Convert man pages to mdoc format, remove sysklogd.8 man page
- Major cleanup, simplifications, grammar corrections - Remove inappropriate sections - Update syntax and add tables for facility and priority Signed-off-by: Joachim Nilsson <troglobit@gmail.com>
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							| @@ -1 +1,583 @@ | ||||
| .so man8/sysklogd.8 | ||||
| .\"                                                              -*- nroff -*- | ||||
| .\" Copyright 1994-1996  Dr. Greg Wettstein, Enjellic Systems Development. | ||||
| .\" Copyright 1997-2008  Martin Schulze <joey@infodrom.org> | ||||
| .\" Copyright 2018-2019  Joachim Nilsson <troglobit@gmail.com> | ||||
| .\" | ||||
| .\" May be distributed under the GNU General Public License | ||||
| .\" | ||||
| .Dd Oct 30, 2019 | ||||
| .Dt syslogd 8 | ||||
| .Os "sysklogd (2.0)" | ||||
| .Sh NAME | ||||
| .Nm syslogd | ||||
| .Nd System Log Daemon | ||||
| .Sh SYNOPSIS | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| .Op Fl ?46Adhnrv | ||||
| .Op Fl a Ar SOCK | ||||
| .Op Fl f Ar FILE | ||||
| .Op Fl l Ar HOST[:HOST] | ||||
| .Op Fl m Ar MINUTES | ||||
| .Op Fl P Ar FILE | ||||
| .Op Fl p Ar SOCK | ||||
| .Op Fl R Ar size[:count] | ||||
| .Op Fl s Ar NAME[:NAME] | ||||
| .Sh DESCRIPTION | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| support RFC3164 and RFC5424 style log messages for both local and remote | ||||
| logging using Internet and UNIX domain sockets.  The companion daemon, | ||||
| .Xr klogd 8 , | ||||
| is used for trapping kernel messages and events. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| is derived from BSD sources, today | ||||
| .Fx | ||||
| is the reference for | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| and | ||||
| .Nx | ||||
| for the new | ||||
| .Xr syslogp 3 | ||||
| API, which fully supports the new features of RFC5424.  Please note; 1) | ||||
| the intention is to follow standard BSD | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| behavior, 2) despite having a stand-alone | ||||
| .Xr syslog 3 , | ||||
| and | ||||
| .Xr syslogp 3 | ||||
| API in | ||||
| .Lb libsyslog , | ||||
| this version of | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| interacts transparently with the standard C library | ||||
| .Xr syslog 3 | ||||
| API, as implemented in GLIBC, musl libc, and uClibc. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| When | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| starts up it reads its main configuration file | ||||
| .Pa /etc/syslog.conf , | ||||
| or an alternate file given with the | ||||
| .Fl f Ar FILE | ||||
| option.  For details on how to configure syslog priority | ||||
| (facility.severity) filtering, see | ||||
| .Xr syslog.conf 5 . | ||||
| .Sh OPTIONS | ||||
| .Bl -tag -width Ds | ||||
| .It Fl 4 | ||||
| Force | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| to use IPv4 addresses only. | ||||
| .It Fl 6 | ||||
| Force | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| to use IPv6 addresses only. | ||||
| .It Fl A | ||||
| Ordinarily, | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| tries to send the message to only one address even if the host has | ||||
| more than one A or AAAA record.  If this option is specified, | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| tries to send the message to all addresses. | ||||
| .It Fl a Ar SOCK | ||||
| Using this argument you can specify additional sockets from that | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| has to listen to.  This is needed if you're going to let some daemon | ||||
| run within a | ||||
| .Xr chroot 8 | ||||
| environment.  You can use up to 19 additional sockets.  If your | ||||
| environment needs even more, you have to increase the symbol | ||||
| .Ql MAXFUNIX | ||||
| within the | ||||
| .Pa syslogd.c | ||||
| source file. | ||||
| .It Fl d | ||||
| Turns on debug mode.  This implicitly enables | ||||
| .Fl n | ||||
| to prevent | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| from backgrounding itself.  Debug information is written to the current | ||||
| TTY.  SIGUSR1 is required to confirm continued debug messages when the | ||||
| daemon has finished started up.  See the | ||||
| .Sx DEBUGGING | ||||
| section for more information. | ||||
| .It Fl f Ar FILE | ||||
| Specify an alternative configuration file instead of the default | ||||
| .Pa /etc/syslog.conf . | ||||
| .It Fl h | ||||
| By default syslogd will not forward messages it receives from remote | ||||
| hosts.  Specifying this switch on the command line will cause the log | ||||
| daemon to forward any remote messages it receives to forwarding hosts | ||||
| which have been defined.  This can cause syslog loops that fill up hard | ||||
| disks quite fast and thus needs to be used with caution. | ||||
| .It Fl l Ar HOST | ||||
| Specify a hostname that should be logged only with its simple hostname | ||||
| and not the fqdn.  Multiple hosts may be specified using the colon (':') | ||||
| separator. | ||||
| .It Fl m Ar MINUTES | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| logs a mark timestamp regularly.  The default interval between two | ||||
| .Ql -- MARK -- | ||||
| lines is 20 minutes.  This can be changed with this option.  Setting | ||||
