/* klogd.c - main program for Linux kernel log daemon. Copyright (c) 1995 Dr. G.W. Wettstein This file is part of the sysklogd package, a kernel and system log daemon. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. */ /* * Steve Lord (lord@cray.com) 7th Nov 92 * * Modified to check for kernel info by Dr. G.W. Wettstein 02/17/93. * * Fri Mar 12 16:53:56 CST 1993: Dr. Wettstein * Modified LogLine to use a newline as the line separator in * the kernel message buffer. * * Added debugging code to dump the contents of the kernel message * buffer at the start of the LogLine function. * * Thu Jul 29 11:40:32 CDT 1993: Dr. Wettstein * Added syscalls to turn off logging of kernel messages to the * console when klogd becomes responsible for kernel messages. * * klogd now catches SIGTERM and SIGKILL signals. Receipt of these * signals cases the clean_up function to be called which shuts down * kernel logging and re-enables logging of messages to the console. * * Sat Dec 11 11:54:22 CST 1993: Dr. Wettstein * Added fixes to allow compilation with no complaints with -Wall. * * When the daemon catches a fatal signal (SIGTERM, SIGKILL) a * message is output to the logfile advising that the daemon is * going to terminate. * * Thu Jan 6 11:54:10 CST 1994: Dr. Wettstein * Major re-write/re-organization of the code. * * Klogd now assigns kernel messages to priority levels when output * to the syslog facility is requested. The priority level is * determined by decoding the prioritization sequence which is * tagged onto the start of the kernel messages. * * Added the following program options: -f arg -c arg -s -o -d * * The -f switch can be used to specify that output should * be written to the named file. * * The -c switch is used to specify the level of kernel * messages which are to be directed to the console. * * The -s switch causes the program to use the syscall * interface to the kernel message facility. This can be * used to override the presence of the /proc filesystem. * * The -o switch causes the program to operate in 'one-shot' * mode. A single call will be made to read the complete * kernel buffer. The contents of the buffer will be * output and the program will terminate. * * The -d switch causes 'debug' mode to be activated. This * will cause the daemon to generate LOTS of output to stderr. * * The buffer decomposition function (LogLine) was re-written to * squash a bug which was causing only partial kernel messages to * be written to the syslog facility. * * The signal handling code was modified to properly differentiate * between the STOP and TSTP signals. * * Added pid saving when the daemon detaches into the background. Thank * you to Juha Virtanen (jiivee@hut.fi) for providing this patch. * * Mon Feb 6 07:31:29 CST 1995: Dr. Wettstein * Significant re-organization of the signal handling code. The * signal handlers now only set variables. Not earth shaking by any * means but aesthetically pleasing to the code purists in the group. * * Patch to make things more compliant with the file system standards. * Thanks to Chris Metcalf for prompting this helpful change. * * The routines responsible for reading the kernel log sources now * initialize the buffers before reading. I think that this will * solve problems with non-terminated kernel messages producing * output of the form: new old old old * * This may also help influence the occassional reports of klogd * failing under significant load. I think that the jury may still * be out on this one though. My thanks to Joerg Ahrens for initially * tipping me off to the source of this problem. Also thanks to * Michael O'Reilly for tipping me off to the best fix for this problem. * And last but not least Mark Lord for prompting me to try this as * a means of attacking the stability problem. * * Specifying a - as the arguement to the -f switch will cause output * to be directed to stdout rather than a filename of -. Thanks to * Randy Appleton for a patch which prompted me to do this. * * Wed Feb 22 15:37:37 CST 1995: Dr. Wettstein * Added version information to logging startup messages. * * Wed Jul 26 18:57:23 MET DST 1995: Martin Schulze * Added an commandline argument "-n" to avoid forking. This obsoletes * the compiler define NO_FORK. It's more useful to have this as an * argument as there are many binary versions and one doesn't need to * recompile the daemon. * * Thu Aug 10 19:01:08 MET DST 1995: Martin Schulze * Added my pidfile.