STDSYSLOG(1) | General Commands Manual | STDSYSLOG(1) |
NAME¶
stdsyslog
— log a
program's output to the system log
SYNOPSIS¶
stdsyslog |
[-d fd:level]
[-f facility]
[-p pidfile]
cmd [args...] |
stdsyslog |
-f list |
stdsyslog |
-l |
stdsyslog |
-V | -h |
DESCRIPTION¶
The stdsyslog
utility executes a program,
reads everything that it outputs to a set of file descriptors (by default
the standard output and standard error streams) and logs it to the system
log.
The stdsyslog
utility may be passed the
following options:
-d
- Specify the level for messages on a file descriptor; may (and probably
should) be used more than once. If no
-d
options are specified,stdsyslog
will assume “-d 1:info -d 2:err”, i.e. log the program's standard output using the “info” level and the errors using the “err” one. -f
- Specify the syslog facility to use, or “list” for a list of
the available values. If not specified,
stdsyslog
will use the “daemon” facility. -h
- Display program usage information and exit.
-l
- List the available syslog levels.
-p
- Specify the file to write the child process ID to.
-V
- Display program version information and exit.
EXAMPLES¶
The following examples are shown as given to the shell.
Log the string “information” to the “daemon:info” syslog facility:
stdsyslog echo
information
Log the string “error” to the “local4:err” facility:
stdsyslog -f local4 sh -c 'echo error
1>&2'
Run the “sprog” program with two arguments, “some” and “args”, store its process ID into the sprog.pid file and log the messages appearing on its standard output to “daemon:info” and the ones on its standard error stream to “daemon:err”:
stdsyslog -p sprog.pid -d 1:info -d
2:crit sprog some args
SEE ALSO¶
TODO¶
Planned or at least possible enhancements:
- *
- Command-line flags to specify openlog(3) options.
- *
- Command-line flags to specify patterns for text appearing on some file descriptors for possibly logging with another priority, e.g. lines appearing on the standard error stream starting with “DBG:” should be logged with the debug priority.
February 8, 2013 | Debian |