rsyslogd man page on Kali

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RSYSLOGD(8)		  Linux System Administration		   RSYSLOGD(8)

NAME
       rsyslogd - reliable and extended syslogd

SYNOPSIS
       rsyslogd	 [  -d ] [ -D ] [ -f config file ] [ -i pid file ] [ -n ] [ -N
       level ] [ -C ] [ -v ]

DESCRIPTION
       Rsyslogd is a system utility providing  support	for  message  logging.
       Support	of  both internet and unix domain sockets enables this utility
       to support both local and remote logging.

       Note that this version of rsyslog ships with extensive documentation in
       html  format.   This is provided in the ./doc subdirectory and probably
       in a separate package if you installed rsyslog via a packaging  system.
       To  use rsyslog's advanced features, you need to look at the html docu‐
       mentation, because the man pages only covers basic  aspects  of	opera‐
       tion.  For details and configuration examples, see the rsyslog.conf (5)
       man page and the online documentation at http://www.rsyslog.com/doc

       Rsyslogd(8) is derived from the	sysklogd  package  which  in  turn  is
       derived from the stock BSD sources.

       Rsyslogd	 provides  a  kind  of	logging that many modern programs use.
       Every logged message contains at least a time  and  a  hostname	field,
       normally	 a program name field, too, but that depends on how trusty the
       logging program is. The rsyslog package	supports  free	definition  of
       output  formats	via templates. It also supports precise timestamps and
       writing directly to databases. If the database option  is  used,	 tools
       like phpLogCon can be used to view the log data.

       While the rsyslogd sources have been heavily modified a couple of notes
       are in order.  First of all there has  been  a  systematic  attempt  to
       ensure  that  rsyslogd  follows	its default, standard BSD behavior. Of
       course, some configuration file changes are necessary in order to  sup‐
       port  the  template  system.  However, rsyslogd should be able to use a
       standard syslog.conf and act like the  original	syslogd.  However,  an
       original	 syslogd  will not work correctly with a rsyslog-enhanced con‐
       figuration file. At best, it will generate funny	 looking  file	names.
       The  second  important concept to note is that this version of rsyslogd
       interacts transparently with the version of syslog found in  the	 stan‐
       dard  libraries.	  If  a binary linked to the standard shared libraries
       fails to function correctly we would like an example of	the  anomalous
       behavior.

       The  main  configuration file /etc/rsyslog.conf or an alternative file,
       given with the -f option, is read at startup.   Any  lines  that	 begin
       with  the  hash	mark (``#'') and empty lines are ignored.  If an error
       occurs during parsing the error element is  ignored.  It	 is  tried  to
       parse the rest of the line.

OPTIONS
       -D     Runs  the	 Bison config parser in debug mode. This may help when
	      hard to find syntax errors are reported. Please  note  that  the
	      output  generated	 is  deeply  technical	and orignally targeted
	      towards developers.

       -d     Turns on debug mode. See the DEBUGGING section for more informa‐
	      tion.

       -f config file
	      Specify  an alternative configuration file instead of /etc/rsys‐
	      log.conf, which is the default.

       -i pid file
	      Specify an alternative pid file  instead	of  the	 default  one.
	      This  option  must  be  used  if	multiple instances of rsyslogd
	      should run on a single machine.

       -n     Avoid auto-backgrounding.	 This  is  needed  especially  if  the
	      rsyslogd is started and controlled by init(8).

       -N  level
	      Do  a  coNfig check. Do NOT run in regular mode, just check con‐
	      figuration file correctness.  This option is meant to  verify  a
	      config file. To do so, run rsyslogd interactively in foreground,
	      specifying -f <config-file> and -N level.	  The  level  argument
	      modifies	behaviour.  Currently, 0 is the same as not specifying
	      the -N option at all (so this makes limited sense) and  1	 actu‐
	      ally  activates  the  code.  Later, higher levels will mean more
	      verbosity (this is a forward-compatibility option).

       -C     This prevents rsyslogd from changing to the root directory. This
	      is  almost  never a good idea in production use. This option was
	      introduced in support of the internal testbed.

       -v     Print version and exit.

SIGNALS
       Rsyslogd reacts to a set of signals.  You may easily send a  signal  to
       rsyslogd using the following:

	      kill -SIGNAL $(cat /var/run/rsyslogd.pid)

       Note  that -SIGNAL must be replaced with the actual signal you are try‐
       ing to send, e.g. with HUP. So it then becomes:

	      kill -HUP $(cat /var/run/rsyslogd.pid)

       HUP    This lets rsyslogd perform close all open files.

       TERM ,  INT ,  QUIT
	      Rsyslogd will die.

       USR1   Switch debugging on/off.	This option can only be used if	 rsys‐
	      logd is started with the -d debug option.

       CHLD   Wait for childs if some were born, because of wall'ing messages.

SECURITY THREATS
       There  is the potential for the rsyslogd daemon to be used as a conduit
       for a denial of service attack.	A rogue program(mer) could very easily
       flood  the  rsyslogd  daemon  with syslog messages resulting in the log
       files consuming all the remaining space on the filesystem.   Activating
       logging	over the inet domain sockets will of course expose a system to
       risks outside of programs or individuals on the local machine.