[ch] to it to perform a better handling with pidfiles. * Now both, syslogd and klogd, can only be started once. They check the * pidfile. * * Fri Nov 17 15:05:43 CST 1995: Dr. Wettstein * Added support for kernel address translation. This required moving * some definitions and includes to the new klogd.h file. Some small * code cleanups and modifications. * * Mon Nov 20 10:03:39 MET 1995 * Added -v option to print the version and exit. * * Thu Jan 18 11:19:46 CST 1996: Dr. Wettstein * Added suggested patches from beta-testers. These address two * two problems. The first is segmentation faults which occur with * the ELF libraries. This was caused by passing a null pointer to * the strcmp function. * * Added a second patch to remove the pidfile as part of the * termination cleanup sequence. This minimizes the potential for * conflicting pidfiles causing immediate termination at boot time. * * Wed Aug 21 09:13:03 CDT 1996: Dr. Wettstein * Added ability to reload static symbols and kernel module symbols * under control of SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2 signals. * * Added -p switch to select 'paranoid' behavior with respect to the * loading of kernel module symbols. * * Informative line now printed whenever a state change occurs due * to signal reception by the daemon. * * Added the -i and -I command line switches to signal the currently * executing daemon. * * Tue Nov 19 10:15:36 PST 1996: Leland Olds * Corrected vulnerability to buffer overruns by rewriting LogLine * routine. Obscenely long kernel messages will now be broken up * into lines no longer than LOG_LINE_LENGTH. * * The last version of LogLine was vulnerable to buffer overruns: * - Kernel messages longer than LOG_LINE_LENGTH caused a buffer * overrun. * - If a line was determined to be shorter than LOG_LINE_LENGTH, * the routine "ExpandKadds" could cause the line grow by * an unknown amount and overrun a buffer. * I turned these routines into a little parsing state machine that * should not have these problems. * * Sun Jun 15 16:23:29 MET DST 1997: Michael Alan Dorman * Some more glibc patches made by . * * Thu Aug 21 12:11:27 MET DST 1997: Martin Schulze * Fixed little mistake which prevented klogd from accepting a * console log * * Fri Jan 9 00:39:52 CET 1998: Martin Schulze * Changed the behaviour of klogd when receiving a terminate * signal. Now the program terminates immediately instead of * completing the receipt of a kernel message, i.e the read() * call. The old behaveiour could result in klogd being * recognized as being undead, because it'll only die after a * message has been received. * * Fri Jan 9 11:03:48 CET 1998: Martin Schulze * Corrected some code that caused klogd to dump core when * receiving messages containing '%', some of them exist in * 2.1.78. Thanks to Chu-yeon Park for * informing me. * * Fri Jan 9 23:38:19 CET 1998: Florian La Roche * Added -x switch to omit EIP translation and System.map evaluation. * * Sun Jan 25 20:47:46 CET 1998: Martin Schulze * As the bug covering the %'s introduced a problem with * unevaluated priorities I've worked out a real fix that strips * %'s to an even number which is harmless for printf. * * Sat Oct 10 20:01:48 CEST 1998: Martin Schulze * Added support for TESTING define which will turn klogd into * stdio-mode used for debugging. * * Mon Apr 13 18:18:45 CEST 1998: Martin Schulze * Modified System.map read function to try all possible map * files until a file with matching version is found. Added support for * Debian release. * * Mon Oct 12 13:01:27 MET DST 1998: Martin Schulze * Used unsigned long and strtoul() to resolve kernel oops symbols. * * Sun Jan 3 18:38:03 CET 1999: Martin Schulze * Shortened LOG_LINE_LENGTH in order to get long lines splitted * up earlier and syslogd has a better chance concatenating them * together again. * * Sat Aug 21 12:27:02 CEST 1999: Martin Schulze * Skip newline when reading in