624 lines
		
	
	
		
			21 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			624 lines
		
	
	
		
			21 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
| .\"                                                              -*- nroff -*-
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| .\" Copyright (c) 1990, 1991, 1993
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| .\"	The Regents of the University of California.
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| .\" All rights reserved.
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| .\"
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| .\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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| .\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
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| .\" are met:
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| .\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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| .\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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| .\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
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| .\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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| .\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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| .\" 3. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors
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| .\"    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
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| .\"    without specific prior written permission.
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| .\"
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| .\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
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| .\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
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| .\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
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| .\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
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| .\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
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| .\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
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| .\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
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| .\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
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| .\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
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| .\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
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| .\" SUCH DAMAGE.
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| .\"
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| .\"     @(#)syslog.conf.5	8.1 (Berkeley) 6/9/93
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| .\" $FreeBSD$
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| .\"
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| .Dd February 21, 2021
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| .Dt SYSLOG.CONF 5
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| .Os sysklogd
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| .Sh NAME
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| .Nm syslog.conf
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| .Nd configuration file format for
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| .Xr syslogd 8
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| .Sh DESCRIPTION
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| The
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| .Nm
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| file is the configuration file for the
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| .Xr syslogd 8
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| program.  It consists of lines of rules for logging, with each line
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| containing at least two fields: the
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| .Em selector
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| field which specifies the types of messages and priorities to which the
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| line applies, and an
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| .Em action
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| field which specifies the action to be taken if a message
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| .Xr syslogd 8
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| receives matches the selection criteria.  A rule may also have an
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| .Em option
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| field for a setting that applies only to that rule.
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| .Pp
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| The fields are separated by one or more tab characters or spaces.  A
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| rule may be divided into several lines if the leading line ends with a
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| single backslash ('\\') character.
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| .Pp
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| .Bd -literal -offset indent
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| RULE     := SELECTOR  ACTION  [;OPTION]
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| SELECTOR := [SELECTOR;]facility[,facility].[!=]severity
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| ACTION   := /path/to/file
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|          |= |/path/to/named/pipe
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| 	 |= @remote[.host.tld][:PORT]
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| OPTION   := [OPTION,]
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| 	 |= RFC3164
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| 	 |= RFC5424
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|          |= rotate=SIZE:COUNT
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| 
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| secure_mode [0,1,2]
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| 
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| include /etc/syslog.d/*.conf
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| notify  /path/to/script-on-rotate
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| .Ed
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| .Pp
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| The
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| .Em selector
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| field specifies a pattern of facilities and priorities belonging to the
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| specified action.  The
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| .Em action
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| details where or what to do with the selected input.  The
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| .Em option
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| field, which must start with the semi-colon option delimiter (';'),
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| currently supports log formatting and log rotation.  The default log
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| format is the traditional RFC3164 (included here for completeness),
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| .Sy except
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| for remote syslog targets where the BSD format (without both timestamp
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| and hostname) is the default.  The user must explicitly set RFC3164 on
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| a remote logging target.  RFC5424 is the newest format with RFC3339 time
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| stamps, msgid, structured data, and more.  The BSD format cannot be set,
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| it is only the default for remote targets for compatibility reasons.
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| .Pp
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| .Bl -tag -compact -width "RFC3164:"
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| .It Sy BSD:
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| .Li myproc[8710]: Kilroy was here.
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| .It Sy RFC3164:
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| .Li Aug 24 05:14:15 192.0.2.1 myproc[8710]: Kilroy was here.
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| .It Sy RFC5424:
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| .Li 2003-08-24T05:14:15.000003-07:00 192.0.2.1 myproc 8710 - - Kilroy was here.
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| .El
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| .Pp
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| The log rotation, which is only relevant for files, details the max
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| .Ar SIZE:COUNT
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| a file can reach before it is rotated, and later compressed.  This
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| feature is mostly intended for embedded systems that do not want to have
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| cron or a separate log rotate daemon.