| this to zero disables log marks entirely. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| Depending on other log messages generated these lines may not be written | ||||
| consecutively.  The | ||||
| .Ql -- MARK -- | ||||
| message is only written if the log file hasn't been touched in | ||||
| .Ar MINUTES / 2 | ||||
| minutes. | ||||
| .It Fl n | ||||
| Run in foreground, required when run from a modern init/supervisor.  See | ||||
| your system | ||||
| .Xr init 8 | ||||
| for details. | ||||
| .It Fl P Ar FILE | ||||
| Specify an alternate file in which to store the process ID. | ||||
| The default is | ||||
| .Pa /var/run/syslog.pid . | ||||
| .It Fl p Ar SOCK | ||||
| Specify an alternate UNIX domain socket instead of the default | ||||
| .Pa /dev/log . | ||||
| .It Fl R Ar size[:count] | ||||
| Enable built-in support for log rotation of files listed in | ||||
| .Pa /etc/syslog.conf . | ||||
| This feature is particulary useful for small and embedded systems that | ||||
| do not want the overhead of | ||||
| .Xr cron 8 | ||||
| and | ||||
| .Xr logrotate 8 . | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| The option controls the max size and number of backup files kept by the | ||||
| built-in log-rotation.  When present on the command line it activates | ||||
| log rotation of all files with the given maximum size.  It is also | ||||
| possible to control log rotate per log file, see | ||||
| .Xr syslog.conf 5 | ||||
| for details. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| The size argument takes optional modifiers; k, M, G.  E.g., 100M is | ||||
| 100MB, 42k is 42 kB, etc. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| The optional number of files kept include both gzipped files and the | ||||
| first rotated (not zipped) file.  The default for this, when omitted, | ||||
| is 5. | ||||
| .It Fl r | ||||
| This option enables the facility to receive message from the network | ||||
| using an internet domain socket with the syslog service (see | ||||
| .Xr services 5 ). | ||||
| The default is to not receive any messages from the network. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| This option is introduced in version 1.3 of the | ||||
| .Nm sysklogd | ||||
| package.  Please note that the default behavior is the opposite of how | ||||
| older versions behave, so you might have to turn this on. | ||||
| .It Fl s NAME | ||||
| Specify domain name(s) to be stripped off before logging.  Multiple | ||||
| domains may be specified using the colon (':') separator.  Note, no | ||||
| sub-domains may be specified but only entire domains.  For example if | ||||
| .Fl s Ar north.de | ||||
| is specified and the host logging resolves to | ||||
| .Ql satu.infodrom.north.de | ||||
| nothing is stripped, instead two domains must be specified: | ||||
| .Fl s Ar north.de:infodrom.north.de . | ||||
| .It Fl v | ||||
| Print | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| version and exit. | ||||
| .Sh CONFIGURATION FILE SYNTAX DIFFERENCES | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| uses a slightly different syntax for its configuration file than the | ||||
| original BSD sources.  Originally all messages of a specific priority | ||||
| and above were forwarded to the log file. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| For example the following line caused ALL output from daemons using | ||||
| the daemon facilities (debug is the lowest priority, so every higher | ||||
| will also match) to go into  | ||||
| .Pa /usr/adm/daemons : | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| # Sample syslog.conf | ||||
| daemon.debug		/usr/adm/daemons | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| Under the new scheme this behavior remains the same.  The difference is | ||||
| the addition of four new specifiers, the asterisk ('*') wildcard, the | ||||
| equation sign ('='), the exclamation mark ('!'), and the minus sign | ||||
| ('-'). | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| The '*' specifies that all messages for the specified facility are to be | ||||
| directed to the destination.  Note that this behavior is degenerate with | ||||
| specifying a priority level of debug.  Users have indicated that the | ||||
| asterisk notation is more intuitive. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| The '=' wildcard is used to restrict logging to the specified priority | ||||
| class.  This allows, for example, routing only debug messages to a | ||||
| particular logging source. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| For example, the following line in | ||||
| .Pa syslog.conf | ||||
| directs debug messages from all sources to the | ||||
| .Pa /usr/adm/debug | ||||
| file. | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| # Sample syslog.conf | ||||
| *.=debug		/usr/adm/debug | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| .\" The '!' as the first character of a priority inverts the above | ||||
| .\" mentioned interpretation. | ||||
| The '!' is used to exclude logging of the specified priorities.  This | ||||
| affects all (!) possibilities of specifying priorities. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| For example the following lines in | ||||
