syslog.conf man page on OpenIndiana

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   20441 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
OpenIndiana logo
[printable version]

syslog.conf(4)			 File Formats			syslog.conf(4)

NAME
       syslog.conf - configuration file for syslogd system log daemon

SYNOPSIS
       /etc/syslog.conf

DESCRIPTION
       The  file  /etc/syslog.conf contains information used by the system log
       daemon, syslogd(1M), to forward a system	 message  to  appropriate  log
       files  and/or  users.  syslogd  preprocesses this file through m4(1) to
       obtain the correct information for certain log files, defining  LOGHOST
       if  the address of "loghost" is the same as one of the addresses of the
       host that is running syslogd.

       A configuration entry is composed of two TAB-separated fields:

	 selector	action

       The selector field contains  a  semicolon-separated  list  of  priority
       specifications of the form:

	 facility.level [ ; facility.level ]

       where facility is a system facility, or comma-separated list of facili‐
       ties, and level is an indication of the severity of the condition being
       logged. Recognized values for facility include:

       user	   Messages  generated	by user processes. This is the default
		   priority for	 messages  from	 programs  or  facilities  not
		   listed in this file.

       kern	   Messages generated by the kernel.

       mail	   The mail system.

       daemon	   System daemons, such as in.ftpd(1M)

       auth	   The	authorization  system:	login(1),  su(1M),  getty(1M),
		   among others.

       lpr	   The line printer spooling system: lpr(1B),  lpc(1B),	 among
		   others.

       news	   Designated for the USENET network news system.

       uucp	   Designated  for  the UUCP system; it does not currently use
		   the syslog mechanism.

       cron	   Designated for cron/at messages generated by	 systems  that
		   do  logging	through	 syslog.  The  current	version of the
		   Solaris Operating Environment does not  use	this  facility
		   for logging.

       audit	   Designated  for  audit  messages  generated by systems that
		   audit by means of syslog.

       local0-7	   Designated for local use.

       mark	   For timestamp messages produced internally by syslogd.

       *	   An asterisk indicates all facilities except	for  the  mark
		   facility.

       Recognized values for level are (in descending order of severity):

       emerg	  For panic conditions that would normally be broadcast to all
		  users.

       alert	  For conditions that should be corrected immediately, such as
		  a corrupted system database.

       crit	  For  warnings about critical conditions, such as hard device
		  errors.

       err	  For other errors.

       warning	  For warning messages.

       notice	  For conditions  that	are  not  error	 conditions,  but  may
		  require special handling. A configuration entry with a level
		  value of notice must appear on a separate line.

       info	  Informational messages.

       debug	  For messages that are normally used only  when  debugging  a
		  program.

       none	  Do  not  send	 messages  from	 the indicated facility to the
		  selected file. For example, a selector of

		  *.debug;mail.none

		  sends all messages except  mail  messages  to	 the  selected
		  file.

       For  a  given facility and level, syslogd matches all messages for that
       level and all higher levels. For example, an  entry  that  specifies  a
       level of crit also logs messages at the alert and emerg levels.

       The  action  field  indicates  where to forward the message. Values for
       this field can have one of four forms:

	   o	  A filename, beginning with a leading slash, which  indicates
		  that messages specified by the selector are to be written to
		  the specified file. The file is opened in append mode if  it
		  exists.  If  the file does not exist, logging silently fails
		  for this action.

	   o	  The name of a remote host, prefixed  with  an	 @,  as	 with:
		  @server,  which  indicates  that  messages  specified by the
		  selector are to be forwarded to the  syslogd	on  the	 named
		  host. The hostname "loghost" is treated, in the default sys‐
		  log.conf, as the hostname given to  the  machine  that  logs
		  syslogd messages. Every machine is "loghost" by default, per
		  the hosts database. It  is  also  possible  to  specify  one
		  machine  on  a network to be "loghost" by, literally, naming
		  the machine "loghost". If the local machine is designated to
		  be  "loghost",  then	syslogd	 messages  are	written to the
		  appropriate files. Otherwise, they are sent to  the  machine
		  "loghost" on the network.

	   o	  A  comma-separated  list  of usernames, which indicates that
		  messages specified by the selector are to be written to  the
		  named users if they are logged in.

	   o	  An  asterisk, which indicates that messages specified by the
		  selector are to be written to all logged-in users.

       Blank lines are ignored. Lines for which the first  nonwhite  character
       is a '#' are treated as comments.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 A Sample Configuration File

       With the following configuration file:

       *.notice			     /var/log/notice
       mail.info		     /var/log/notice
       *.crit			     /var/log/critical
       kern,mark.debug		     /dev/console
       kern.err			     @server
       *.emerg			     *
       *.alert			     root,operator
       *.alert;auth.warning	     /var/log/auth

       syslogd(1M) logs all mail system messages except debug messages and all
       notice (or higher) messages into a file named /var/log/notice. It  logs
       all  critical  messages into /var/log/critical, and all kernel messages
       and 20-minute marks onto the system console.

       Kernel messages of err (error) severity or higher are forwarded to  the
       machine	named  server.	Emergency messages are forwarded to all users.
       The users root and operator are informed of  any	 alert	messages.  All
       messages	 from  the authorization system of warning level or higher are
       logged in the file /var/log/auth.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability	     │Committed			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       at(1), crontab(1), logger(1), login(1), lp(1), lpc(1B), lpr(1B), m4(1),
       cron(1M),  getty(1M),  in.ftpd(1M),  su(1M),  syslogd(1M),  syslog(3C),
       hosts(4), attributes(5)

SunOS 5.11			  26 Apr 2006			syslog.conf(4)
[top]

List of man pages available for OpenIndiana

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net