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| .Pp
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| .Sy Note:
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| the permissions of the rotated files are kept.  Meaning the
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| administrator can create all log files, before starting
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| .Nm
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| the first time, with the permissions needed for the site.  However, if
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| the log files do not exist,
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| .Nm
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| will create them with the user and group it runs as and 0644
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| permissions.
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| .Pp
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| Comments, lines starting with a hash mark ('#'), and empty lines are
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| ignored.  If an error occurs during parsing the whole line is ignored.
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| .Pp
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| Additional options include
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| .Ql secure_mode <0-2>
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| which is the same as the
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| .Nm syslogd Fl s
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| commandline option.
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| .Sy Note:
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| command line option always wins, so you need to drop
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| .Fl s
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| from the command line to use this .conf file option instead.
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| .Pp
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| .Bl -tag -compact -width "01" -offset indent
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| .It 0
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| act as a syslog sink, listening on UDP port 514 by default, as well as
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| support for sending to remote syslog servers
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| .It 1
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| only support for sending to remote syslog servers, no Internet ports
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| open
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| .It 2
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| no Internet ports open at all, and no remote logging possible
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| .El
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| .Bd -literal -offset indent
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| # Example: only allow logging to remote servers
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| secure_mode 1
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| .Ed
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| .Pp
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| The
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| .Ql notify <PATH>
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| option specifies the path to an executable program which will get called
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| whenever a log file has been rotated, with the name of the file, less
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| its rotation suffix
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| .Ql .0 ,
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| as an argument.
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| For example:
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| .Ql notify /sbin/on-log-rotate.sh .
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| Any number of notifiers may be installed.
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| .Pp
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| The
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| .Ql include <PATH/*.conf>
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| option can be used to include all files with names ending in '.conf' and
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| not beginning with a '.' contained in the directory following the
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| keyword.  This keyword can only be used in the first level configuration
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| file.  The included example
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| .Pa /etc/syslog.conf
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| has the following at the end:
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| .Bd -literal -offset indent
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| #
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| # Drop your subsystem .conf file in /etc/syslog.d/
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| #
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| include /etc/syslog.d/*.conf
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| .Ed
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| .Pp
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| Note that if you use spaces as separators, your
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| .Nm
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| might be incompatible with other Unices or Unix-like systems.
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| This functionality was added for ease of configuration
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| (e.g.\& it is possible to cut-and-paste into
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| .Nm ) ,
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| and to avoid possible mistakes.
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| This change however preserves
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| backwards compatibility with the old style of
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| .Nm
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| (i.e., tab characters only).
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| .Sh SELECTORS
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| The selector field consists of two parts, a
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| .Em facility
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| and a 
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| .Em priority ,
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| separated by a period ('.').  Both parts are case insensitive and can
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| also be specified as decimal numbers corresponding to the definitions in
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| .Pa /usr/include/syslog.h .
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| It is safer to use symbolic names rather than decimal numbers.  Both
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| facilities and priorities are described in
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| .Xr syslogp 3 .
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| The names mentioned below correspond to the similar 
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| .Ql LOG_FOO
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| values in
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| .Pa /usr/include/syslog.h .
