NAME¶
rsyslogd - reliable and extended syslogd
SYNOPSIS¶
rsyslogd [
-4 ] [
-6 ] [
-A ] [
-d ] [
-D
] [
-f config file ]
[
-i pid file ] [
-l hostlist ] [
-n ] [
-N level ]
[
-q ] [
-Q ] [
-s domainlist ] [
-u
userlevel ] [
-v ] [
-w ] [
-x ]
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
documentation, because the man pages only cover basic aspects of operation.
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 support 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 configuration 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 standard 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¶
- -A
- When sending UDP messages, there are potentially multiple
paths to the target destination. By default, rsyslogd only sends to
the first target it can successfully send to. If -A is given, messages are
sent to all targets. This may improve reliability, but may also cause
message duplication. This option should be enabled only if it is fully
understood.
- -4
- Causes rsyslogd to listen to IPv4 addresses only. If
neither -4 nor -6 is given, rsyslogd listens to all configured
addresses of the system.
- -6
- Causes rsyslogd to listen to IPv6 addresses only. If
neither -4 nor -6 is given, rsyslogd listens to all configured
addresses of the system.
- -c version
- This option has been obsoleted and has no function any
longer. It is still accepted in order not to break existing scripts.
However, future versions may not support it.
- -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. Using this the daemon will not proceed
a fork(2) to set itself in the background, but opposite to that
stay in the foreground and write much debug information on the current
tty. See the DEBUGGING section for more information.
- -f config file
- Specify an alternative configuration file instead of
/etc/rsyslog.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.
- -l hostlist
- Specify a hostname that should be logged only with its
simple hostname and not the fqdn. Multiple hosts may be specified using
the colon (``:'') separator.
- -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
configuration 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 actually activates the code. Later, higher
levels will mean more verbosity (this is a forward-compatibility option).
rsyslogd is started and controlled by init(8).
- -q add hostname if DNS fails during ACL
processing
- During ACL processing, hostnames are resolved to IP
addresses for performance reasons. If DNS fails during that process, the
hostname is added as wildcard text, which results in proper, but somewhat
slower operation once DNS is up again.
- -Q do not resolve hostnames during ACL
processing
- Do not resolve hostnames to IP addresses during ACL
processing.
- -s domainlist
- Specify a domainname that should be stripped off before
logging. Multiple domains may be specified using the colon (``:'')
separator. Please be advised that no sub-domains may be specified but only
entire domains. For example if -s north.de is specified and the
host logging resolves to satu.infodrom.north.de no domain would be cut,
you will have to specify two domains like: -s
north.de:infodrom.north.de.
- -S ip_addresslocal client source IP
- rsyslogd uses ip_address as local client address while
connecting to remote logserver. Currently used by omrelp only and only
with tcp.
- -u userlevel
- This is a "catch all" option for some very
seldomly-used user settings. The "userlevel" variable selects
multiple things. Add the specific values to get the combined effect of
them. A value of 1 prevents rsyslogd from parsing hostnames and tags
inside messages. A value of 2 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. To combine these two
features, use a userlevel of 3 (1+2). Whenever you use an -u option, make
sure you really understand what you do and why you do it.
- -v
- Print version and exit.
- -w
- Suppress warnings issued when messages are received from
non-authorized machines (those, that are in no AllowedSender list).
- -x
- Disable DNS for remote messages.
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 trying 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.
Also, in v3 a full restart will be done in order to read changed
configuration files. Note that this means a full rsyslogd restart is done.
This has, among others, the consequence that TCP and other connections are
torn down. Also, if any queues are not running in disk assisted mode or
are not set to persist data on shutdown, queue data is lost. HUPing
rsyslogd is an extremely expensive operation and should only be done when
actually necessary. Actually, it is a rsyslgod stop immediately followed
by a restart. Future versions will remove this restart functionality of
HUP (it will go away in v5). So it is advised to use HUP only for closing
files, and a "real restart" (e.g. /etc/rc.d/rsyslogd restart) to
activate configuration changes.
- TERM , INT , QUIT
- Rsyslogd will die.
- USR1
- Switch debugging on/off. This option can only be used if
rsyslogd 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 logging
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
-d option then
rsyslogd will be
very verbose by writing much of what it does on stdout.
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):
- 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
FileTrace=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.
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.enjellic.com) and
Martin Schulze (joey@linux.de) for the fine sysklogd package.
- Rainer Gerhards
- Adiscon GmbH
- Grossrinderfeld, Germany
- rgerhards@adiscon.com