| .Pa syslog.conf | ||||
| log all messages of facility | ||||
| .Ql mail | ||||
| except those with priority | ||||
| .Ql info | ||||
| to the | ||||
| .Pa /usr/adm/mail  | ||||
| file.  All messages from | ||||
| .Ql news.info | ||||
| (including) to | ||||
| .Ql news.crit | ||||
| (excluding) are logged to the | ||||
| .Pa /usr/adm/news | ||||
| file. | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| # Sample syslog.conf | ||||
| mail.*;mail.!=info	/usr/adm/mail | ||||
| news.info;news.!crit	/usr/adm/news | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| You may use it intuitively as an exception specifier.  The above | ||||
| mentioned interpretation is simply inverted.  Doing that you may use | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| mail.none | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| or | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| mail.!* | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| or | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| mail.!debug | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| to skip every message that comes with a mail facility.  There is much | ||||
| room to play with it. :-) | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| The '-' may only be used to prefix a filename if you want to omit | ||||
| sync'ing the file after every write to it. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| This may take some acclimatization for those individuals used to the | ||||
| pure BSD behavior but testers have indicated that this syntax is | ||||
| somewhat more flexible than the BSD behavior.  Note that these changes | ||||
| do not affect standard | ||||
| .Xr syslog.conf 5 | ||||
| files.  You must specifically modify the configuration files to obtain | ||||
| the new features. | ||||
| .Sh REMOTE LOGGING | ||||
| The following modifications provide network support to the | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| facility.  Network support means that messages can be forwarded from one | ||||
| node running | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| to another node running | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| where they will be actually logged to a disk file. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| This feature is enabled using the | ||||
| .Fl r | ||||
| option on the command line.  The default behavior to not listen to | ||||
| network connections. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| The strategy is to have syslogd listen on a UNIX domain socket for | ||||
| locally generated log messages.  This behavior will allow syslogd to | ||||
| inter-operate with the syslog found in the standard C library.  At the | ||||
| same time syslogd listens on the standard syslog port for messages | ||||
| forwarded from other hosts.  To have this work correctly the | ||||
| .Xr services 5 | ||||
| files (typically found in | ||||
| .Pa /etc/servces ) | ||||
| must have the following entry: | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| syslog          514/udp | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| If this entry is missing | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| cannot receive remote messages, or send them, because the UDP port cannot | ||||
| be determined.  Instead | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| will die immediately with an error message. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| To forward messages to to a remote host, replace the file line in the | ||||
| .Pa syslog.conf | ||||
| file with the name of the hostname to which the messages is to be sent | ||||
| prepended with an at ('@') sign.  For remote logging the hostname can | ||||
| also be appended with the flag | ||||
| .Ql ;RFC5424 | ||||
| to enable RFC5424 style formatting which includes RFC3339 timestamp and | ||||
| hostname information, which is not included in the default BSD | ||||
| .Nm . | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| For example, to forward | ||||
| .Sy ALL | ||||
| messages to a remote host use the following | ||||
| .Pa syslog.conf | ||||
| entry: | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| # Sample syslogd configuration file to forward all message | ||||
| # messages to a remote host using RFC5424 style formatting | ||||
| *.*			@hostname;RFC5424 | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| To forward all | ||||
| .Ql kernel | ||||
| messages to a remote host the configuration file would be as follows: | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| # Sample configuration file to forward all kernel | ||||
| # messages to a remote host. | ||||
| kern.*		@hostname | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| If the remote hostname cannot be resolved at startup, because the | ||||
| name-server might not be accessible (it may be started after | ||||
| .Nm ), | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| will retry resolving the name ten times before logging the error. | ||||
| Another possibility to avoid this is to place the hostname in | ||||
| .Pa /etc/hosts . | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| To avoid syslog-loops (messages that were received from a remote host | ||||