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| .Pp
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| The
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| .Em facility
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| is one of the following keywords:
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| .Bl -column "Code" "Facility" "Description" -offset indent
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| .It Sy "Code" Ta Sy "Facility" Ta Sy "Description"
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| .It        0  Ta         kern  Ta Kernel log messages
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| .It        1  Ta         user  Ta User-level messages
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| .It        2  Ta         mail  Ta Mail system
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| .It        3  Ta       daemon  Ta General system daemons
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| .It        4  Ta         auth  Ta Security/authorization messages
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| .It        5  Ta       syslog  Ta Messages generated by syslogd
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| .It        6  Ta          lpr  Ta Line printer subsystem
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| .It        7  Ta         news  Ta Network news subsystem
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| .It        8  Ta         uucp  Ta UNIX-to-UNIX copy
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| .It        9  Ta         cron  Ta Clock/cron daemon (BSD, Linux)
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| .It       10  Ta     authpriv  Ta Security/authorization messages (private)
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| .It       11  Ta          ftp  Ta FTP daemon
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| .It       12  Ta          ntp  Ta NTP subsystem
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| .It       13  Ta     security  Ta Log audit
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| .It       14  Ta      console  Ta Log alert
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| .It       15  Ta       unused  Ta Clock/cron daemon (Solaris)
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| .It       16  Ta       local0  Ta Reserved for local/system use
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| .It       17  Ta       local1  Ta Reserved for local/system use
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| .It       18  Ta       local2  Ta Reserved for local/system use
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| .It       19  Ta       local3  Ta Reserved for local/system use
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| .It       20  Ta       local4  Ta Reserved for local/system use
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| .It       21  Ta       local5  Ta Reserved for local/system use
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| .It       22  Ta       local6  Ta Reserved for local/system use
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| .It       23  Ta       local7  Ta Reserved for local/system use
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| .El
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| .Pp
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| Notice, several of the above listed facilities are not supported by the
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| standard C library (GLIBC, musl libc, or uClibc) on Linux.  libsyslog,
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| shipped with
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| .Nm sysklogd ,
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| however, supports all the above facilities in full.  Also, the keyword
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| .Ql mark
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| is only for internal use and should therefore not be used in
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| applications.  The
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| .Em facility
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| specifies the subsystem that produced the message, e.g. all mail
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| programs log with the mail facility,
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| .Ql LOG_MAIL ,
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| if they log using syslog.
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| .Pp
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| In most cases anyone can log to any facility, so we rely on convention
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| for the correct facility to be chosen.  However, generally only the
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| kernel can log to the
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| .Ql kern
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| facility.  This because the implementation of
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| .Xr openlog 3
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| and
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| .Xr syslog 3
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| in GLIBC does not allow logging to the
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| .Ql kern
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| facility.
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| .Pp
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| The
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| .Em priority
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| is one of the following keywords, in ascending order:
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| .Bl -column "Code" "Facility" "Description" -offset indent
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| .It Sy "Value" Ta Sy "Severity" Ta Sy "Description"
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| .It         0  Ta    emergency  Ta System is unusable
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| .It         1  Ta        alert  Ta Action must be taken immediately
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| .It         2  Ta     critical  Ta Critical conditions
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| .It         3  Ta        error  Ta Error conditions
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| .It         4  Ta      warning  Ta Warning conditions
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| .It         5  Ta       notice  Ta Normal but significant conditions
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| .It         6  Ta         info  Ta Informational messages
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| .It         7  Ta        debug  Ta Debug-level messages
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| .El
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| .Pp
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| The default log level of most applications is
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| .Ql notice ,
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| meaning only
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| .Ql notice
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| and above are forwarded to
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| .Nm syslogd .
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| See
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| .Xr setlogmask 3
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| for more information on how to change the default log level of your
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| application.
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| .Pp
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| In addition to the above mentioned facility and priority names,
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| .Xr syslogd 8
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| understands the following extensions:
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| .Pp
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| .Bl -tag -compact -width "'none'"
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| .It *
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| An asterisk ('*') matches all facilities or all priorities, depending on
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| where it is used (before or after the period).
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| .It none
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| The keyword
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| .Ql none
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| stands for no priority of the given facility.
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| .It ,
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| Multiple facilities may be specified for a single priority pattern in
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| one statement using the comma (',') operator to separate the facilities.
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| You may specify as many facilities as you want.  Please note that only
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| the facility part from such a statement is taken, a priority part would
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| be ignored.
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| .It ;
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| Multiple selectors may be specified for a single
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| .Em action
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| using the semicolon (';') separator.  Selectors are processed from left
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| to right, with each selector being able to overwrite preceding ones.
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| Using this behavior you are able to exclude some priorities from the
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| pattern.
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| .It =
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| This version of
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| .Xr syslogd 8
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| has a syntax extension to the original BSD source, which makes its use
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| more intuitive.  You may precede every priority with an equation sign
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| ('=') to specify that only this single priority should be matched,
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| instead of the default: this priority and all higher priorities.
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| .It !
