RFC5424 Compliant System Logging
Table of Contents
Introduction
This is the continuation of the original Debian/Ubuntu syslog daemon,
updated with full RFC3164 and RFC5424 support from NetBSD and
FreeBSD.  The package includes a library and syslog.h header file
replacement, two system log daemons, and one command line tool.
The libsyslog and syslog/syslog.h, derived directly from NetBSD,
expose syslogp() and other new features available only in RFC5424:
The syslogd daemon is an enhanced version of the standard Berkeley
utility program, updated with DNA from FreeBSD.  It is responsible for
providing logging of messages received from programs and facilities on
the local host as well as from remote hosts.  Although compatible with
standard C-library implementations of the syslog() API (GLIBC, musl
libc, uClibc), libsyslog must be used in your application to unlock
the new RFC5424 syslogp() API.
The klogd daemon listens to kernel message sources and is responsible
for prioritizing and processing operating system messages.  The klogd
daemon can run as a client of syslogd or optionally as a standalone
program.  klogd can now be used to decode EIP addresses if it can
determine a System.map file.
The included logger tool can be used from the command line, or script,
to send RFC5424 formatted messages using libsyslog to syslogd for
local or remote logging.
Main differences from the original sysklogd package are:
- Built-in log-rotation support, with compression by default, useful for embedded systems. No need for cron and a separate logrotate daemon
- Full RFC3164 and RFC5424 support
- Includes timestamp and hostname, RFC3164 style, in remote logging
- Support for sending RFC5424 style remote syslog messages
- Includes a loggertool with RFC5424 capabilities (msgidetc.)
- Includes a library and system header replacement for logging
- FreeBSD socket receive buffer size patch
- Avoid blocking syslogdif console is backed up
- Touch PID file on SIGHUP, for integration with Finit
- GNU configure & build system to ease porting/cross-compiling
- Support for configuring remote syslog timeout
Build & Install
The GNU Configure & Build system use /usr/local as the default install
prefix.  In many cases this is useful, but this means the configuration
files and cache files will also use that same prefix.  Most users have
come to expect those files in /etc/ and /var/run/ and configure has
a few useful options that are recommended to use:
$ ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var
$ make -j5
$ sudo make install-strip
You may want to remove the --prefix=/usr option.
Building from GIT
If you want to contribute, or just try out the latest but unreleased features, then you need to know a few things about the GNU build system:
- configure.acand a per-directory- Makefile.amare key files
- configureand- Makefile.inare generated from- autogen.sh, they are not stored in GIT but automatically generated for the release tarballs
- Makefileis generated by- configurescript
To build from GIT you first need to clone the repository and run the
autogen.sh script.  This requires automake and autoconf to be
installed on your system.
git clone https://github.com/troglobit/sysklogd.git
cd sysklogd/
./autogen.sh
./configure && make
GIT sources are a moving target and are not recommended for production systems, unless you know what you are doing!
Origin & References
This is the continuation of the original sysklogd by Martin Schulze. Now maintained and heavilty updated by Joachim Nilsson. Please file bug reports, or send pull requests for bug fixes and proposed extensions at GitHub.