| are sent back to the same host, or more complicated to a third host that | ||||
| sends it back to the first one, and so on), | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| by default does not forward remote messages to another remote server. | ||||
| If this for some reason is required, use the | ||||
| .Fl h | ||||
| option on the command line.  However, this option needs to be handled | ||||
| with caution since a syslog loop can fill up hard disks quite fast. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| If the remote host is located in the same domain as the host, | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| is running on, only the simple hostname will be logged instead of the | ||||
| whole FQDN. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| In a local network you may provide a central log server to have all the | ||||
| important information kept on one machine.  If the network consists of | ||||
| different domains, you may want to use the strip-domain feature | ||||
| .Fl s . | ||||
| See above. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| Using the | ||||
| .Fl l | ||||
| option it is possibile to define single hosts as local machines.  This | ||||
| also results in logging only their simple hostnames and not the FQDNs. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| The UDP socket used to forward messages to remote hosts or to receive | ||||
| messages from them is only opened when it is needed.  In releases | ||||
| prior to 1.3-23 it was opened every time but not opened for reading or | ||||
| forwarding respectively. | ||||
| .Sh OUTPUT TO NAMED PIPES (FIFOs) | ||||
| This version of syslogd has support for logging output to named pipes | ||||
| (fifos).  A FIFO or named pipe can be used as a destination for log | ||||
| messages by prepending a pipy symbol ('|') to the name of the file. | ||||
| This is very handy for debugging.  Note, the FIFO must be created with | ||||
| the | ||||
| .Xr mkfifo 1 | ||||
| command before | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| is started. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| The following configuration file routes debug messages from the kernel | ||||
| to a FIFO: | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| # Sample configuration to route kernel debugging | ||||
| # messages ONLY to /usr/adm/debug which is a | ||||
| # named pipe. | ||||
| kern.=debug			|/usr/adm/debug | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| .Sh CONCERNS | ||||
| There is probably one important consideration when installing this | ||||
| version of syslogd.  This version of syslogd is dependent on proper | ||||
| formatting of messages by the syslog function.  The functioning of the | ||||
| syslog function in the shared libraries changed somewhere in the region | ||||
| of libc.so.4.[2-4].n.  The specific change was to null-terminate the | ||||
| message before transmitting it to the | ||||
| .Pa /dev/log | ||||
| socket.  Proper functioning of this version of | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| is dependent on null-termination of the message. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| This problem will typically manifest itself if old statically linked | ||||
| binaries are being used on the system.  Binaries using old versions of | ||||
| the syslog function will cause empty lines to be logged followed by the | ||||
| message with the first character in the message removed.  Relinking | ||||
| these binaries to newer versions of the shared libraries will correct | ||||
| this problem. | ||||
| .Sh SECURITY | ||||
| There is the potential for | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| to be used as a conduit for a denial of service attack.  Thanks go to | ||||
| .An John Morrison Aq Mt jmorriso@rflab.ee.ubc.ca | ||||
| for alerting the project of this.  A rogue program(mer) could very | ||||
| easily flood | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| with syslog messages resulting in the log files consuming all the | ||||
| remaining space on the filesystem.  Activating logging over network | ||||
| domain sockets will of course expose a system to risks outside of | ||||
| programs or individuals on the local machine. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| There are a number of methods of protecting a machine: | ||||
| .Bl -enum | ||||
| .It | ||||
| Implement kernel firewalling to limit which hosts or networks have | ||||
| access to the 514/UDP socket. | ||||
| .It | ||||
| Logging can be directed to an isolated or non-root filesystem which, | ||||
| if filled, will not impair the machine. | ||||
| .It | ||||
| The ext2 filesystem can be used which can be configured to limit a | ||||
| certain percentage of a filesystem to usage by root only. | ||||
| .Sy NOTE: | ||||
| this requires | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| to be run as a non-root process.  Also, this prevents usage of remote | ||||
| logging since | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| will be unable to bind to the 514/UDP socket. | ||||
| .It | ||||
| Disabling inet domain sockets will limit risk to the local machine. | ||||
| .El | ||||
| .Sh DEBUGGING | ||||
| When debug mode ( | ||||
| .Fl d ) | ||||