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| You may also precede the priority with an exclamation mark ('!') if you
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| want to ignore this priority and all higher priorities.  You may even
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| use both the exclamation mark and the equation sign if you want to
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| ignore a single priority.  If both extensions are used, the exclamation
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| mark must occur before the equation sign.
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| .El
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| .Sh ACTIONS
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| The action field of a rule is the destination or target for a match.  It
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| can be a file, a UNIX named pipe, the console, or a remote machine.
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| .Ss Regular File
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| Typically messages are logged to real files.  The filename is specified
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| with an absolute path name.
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| .Pp
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| You may prefix each entry with a minus sign ('-') to avoid syncing the
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| file after each log message.  Note that you might lose information if
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| the system crashes right after a write attempt.  Nevertheless this might
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| give you back some performance, especially if you run programs that use
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| logging in a very verbose manner.
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| .Ss Named Pipes
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| This version of
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| .Xr syslogd 8
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| supports logging to named pipes (FIFOs).  A FIFO, or named pipe, can be
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| used as a destination for log messages by prepending a pipe symbol ('|')
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| to the name of the file.  This can be very handy for debugging.  Note
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| that the FIFO must be created with the
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| .Xr mkfifo 1
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| command before
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| .Nm syslogd
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| is started.
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| .Ss Terminal and Console
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| If the file you specified is a tty, special tty-handling is done, same
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| with
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| .Pa /dev/console .
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| .Ss Remote Machine
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| Full remote logging support is available in
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| .Nm syslogd ,
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| i.e. to send messages to a remote syslog server, and and to receive
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| messages from remote hosts.  To forward messages to another host,
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| prepend the hostname with the at sign ('@').  If a port number is added
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| after a colon (':') then that port will be used as the destination port
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| rather than the usual syslog port.
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| .Pp
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| This feature makes it possible to collect all syslog messages in a
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| network on a central host.  This reduces administration needs and
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| can be really helpful when debugging distributed systems.
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| .Pp
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| Using a named pipe log method, messages from remote hosts can be sent to
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| a log program.  By reading log messages line by line such a program is
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| able to sort log messages by host name or program name on the central
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| log host.  This way it is possible to split the log into separate files.
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| .Pp
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| By default messages to remote remote hosts were formatted in the original
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| BSD style, without timestamp or hostname.  As of
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| .Nm syslogd
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| v2.0 the default includes timestamp and hostname.  It is also possible to
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| enable the new RFC5424 style formatting, append ';RFC5424' after the
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| hostname.
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| .Ss List of Users
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| Usually critical messages are also directed to
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| .Ql root
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| on that machine.  You can specify a list of users that ought to receive
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| the log message on their terminal by writing their usernames.  You may
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| specify more than one user by separating the usernames with commas
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| (',').  Only logged in users will receive the log messages.
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| .Ss Everyone logged on
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| Emergency messages often go to all users currently online to notify them
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| that something strange is happening with the system.  To specify this
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| .Xr wall 1
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| feature use an asterisk ('*').
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| .Sh IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
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| The
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| .Dq kern
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| facility is usually reserved for messages
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| generated by the local kernel.
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| Other messages logged with facility
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| .Dq kern
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| are usually translated to facility
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| .Dq user .
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| This translation can be disabled;
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| see
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| .Xr syslogd 8
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| for details.
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| .Sh FILES
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| .Bl -tag -width /etc/syslog.d/*.conf -compact
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| .It Pa /etc/syslog.conf
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| .Xr syslogd 8
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| configuration file
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| .It /etc/syslog.d/*.conf
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| Recommended directory for .conf snippets
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| .El
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| .Sh EXAMPLES
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| This section lists some examples, partially from actual site setups.
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| .Ss Catch Everything
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| This example matches all facilities and priorities and stores everything
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| in the file
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| .Pa /var/log/syslog
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| in RFC5424 format.  Every time the file reaches 10 MiB it is rotated and
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| five files in total are kept, including the non-rotated file.