       There are a number of methods of protecting a machine:

       1.     Implement kernel firewalling to limit which  hosts  or  networks
	      have access to the 514/UDP socket.

       2.     Logging  can  be	directed to an isolated or non-root filesystem
	      which, if filled, will not impair the machine.

       3.     The ext2 filesystem can be used which can be configured to limit
	      a	 certain  percentage  of  a  filesystem to usage by root only.
	      NOTE that this will require rsyslogd to be  run  as  a  non-root
	      process.	 ALSO NOTE that this will prevent usage of remote log‐
	      ging on the default port since rsyslogd will be unable  to  bind
	      to the 514/UDP socket.

       4.     Disabling	 inet  domain  sockets	will  limit  risk to the local
	      machine.

   Message replay and spoofing
       If remote logging is  enabled,  messages	 can  easily  be  spoofed  and
       replayed.   As  the messages are transmitted in clear-text, an attacker
       might use the information  obtained  from  the  packets	for  malicious
       things.	Also,  an  attacker  might replay recorded messages or spoof a
       sender's IP address, which could lead to a wrong perception  of	system
       activity.  These	 can  be prevented by using GSS-API authentication and
       encryption. Be sure to  think  about  syslog  network  security	before
       enabling it.

DEBUGGING
       When  debugging	is  turned  on	using the -d option, rsyslogd produces
       debugging information according to the RSYSLOG_DEBUG environment	 vari‐
       able  and the signals received. When run in foreground, the information
       is written to stdout. An additional output file can be specified	 using
       the RSYSLOG_DEBUGLOG environment variable.

FILES
       /etc/rsyslog.conf
	      Configuration  file for rsyslogd.	 See rsyslog.conf(5) for exact
	      information.
       /dev/log
	      The Unix domain socket to from where local syslog	 messages  are
	      read.
       /var/run/rsyslogd.pid
	      The file containing the process id of rsyslogd.
       prefix/lib/rsyslog
	      Default  directory for rsyslogd modules. The prefix is specified
	      during compilation (e.g. /usr/local).
ENVIRONMENT
       RSYSLOG_DEBUG
	      Controls runtime debug support. It  contains  an	option	string
	      with the following options possible (all are case insensitive):

	      Debug  Turns  on	debugging  and	prevents forking. This is pro‐
		     cessed earlier in the startup than command	 line  options
		     (i.e.  -d)	 and as such enables earlier debugging output.
		     Mutually exclusive with DebugOnDemand.
	      DebugOnDemand
		     Enables debugging but turns off debug output. The	output
		     can  be  toggled  by  sending SIGUSR1. Mutually exclusive
		     with Debug.
	      LogFuncFlow
		     Print out the logical flow	 of  functions	(entering  and
		     exiting them)
	      FileTrace
		     Specifies	which  files  to trace LogFuncFlow. If not set
		     (the default), a LogFuncFlow trace is  provided  for  all
		     files.  Set  to limit it to the files specified.FileTrace
		     may be specified multiple	times,	one  file  each	 (e.g.
		     export  RSYSLOG_DEBUG="LogFuncFlow	 FileTrace=vm.c	 File‐
		     Trace=expr.c"
	      PrintFuncDB
		     Print the content of the debug function database whenever
		     debug information is printed (e.g. abort case)!
	      PrintAllDebugInfoOnExit
		     Print  all	 debug information immediately before rsyslogd
		     exits (currently not implemented!)
	      PrintMutexAction
		     Print mutex action as  it	happens.  Useful  for  finding
		     deadlocks and such.
	      NoLogTimeStamp
		     Do	 not  prefix log lines with a timestamp (default is to
		     do that).
	      NoStdOut
		     Do not emit debug messages to stdout. If RSYSLOG_DEBUGLOG
		     is	 not  set, this means no messages will be displayed at
		     all.
	      Help   Display a very short list of commands - hopefully a  life
		     saver if you can't access the documentation...

       RSYSLOG_DEBUGLOG
	      If  set,	writes (almost) all debug message to the specified log
	      file in addition to stdout.
       RSYSLOG_MODDIR
	      Provides the default directory in which loadable modules reside.

BUGS
       Please review the file BUGS for up-to-date information  on  known  bugs
       and annoyances.

Further Information
       Please  visit  http://www.rsyslog.com/doc  for  additional information,
       tutorials and a support forum.

SEE ALSO
       rsyslog.conf(5),	  logger(1),   syslog(2),   syslog(3),	  services(5),
       savelog(8)

COLLABORATORS
       rsyslogd is derived from sysklogd sources, which in turn was taken from
       the BSD sources. Special thanks	to  Greg  Wettstein  (greg@wind.enjel‐
       lic.com) and Martin Schulze (joey@linux.de) for the fine sysklogd pack‐
       age.

       Rainer Gerhards
       Adiscon GmbH
       Grossrinderfeld, Germany
       rgerhards@adiscon.com

Version 8.6.0			  02 Dec 2014			   RSYSLOGD(8)
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