messages. * * Tue Sep 12 22:14:33 CEST 2000: Martin Schulze * Don't feed a buffer directly to a printf-type routine, use * "%s" as format string instead. Thanks to Jouko Pynnönen * for pointing this out. * * Tue Sep 12 22:44:57 CEST 2000: Martin Schulze * Commandline option `-2': When symbols are expanded, print the * line twice. Once with addresses converted to symbols, once with the * raw text. Allows external programs such as ksymoops do their own * processing on the original data. Thanks to Keith Owens * for the patch. */ /* Includes. */ #include #include #include #include #include #if !defined(__GLIBC__) #include #endif /* __GLIBC__ */ #include #include #include #include "klogd.h" #include "ksyms.h" #ifndef TESTING #include "pidfile.h" #endif #include "version.h" #define __LIBRARY__ #include #if !defined(__GLIBC__) # define __NR_ksyslog __NR_syslog _syscall3(int,ksyslog,int, type, char *, buf, int, len); #else #include #define ksyslog klogctl #endif #define LOG_BUFFER_SIZE 4096 #define LOG_LINE_LENGTH 1000 #ifndef TESTING #if defined(FSSTND) static char *PidFile = _PATH_VARRUN "klogd.pid"; #else static char *PidFile = "/etc/klogd.pid"; #endif #endif static int kmsg, change_state = 0, terminate = 0, caught_TSTP = 0, reload_symbols = 0, console_log_level = 6; static int use_syscall = 0, one_shot = 0, symbol_lookup = 1, no_fork = 0; /* don't fork - don't run in daemon mode */ static char *symfile = (char *) 0, log_buffer[LOG_BUFFER_SIZE]; static FILE *output_file = (FILE *) 0; static enum LOGSRC {none, proc, kernel} logsrc; int debugging = 0; int symbols_twice = 0; /* Function prototypes. */ extern int ksyslog(int type, char *buf, int len); static void CloseLogSrc(void); extern void restart(int sig); extern void stop_logging(int sig); extern void stop_daemon(int sig); extern void reload_daemon(int sig); static void Terminate(void); static void SignalDaemon(int); static void ReloadSymbols(void); static void ChangeLogging(void); static enum LOGSRC GetKernelLogSrc(void); static void LogLine(char *ptr, int len); static void LogKernelLine(void); static void LogProcLine(void); extern int main(int argc, char *argv[]); static void CloseLogSrc() { /* Turn on logging of messages to console. */ ksyslog(7, NULL, 0); /* Shutdown the log sources. */ switch ( logsrc ) { case kernel: ksyslog(0, 0, 0); Syslog(LOG_INFO, "Kernel logging (ksyslog) stopped."); break; case proc: close(kmsg); Syslog(LOG_INFO, "Kernel logging (proc) stopped."); break; case none: break; } if ( output_file != (FILE *) 0 ) fflush(output_file); return; } void restart(sig) int sig; { signal(SIGCONT, restart); change_state = 1; caught_TSTP = 0; return; } void stop_logging(sig) int sig; { signal(SIGTSTP, stop_logging); change_state = 1; caught_TSTP = 1; return; } void stop_daemon(sig) int sig; { Terminate(); return; } void reload_daemon(sig) int sig; { change_state = 1; reload_symbols = 1; if ( sig == SIGUSR2 ) { ++reload_symbols; signal(SIGUSR2, reload_daemon); } else signal(SIGUSR1, reload_daemon); return; } static void Terminate() { CloseLogSrc(); Syslog(LOG_INFO, "Kernel log daemon terminating."); sleep(1); if ( output_file != (FILE *) 0 ) fclose(output_file); closelog(); #ifndef TESTING (void) remove_pid(PidFile); #endif exit(1); } static void SignalDaemon(sig) int sig; { #ifndef TESTING auto int pid = check_pid(PidFile); kill(pid, sig); #else kill(getpid(), sig); #endif return; } static void ReloadSymbols() { if (symbol_lookup) { if ( reload_symbols > 1 ) InitKsyms(symfile); InitMsyms(); } reload_symbols = change_state = 0; return; } static void ChangeLogging(void) { /* Terminate kernel logging. */ if ( terminate == 1 ) Terminate(); /* Indicate that something is happening. */ Syslog(LOG_INFO, "klogd %s-%s, ---------- state change ----------\n", \ VERSION, PATCHLEVEL); /* Reload symbols. */ if ( reload_symbols > 0 ) { ReloadSymbols(); return; } /* Stop kernel logging. */ if ( caught_TSTP == 1 ) { CloseLogSrc(); logsrc = none; change_state = 0; return; } /* * The rest of this function is responsible for restarting * kernel logging after it was stopped. * * In the following section we make a decision based on the * kernel log state as to what is causing us