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| .Bd -literal -offset indent
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| # Match all log messages, store in RC5424 format and rotate every 10 MiB
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| #
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| *.*                          /var/log/critical    ;rotate=10M:5,RFC5424
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| .Ed
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| .Ss Critical
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| This stores all messages of priority
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| .Ql crit
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| in the file
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| .Pa /var/log/critical ,
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| with the exception of any kernel messages.
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| .Bd -literal -offset indent
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| # Store critical stuff in critical
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| #
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| *.=crit;kern.none            /var/log/critical
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| .Ed
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| .Ss Kernel
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| This is an example of the 2nd selector overwriting part of the first
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| one.  The first selector selects kernel messages of priority
 | |
| .Ql info
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| and higher.  The second selector filters out kernel messages of priority
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| .Ql error
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| and higher.  This leaves just priorities
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| .Ql info ,
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| .Ql notice ,
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| and
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| .Ql warning
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| to get logged.
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| .Bd -literal -offset indent
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| # Kernel messages are stored in the kernel file, critical messages and
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| # higher ones also go to another host and to the console
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| #
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| kern.*                       /var/log/kernel
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| kern.crit                    @arpa.berkeley.edu   ;RFC5424
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| kern.crit                    /dev/console
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| kern.info;kern.!err          /var/log/kernel.info
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| .Ed
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| .Pp
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| The first rule directs any message that has the kernel facility to the
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| file
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| .Pa /var/log/kernel .
 | |
| Recall that only the kernel itself can log to this facility.
 | |
| .Pp
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| The second statement directs all kernel messages of priority
 | |
| .Ql crit
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| and higher to the remote host
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| .Ql arpa.berkeley.edu
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| in RFC5424 style formatting.  This is useful, because if the host
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| crashes and the disks get irreparable errors you might not be able to
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| read the stored messages.  If they're on a remote host, too, you still
 | |
| can try to find out the reason for the crash.
 | |
| .Pp
 | |
| The third rule directs kernel messages of priority
 | |
| .Ql crit
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| and higher to the actual console, so the person who works on the machine
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| will get them, too.
 | |
| .Pp
 | |
| The fourth line tells
 | |
| .Nm syslogd
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| to save all kernel messages that come with priorities from
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| .Ql info
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| up to
 | |
| .Ql warning
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| in the file
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| .Pa /var/log/kernel.info .
 | |
| .Ss Redirecting to a TTY
 | |
| This directs all messages that use 
 | |
| .Ql mail.info
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| (in source
 | |
| .Ql LOG_MAIL | LOG_INFO )
 | |
| to
 | |
| .Pa /dev/tty12 , 
 | |
| the 12th console.  For example the tcpwrapper
 | |
| .Xr tcpd 8 
 | |
| uses this as its default.
 | |
| .Bd -literal -offset indent
 | |
| # The tcp wrapper logs with mail.info, we display
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| # all the connections on tty12
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| #
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| mail.=info                   /dev/tty12
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| .Ed
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| .Ss Redirecting to a file
 | |
| This pattern matches all messages that come with the
 | |
| .Ql mail
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| facility, except for the
 | |
| .Ql info
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| priority.  These will be stored in the file
 | |
| .Pa /var/log/mail .
 | |
| .Bd -literal -offset indent
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| # Write all mail related logs to a file
 | |
| #
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| mail.*;mail.!=info           /var/log/mail
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| .Ed
 | |
| .Ss Single Priority from Two Facilities
 | |
| This will extract all messages that come either with
 | |
| .Ql mail.info
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| or with
 | |
| .Ql news.info
 | |
| and store them in the file
 | |
| .Pa /var/log/info .
 | |
| .Bd -literal -offset indent
 | |
| # Log all mail.info and news.info messages to info
 | |
| #
 | |
| mail,news.=info              /var/log/info
 | |
| .Ed
 | |
| .Ss Advanced Filtering, part 1
 | |
| This logs all messages that come with either the
 | |
| .Ql info
 | |
| or the
 | |
| .Ql notice
 | |
| priority into the file
 | |
| .Pa /var/log/messages ,
 | |
| except for all messages that use the
 | |
| .Ql mail
 | |
| facility.
