SYSLOGD(8) | System Manager's Manual | SYSLOGD(8) |
NAME¶
syslogd
—
SYNOPSIS¶
syslogd |
[-V ] [-a
socket] [-d ]
[-f config_file]
[-h ] [-l
host_list] [-m
mark_interval] [-n ]
[-p log_socket]
[-r ] [-s
domain_list] [--no-klog ]
[--no-unixaf ]
[--no-forward ] |
DESCRIPTION¶
Syslogd
reads and logs messages to the system console,
log files, other machines and/or users as specified by its configuration file.
The options are as follows:
-V
- Print version number and exit.
--help
- Display help information and exit.
-d
- Enter debug mode. syslogd does not put itself in the background, does not fork and shows debug information.
-a
- Specify additional sockets from that syslogd has to listen to. This is needed if you are going to let some daemon run within a chroot()'ed environment. You can specify up to 19 additional sockets.
- -f, --rcfile=FILE
- Specify the pathname of an alternate configuration file; the default is system specific and displayed in the help output.
- --rcdir=DIR
- Specify the pathname of an alternate configuration directory; the default is system specific and displayed in the help output.
- -h, --hop
- Enable forwarding remote messages. By default syslogd will not forward messages it receives from remote hosts.
-l
- A colon-seperated lists of hosts which should be considered local; they are logged by their hostnames instead by their FQDN.
- -m, --mark=INTERVAL/fP
- Select the number of minutes between ``mark'' messages; the default is 20 minutes. Setting it to 0 disables timestamps.
- -n, --no-detach
- Suppress backgrounding and detachment of the daemon from its controlling terminal.
- -p, --socket=PATH
- Specify the pathname of an alternate log socket. The default is systemspecific and displayed in the help output.
- -r, --inet
- Enable to receive remote messages using an internet domain socket. The default is to not receive any messages from the network. Older version always accepted remote messages.
-s
- A colon-seperated list of domainnames which should be stripped from the FQDNs of hosts when logging.
--no-klog
- Do not listen to the kernel log device. This is only supported on systems which define a kernel log device, on all others this is already the default, and the option will be silently ignored.
--no-unixaf
- Do not listen to any unix domain socket. This option overrides -p and -a.
--no-forward
- Do not forward any messages. This overrides -h.
Syslogd
reads its configuration file when
it starts up and whenever it receives a hangup signal. For information on
the format of the configuration file, see
syslog.conf(5).
Syslogd
reads messages from the UNIX
domain socket /dev/log, from an Internet domain
socket specified in /etc/services, and from the one
of the special devices /dev/klog or
/proc/kmsg depending on the system (to read kernel
messages). In a GNU/Linux system it will not parse the System.map and use it
to annotate the kernel messages.
Syslogd
creates the file
/var/run/syslog.pid, and stores its process id
there. This can be used to kill or reconfigure
syslogd
.
The message sent to syslogd
should consist
of a single line. The message can contain a priority code, which should be a
preceding decimal number in angle braces, for example,
‘⟨5.⟩’ This priority code should map into the
priorities defined in the include file
⟨sys/syslog.h⟩.
FILES¶
- /etc/syslog.conf
- The configuration file.
- /var/run/syslog.pid
- The process id of current
syslogd
. - /dev/log
- Name of the UNIX domain datagram log socket.
- /dev/klog, /proc/kmsg
- The kernel log device.
SEE ALSO¶
logger(1), syslog(3), services(5), syslog.conf(5)HISTORY¶
Thesyslogd
command appeared in
4.3BSD.
June 6, 1993 | GNU inetutils |