to restart. Somewhat * groady but it keeps us from creating another static variable. */ if ( logsrc != none ) { Syslog(LOG_INFO, "Kernel logging re-started after SIGSTOP."); change_state = 0; return; } /* Restart logging. */ logsrc = GetKernelLogSrc(); change_state = 0; return; } static enum LOGSRC GetKernelLogSrc(void) { auto struct stat sb; /* Set level of kernel console messaging.. */ if ( (ksyslog(8, NULL, console_log_level) < 0) && \ (errno == EINVAL) ) { /* * An invalid arguement error probably indicates that * a pre-0.14 kernel is being run. At this point we * issue an error message and simply shut-off console * logging completely. */ Syslog(LOG_WARNING, "Cannot set console log level - disabling " "console output."); ksyslog(6, NULL, 0); } /* * First do a stat to determine whether or not the proc based * file system is available to get kernel messages from. */ if ( use_syscall || ((stat(_PATH_KLOG, &sb) < 0) && (errno == ENOENT)) ) { /* Initialize kernel logging. */ ksyslog(1, NULL, 0); #ifdef DEBRELEASE Syslog(LOG_INFO, "klogd %s-%s#%s, log source = ksyslog " "started.", VERSION, PATCHLEVEL, DEBRELEASE); #else Syslog(LOG_INFO, "klogd %s-%s, log source = ksyslog " "started.", VERSION, PATCHLEVEL); #endif return(kernel); } #ifndef TESTING if ( (kmsg = open(_PATH_KLOG, O_RDONLY)) < 0 ) { fprintf(stderr, "klogd: Cannot open proc file system, " \ "%d - %s.\n", errno, strerror(errno)); ksyslog(7, NULL, 0); exit(1); } #else kmsg = fileno(stdin); #endif #ifdef DEBRELEASE Syslog(LOG_INFO, "klogd %s-%s#%s, log source = %s started.", \ VERSION, PATCHLEVEL, DEBRELEASE, _PATH_KLOG); #else Syslog(LOG_INFO, "klogd %s-%s, log source = %s started.", \ VERSION, PATCHLEVEL, _PATH_KLOG); #endif return(proc); } extern void Syslog(int priority, char *fmt, ...) { va_list ap; if ( debugging ) { fputs("Logging line:\n", stderr); fprintf(stderr, "\tLine: %s\n", fmt); fprintf(stderr, "\tPriority: %d\n", priority); } /* Handle output to a file. */ if ( output_file != (FILE *) 0 ) { va_start(ap, fmt); vfprintf(output_file, fmt, ap); va_end(ap); fputc('\n', output_file); fflush(output_file); if (!one_shot) fsync(fileno(output_file)); return; } /* Output using syslog. */ if ( *fmt == '<' ) { switch ( *(fmt+1) ) { case '0': priority = LOG_EMERG; break; case '1': priority = LOG_ALERT; break; case '2': priority = LOG_CRIT; break; case '3': priority = LOG_ERR; break; case '4': priority = LOG_WARNING; break; case '5': priority = LOG_NOTICE; break; case '6': priority = LOG_INFO; break; case '7': default: priority = LOG_DEBUG; } fmt += 3; } va_start(ap, fmt); vsyslog(priority, fmt, ap); va_end(ap); #ifdef TESTING printf ("\n"); #endif return; } /* * Copy characters from ptr to line until a char in the delim * string is encountered or until min( space, len ) chars have * been copied. * * Returns the actual number of chars copied. */ static int copyin( char *line, int space, const char *ptr, int len, const char *delim ) { auto int i; auto int count; count = len < space ? len : space; for(i=0; i]", * where "aaaaaa" is the address. These are replaced with * "[symbolname+offset/size]" in the output line - symbolname, * offset, and size come from the kernel symbol table. * * If a kernel symbol happens to fall at the end of a message close * in length to LOG_LINE_LENGTH, the symbol will not be expanded. * (This should never happen, since the kernel should never generate * messages that long. * * To preserve the original addresses, lines containing kernel symbols * are output twice. Once with the symbols converted and again with the * original text. Just in case somebody wants to run their own Oops * analysis on the syslog, e.g. ksymoops. */ static void LogLine(char *ptr, int len) { enum parse_state_enum { PARSING_TEXT, PARSING_SYMSTART, /* at < */ PARSING_SYMBOL, PARSING_SYMEND /* at ] */ }; static char line_buff[LOG_LINE_LENGTH]; static char *line =line_buff; static enum parse_state_enum parse_state = PARSING_TEXT; static int space = sizeof(line_buff)-1; static char *sym_start; /* points at the '<' of a symbol */ auto int delta = 0; /* number of chars copied */ auto int symbols_expanded = 0; /* 1 if symbols were expanded */ auto int skip_symbol_lookup = 0; /* skip symbol lookup on this pass */ auto char *save_ptr = ptr; /* save start of input line */ auto int save_len = len; /* save length at start of input line */ while( len > 0 ) { if( space == 0 ) /* line buffer is full */ { /* ** Line too long. Start a new line. */ *line = 0; /* force null terminator */ if ( debugging ) { fputs("Line buffer full:\n", stderr); fprintf(stderr, "\tLine: %s\n", line); } Syslog( LOG_INFO, "%s", line_buff ); line = line_buff; space = sizeof(line_buff)-1; parse_state = PARSING_TEXT; symbols_expanded = 0; skip_symbol_lookup = 0; save_ptr = ptr; save_len = len; } switch( parse_state ) { case PARSING_TEXT: delta = copyin( line, space, ptr, len, "\n[%" ); line += delta; ptr += delta; space -= delta; len -= delta; if( space == 0 || len == 0 ) { break; /* full line_buff or end of input buffer */ } if( *ptr == '\n' ) /* newline */ { ptr++; /* skip newline */ space -= 1; len -= 1; *line = 0; /* force null terminator */ Syslog( LOG_INFO, "%s", line_buff ); line = line_buff; space = sizeof(line_buff)-1; if (symbols_twice) { if (symbols_expanded) { /* reprint this line without symbol lookup */ symbols_expanded = 0; skip_symbol_lookup = 1; ptr = save_ptr; len = save_len; } else { skip_symbol_lookup = 0; save_ptr = ptr; save_len = len; } } break; } if( *ptr == '[' ) /* possible kernel symbol */ { *line++ = *ptr++; space -= 1; len -= 1; if (!skip_symbol_lookup) parse_state = PARSING_SYMSTART; /* at < */ break; } if( *ptr == '%' ) /* dangerous printf marker */ { delta = 0; while (len && *ptr == '%') { *line++ = *ptr++; /* copy it in */ space -= 1; len -= 1; delta++; } if (delta % 2) /* odd amount of %'s */ { if (space) { *line++ = '%'; /* so simply add one */ space -= 1; } else { *line++ = '\0'; /* remove the last one / terminate the string */ } } } break; case PARSING_SYMSTART: if( *ptr != '<' ) { parse_state = PARSING_TEXT; /* not a symbol */ break; } /* ** Save this character for now. If this turns out to ** be a valid symbol, this char will be replaced later. ** If not, we'll just leave it there. */ sym_start = line; /* this will point at the '<' */ *line++ = *ptr++; space -= 1; len -= 1; parse_state = PARSING_SYMBOL; /* symbol... */ break; case PARSING_SYMBOL: delta = copyin( line, space, ptr, len, ">\n[" ); line += delta; ptr += delta; space -= delta; len -= delta; if( space == 0 || len == 0 ) { break; /* full line_buff or end of input buffer */ } if( *ptr != '>' ) { parse_state = PARSING_TEXT; break; } *line++ = *ptr++; /* copy the '>' */ space -= 1; len -= 1; parse_state = PARSING_SYMEND; break; case PARSING_SYMEND: if( *ptr != ']' ) { parse_state = PARSING_TEXT; /* not a symbol */ break; } /* ** It's really a symbol! Replace address with the ** symbol text. */ { auto int sym_space; unsigned long value; auto struct symbol sym; auto char *symbol; *(line-1) = 0; /* null terminate the address string */ value = strtoul(sym_start+1, (char **) 0, 16); *(line-1) = '>'; /* put back delim */ symbol = LookupSymbol(value, &sym); if ( !symbol_lookup || symbol == (char *) 0 ) { parse_state = PARSING_TEXT; break; } /* ** verify there is room in the line buffer */ sym_space = space + ( line - sym_start ); if( sym_space < strlen(symbol) + 30 ) /*(30 should be overkill)*/ { parse_state = PARSING_TEXT; /* not enough space */ break; } delta = sprintf( sym_start, "%s+%d/%d]", symbol, sym.offset, sym.size ); space = sym_space + delta; line = sym_start + delta; symbols_expanded = 1; } ptr++; len--; parse_state = PARSING_TEXT; break; default: /* Can't get here! */ parse_state = PARSING_TEXT; } } return; } static void LogKernelLine(void) { auto int rdcnt; /* * Zero-fill the log buffer. This should cure a multitude of * problems with klogd logging the tail end of the message buffer * which will contain old messages. Then read the kernel log * messages into this fresh buffer. */ memset(log_buffer, '\0', sizeof(log_buffer)); if ( (rdcnt = ksyslog(2, log_buffer, sizeof(log_buffer))) < 0 ) { if ( errno == EINTR ) return; fprintf(stderr, "klogd: Error return from sys_sycall: " \ "%d - %s\n", errno, strerror(errno)); } LogLine(log_buffer, rdcnt); return; } static void LogProcLine(void) { auto int rdcnt; /* * Zero-fill