 | |
| .Bd -literal -offset indent
 | |
| # Log info and notice messages to messages file
 | |
| #
 | |
| *.=info;*.=notice;\\
 | |
| 	mail.none            /var/log/messages
 | |
| .Ed
 | |
| .Ss Advanced Filtering, part 2
 | |
| This statement logs all messages that come with the
 | |
| .Ql info
 | |
| priority to the file
 | |
| .Pa /var/log/messages .
 | |
| But any message with either
 | |
| .Ql mail
 | |
| or the
 | |
| .Ql news
 | |
| facility  are not logged.
 | |
| .Bd -literal -offset indent
 | |
| # Log info messages to messages file
 | |
| #
 | |
| *.=info;\\
 | |
| 	mail,news.none       /var/log/messages
 | |
| .Ed
 | |
| .Ss Wall Messages
 | |
| This rule tells
 | |
| .Nm syslogd
 | |
| to write all emergency messages to all currently logged in users.  This
 | |
| is the wall action.
 | |
| .Bd -literal -offset indent
 | |
| # Emergency messages will be displayed using wall
 | |
| #
 | |
| *.=emerg                     *
 | |
| .Ed
 | |
| .Ss Alerting Users
 | |
| This rule directs all messages of priority
 | |
| .Ql alert
 | |
| or higher to the terminals of the operator, i.e. of the users 'root'
 | |
| and 'eric', if they're logged in.
 | |
| .Bd -literal -offset indent
 | |
| # Any logged in root user and Eric get alert and higher messages.
 | |
| #
 | |
| *.alert                      root,eric
 | |
| .Ed
 | |
| .Ss Log Rotation
 | |
| This example logs all messages except kernel messages to the file
 | |
| .Pa /var/log/messages
 | |
| without syncing ('-') the file after each log message.  When the file
 | |
| reaches 100 kiB it is rotated.  In total are only 10 rotated files,
 | |
| including the main file itself and compressed files kept.  The size
 | |
| argument takes the same modifiers as the
 | |
| .Xr syslogd 8
 | |
| command line option,
 | |
| .Fl r .
 | |
| .Bd -literal -offset indent
 | |
| # Log all messages, including kernel, to the messages file rotate it
 | |
| # every 100 kiB and keep up to 10 aged out, and compressed, files.
 | |
| #
 | |
| *.*;kern.none               -/var/log/messages    ;rotate=100k:10
 | |
| .Ed
 | |
| .Ss Logging to Remote Syslog Server
 | |
| This rule redirects all messages to one remote host called
 | |
| .Ql finlandia ,
 | |
| with RFC5424 style formatting, and another remote host called
 | |
| .Ql sibelius ,
 | |
| but on a non-standard port and with RFC3164 formatting (i.e.,
 | |
| including timestamp and hostname).
 | |
| .Bd -literal -offset indent
 | |
| *.*                          @finlandia           ;RFC5424
 | |
| *.*                          @sibelius:5514       ;RFC3164
 | |
| .Ed
 | |
| .Sh SEE ALSO
 | |
| .Xr syslog 3 ,
 | |
| .Xr syslogd 8
 | |
| .Sh BUGS
 | |
| The effects of multiple
 | |
| .Em selectors
 | |
| are sometimes not intuitive.
 | |
| For example
 | |
| .Dq mail.crit,*.err
 | |
| will select
 | |
| .Dq mail
 | |
| facility messages at the level of
 | |
| .Dq err
 | |
| or higher, not at the level of
 | |
| .Dq crit
 | |
| or higher.
 | |
| .Pp
 | |
| In networked environments, note that not all operating systems
 | |
| implement the same set of facilities.
 | |
| The facilities
 | |
| authpriv, cron, ftp, and ntp that are known to this implementation
 | |
| might be absent on the target system.
 | |
| Even worse, DEC UNIX uses
 | |
| facility number 10 (which is authpriv in this implementation) to
 | |
| log events for their AdvFS file system.
 |