| is enabled | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| is very verbose, writing most of what it does on stdout.  Whenever | ||||
| the configuration file is reread and re-parsed you'll see a tabular, | ||||
| corresponding to the internal data structure.  This tabular consists of | ||||
| four fields: | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| .Bl -tag -compact -width arguments | ||||
| .It number | ||||
| This field contains a serial number starting by zero.  This number | ||||
| represents the position in the internal data structure (i.e. the array). | ||||
| If one number is left out then there might be an error in the | ||||
| corresponding line in | ||||
| .Pa /etc/syslog.conf . | ||||
| .It pattern | ||||
| This field is tricky and represents the internal structure exactly. | ||||
| Every column stands for a facility, refer to | ||||
| .Xr syslog 3 . | ||||
| As you can see, there are still some facilities left free for former | ||||
| use, only the left most are used.  Every field in a column represents | ||||
| the priorities, refer to | ||||
| .Xr syslog 3 . | ||||
| .It action | ||||
| This field describes the particular action that takes place whenever a | ||||
| message is received that matches the pattern.  Refer to the | ||||
| .Xr syslog.conf 5 | ||||
| manpage for all possible actions. | ||||
| .It arguments | ||||
| This field shows additional arguments to the actions in the last field. | ||||
| For file-logging this is the filename for the logfile; for user-logging | ||||
| this is a list of users; for remote logging this is the hostname of the | ||||
| machine to log to; for console-logging this is the used console; for | ||||
| tty-logging this is the specified tty; wall has no additional arguments. | ||||
| .El | ||||
| .Sh SIGNALS | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| supports the following signals: | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| .Bl -tag -width "TERM, QUIT" -compact | ||||
| .It HUP | ||||
| This lets | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| perform a re-initialization.  All open files are closed, the | ||||
| configuration file (see above) is reread and the | ||||
| .Xr syslog 3 | ||||
| facility is started again. | ||||
| .It TERM | ||||
| This tells  | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| to exit gracefully.  Flushing any log files to disk. | ||||
| .It INT, QUIT | ||||
| In debug mode these are ignored.  In normal operation they act as | ||||
| SIGTERM. | ||||
| .It USR1 | ||||
| In debug mode this switches debugging on/off.  In normal operation | ||||
| it is ignored. | ||||
| .El | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| For convenience the PID is, by default, stored in | ||||
| .Pa /var/run/syslogd.pid . | ||||
| Example usage: | ||||
| .Bd -literal -offset indent | ||||
| kill -SIGNAL `cat /var/run/syslogd.pid` | ||||
| .Ed | ||||
| .Sh FILES | ||||
| .Bl -tag -width TERM -compact | ||||
| .It Pa /etc/syslog.conf | ||||
| Configuration file for | ||||
| .Nm . | ||||
| See | ||||
| .Xr syslog.conf 5 | ||||
| for more information. | ||||
| .It Pa  /dev/log | ||||
| The UNIX domain socket to from where local syslog messages are read. | ||||
| .It Pa /var/run/syslogd.pid | ||||
| The file containing the process id of  | ||||
| .Nm . | ||||
| .El | ||||
| .Sh BUGS | ||||
| As mentioned in the | ||||
| .Sx DESCRIPTION , | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| transparently supports the standard C library | ||||
| .Xr syslog 3 | ||||
| API.  If a binary linked to the standard C libraries do not operate | ||||
| correctly, this should be reported as a bug to this project.  See below | ||||
| for contact details. | ||||
| .Pp | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| doesn't change the file mode of opened log files at any stage.  If a | ||||
| file is created it is world readable.  If you want to avoid this, you | ||||
| have to create it and change permissions on your own.  This could be | ||||
| done in combination with rotating logfiles using the | ||||
| .Xr savelog 8 | ||||
| program that is shipped in the  | ||||
| .Nm smail | ||||
| 3.x distribution.  Remember that it might be a security hole if | ||||
| everybody is able to read | ||||
| .Ql auth.* | ||||
| messages as these might contain passwords. | ||||
| .Sh SEE ALSO | ||||
| .Xr syslog.conf 5 , | ||||
| .Xr klogd  8 , | ||||
| .Xr logger 1 , | ||||
| .Xr syslog 2 , | ||||
| .Xr syslog 3 , | ||||
| .Xr services 5 , | ||||
| .Xr savelog 8 . | ||||
| .Sh AUTHORS | ||||
| The system log daemon | ||||
| .Nm | ||||
| is originally taken from BSD sources and later updated with new | ||||
| funcitonality from | ||||
| .Fx | ||||
| and | ||||
| .Nx . | ||||
| .An -nosplit | ||||
| .An Greg Wettstein Aq Mt greg@wind.enjellic.com | ||||
| performed the initial port to Linux. | ||||
| .An Martin Schulze Aq Mt joey@infodrom.org | ||||
| fixed some bugs, added several new features and took over maintenance. | ||||
| .An Joachim Nilsson Aq Mt troglobit@gmail.com | ||||
| later picked up the aging | ||||
| .Nm sysklogd | ||||
| and gave it a home at GitHub with new features imported from | ||||
| .Fx | ||||
| and | ||||
| .Nx . | ||||
|   | ||||
		Reference in New Issue
	
	Block a user