the log buffer. This should cure a multitude of * problems with klogd logging the tail end of the message buffer * which will contain old messages. Then read the kernel messages * from the message pseudo-file into this fresh buffer. */ memset(log_buffer, '\0', sizeof(log_buffer)); if ( (rdcnt = read(kmsg, log_buffer, sizeof(log_buffer)-1)) < 0 ) { if ( errno == EINTR ) return; Syslog(LOG_ERR, "Cannot read proc file system: %d - %s.", \ errno, strerror(errno)); } LogLine(log_buffer, rdcnt); return; } int main(argc, argv) int argc; char *argv[]; { auto int ch, use_output = 0; auto char *log_level = (char *) 0, *output = (char *) 0; #ifndef TESTING chdir ("/"); #endif /* Parse the command-line. */ while ((ch = getopt(argc, argv, "c:df:iIk:nopsvx2")) != EOF) switch((char)ch) { case '2': /* Print lines with symbols twice. */ symbols_twice = 1; break; case 'c': /* Set console message level. */ log_level = optarg; break; case 'd': /* Activity debug mode. */ debugging = 1; break; case 'f': /* Define an output file. */ output = optarg; use_output++; break; case 'i': /* Reload module symbols. */ SignalDaemon(SIGUSR1); return(0); case 'I': SignalDaemon(SIGUSR2); return(0); case 'k': /* Kernel symbol file. */ symfile = optarg; break; case 'n': /* don't fork */ no_fork++; break; case 'o': /* One-shot mode. */ one_shot = 1; break; case 'p': SetParanoiaLevel(1); /* Load symbols on oops. */ break; case 's': /* Use syscall interface. */ use_syscall = 1; break; case 'v': printf("klogd %s-%s\n", VERSION, PATCHLEVEL); exit (1); case 'x': symbol_lookup = 0; break; } /* Set console logging level. */ if ( log_level != (char *) 0 ) { if ( (strlen(log_level) > 1) || \ (strchr("12345678", *log_level) == (char *) 0) ) { fprintf(stderr, "klogd: Invalid console logging " "level <%s> specified.\n", log_level); return(1); } console_log_level = *log_level - '0'; } #ifndef TESTING /* * The following code allows klogd to auto-background itself. * What happens is that the program forks and the parent quits. * The child closes all its open file descriptors, and issues a * call to setsid to establish itself as an independent session * immune from control signals. * * fork() is only called if it should run in daemon mode, fork is * not disabled with the command line argument and there's no * such process running. */ if ( (!one_shot) && (!no_fork) ) { if (!check_pid(PidFile)) { if ( fork() == 0 ) { auto int fl; int num_fds = getdtablesize(); /* This is the child closing its file descriptors. */ for (fl= 0; fl <= num_fds; ++fl) { if ( fileno(stdout) == fl && use_output ) if ( strcmp(output, "-") == 0 ) continue; close(fl); } setsid(); } else exit(0); } else { fputs("klogd: Already running.\n", stderr); exit(1); } } /* tuck my process id away */ if (!check_pid(PidFile)) { if (!write_pid(PidFile)) Terminate(); } else { fputs("klogd: Already running.\n", stderr); Terminate(); } #endif /* Signal setups. */ for (ch= 1; ch < NSIG; ++ch) signal(ch, SIG_IGN); signal(SIGINT, stop_daemon); signal(SIGKILL, stop_daemon); signal(SIGTERM, stop_daemon); signal(SIGHUP, stop_daemon); signal(SIGTSTP, stop_logging); signal(SIGCONT, restart); signal(SIGUSR1, reload_daemon); signal(SIGUSR2, reload_daemon); /* Open outputs. */ if ( use_output ) { if ( strcmp(output, "-") == 0 ) output_file = stdout; else if ( (output_file = fopen(output, "w")) == (FILE *) 0 ) { fprintf(stderr, "klogd: Cannot open output file " \ "%s - %s\n", output, strerror(errno)); return(1); } } else openlog("kernel", 0, LOG_KERN); /* Handle one-shot logging. */ if ( one_shot ) { if (symbol_lookup) { InitKsyms(symfile); InitMsyms(); } if ( (logsrc = GetKernelLogSrc()) == kernel ) LogKernelLine(); else LogProcLine(); Terminate(); } /* Determine where kernel logging information is to come from. */ #if defined(KLOGD_DELAY) sleep(KLOGD_DELAY); #endif logsrc = GetKernelLogSrc(); if (symbol_lookup) { InitKsyms(symfile); InitMsyms(); } /* The main loop. */ while (1) { if ( change_state ) ChangeLogging(); switch ( logsrc ) { case kernel: LogKernelLine(); break; case proc: LogProcLine(); break; case none: pause(); break; } } } /* * Local variables: * c-indent-level: 4 * c-basic-offset: 4 * tab-width: 8 * End: */