it also checks the additional files for messages. The additional logs might be in the chroot path. |
The configuration file informs the syslogd daemon where to send a system message, depending on the message's priority level and the facility that generated it.
If you do not use the -f flag, the syslogd daemon reads the default configuration file, the /etc/syslog.conf file.
The syslogd daemon ignores blank lines and lines beginning with a number sign (#).
Format
Lines in the configuration file for the syslogd daemon contain a selector field, an action field, and an optional rotation field, separated by one or more tabs or spaces.
The selector field names a facility and a priority level. Separate facility names with a , (comma). Separate the facility and priority-level portions of the selector field with a . (period). Separate multiple entries in the same selector field with a ; (semicolon). To select all facilities, use an * (asterisk).
The action field identifies a destination (file, host, or user) to receive the messages. If routed to a remote host, the remote system will handle the message as indicated in its own configuration file. To display messages on a user's terminal, the destination field must contain the name of a valid, logged-in system user.
The rotation field identifies how rotation is used. If the action field is a file, then rotation can be based on size or time, or both. One can also compress and/or archive the rotated files.
Facilities
Use the following system facility names in the selector field:
Facility | Description |
---|---|
kern | Kernel |
user | User level |
Mail subsystem | |
daemon | System daemons |
auth | Security or authorization |
syslog | syslogd daemon |
lpr | Line-printer subsystem |
news | News subsystem |
uucp | uucp subsystem |
local0 through local7 | Local use |
* | All facilities |
Priority Levels
Use the following message priority levels in the selector field. Messages of the specified priority level and all levels above it are sent as directed.
Priority Level | Description |
---|---|
emerg | Specifies emergency messages (LOG_EMERG). These messages are not distributed to all users. LOG_EMERG priority messages can be logged into a separate file for reviewing. |
alert | Specifies important messages (LOG_ALERT), such as a serious hardware error. These messages are distributed to all users. |
crit | Specifies critical messages not classified as errors (LOG_CRIT), such as improper login attempts. LOG_CRIT and higher-priority messages are sent to the system console. |
err | Specifies messages that represent error conditions (LOG_ERR), such as an unsuccessful disk write. |
warning | Specifies messages for abnormal, but recoverable, conditions (LOG_WARNING). |
notice | Specifies important informational messages (LOG_NOTICE). Messages without a priority designation are mapped into this priority message. |
info | Specifies informational messages (LOG_INFO). These messages can be discarded, but are useful in analyzing the system. |
debug | Specifies debugging messages (LOG_DEBUG). These messages may be discarded. |
none | Excludes the selected facility. This priority level is useful only if preceded by an entry with an * (asterisk) in the same selector field. |
Destinations
Use the following message destinations in the action field.
Destination | Description |
---|---|
File Name | Full path name of a file opened in append mode |
@Host | Host name, preceded by @ (at sign) |
User[, User][...] | User names |
* | All users |
centralizedlog LogSpaceName/LogStreamName | PowerHA® pureScale® logstream Note: You
must have PowerHA pureScale appliance to use
thecentralizedlog LogSpaceName/LogStreamName message destination.
|
Rotation
Use the following rotation keywords in the rotation field.
Keyword | Description |
---|---|
rotate | This keyword must be specified after the action field. |
size | This keyword specifies that rotation is based on size. It is followed by a number and either a k (kilobytes) or m(megabytes). |
time | This keyword specifies that rotation is based on time. It is followed by a number and either a h(hour) or d(day) or w(week) or m(month) or y(year). |
files | This keyword specifies the total number of rotated files. It is followed by a number. If not specified, then there are unlimited number of rotated files. |
compress | This keyword specifies that the saved rotated files will be compressed. |
archive | This keyword specifies that the saved rotated files will be copied to a directory. It is followed by the directory name. |
Effect of command line flags on syslogd rotation:
mail.debug /tmp/mailsyslog
*.debug;mail.none @rigil
*.emerg;mail,daemon.crit nick, jam
mail.debug *
*.debug /tmp/syslog.out rotate size 500k time 1w files 10 compress archive /syslogfiles
Item | Description |
---|---|
/etc/syslog.conf | Controls the output of syslogd. |
/etc/syslog.pid | Contains the process ID. |