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SYSKLOGD(8)		 Linux System Administration		  SYSKLOGD(8)



NAME
       sysklogd - Linux system logging utilities.

SYNOPSIS
       syslogd [ -a socket ] [ -d ] [ -f config file ] [ -h ] [ -l hostlist ]
       [ -m interval ] [ -n ] [ -p socket ] [ -r ] [ -s domainlist ] [ -v ] [
       -x ]


DESCRIPTION
       Sysklogd	 provides two system utilities which provide support for sys-
       tem logging and kernel message trapping.	 Support of both internet and
       unix domain sockets enables this utility package to support both local
       and remote logging.

       System logging is provided by a version of syslogd(8) derived from the
       stock  BSD  sources.   Support  for  kernel logging is provided by the
       klogd(8) utility which allows kernel logging to be conducted in either
       a standalone fashion or as a client of syslogd.

       Syslogd	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.

       While the syslogd sources have been heavily modified a couple of notes
       are  in	order.	 First	of all there has been a systematic attempt to
       insure that syslogd follows its default, standard BSD  behavior.	  The
       second  important  concept  to  note  is	 that this version of syslogd
       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/syslog.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 whole line is ignored.



OPTIONS
       -a socket
	      Using this argument you can  specify  additional	sockets	 from
	      that  syslogd has to listen to.  This is needed if you're going
	      to let some daemon run within a chroot() environment.  You  can
	      use  up  to  19  additional sockets.  If your environment needs
	      even more, you have to increase the symbol MAXFUNIX within  the
	      syslogd.c	 source	 file.	 An  example for a chroot() daemon is
	      described	    by	   the	   people     from     OpenBSD	   at
	      http://www.psionic.com/papers/dns.html.

       -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/sys-
	      log.conf, which is the default.

       -h     By  default  syslogd will not forward messages it receives from
	      remote hosts.  Specifying this switch on the command line	 will
	      cause the log daemon to forward any remote messages it receives
	      to forwarding hosts which have been defined.

       -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.

       -m interval
	      The syslogd logs	a  mark	 timestamp  regularly.	 The  default
	      interval	between two -- MARK -- lines is 20 minutes.  This can
	      be changed with this option.   Setting  the  interval  to	 zero
	      turns it off entirely.

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

       -p socket
	      You can specify an alternative unix domain  socket  instead  of
	      /dev/log.

       -r     This  option  will  enable the facility to receive message from
	      the network using an internet domain  socket  with  the  syslog
	      service  (see  services(5)).  The default is to not receive any
	      messages from the network.

	      This option is introduced in version 1.3 of the sysklogd	pack-
	      age.   Please note that the default behavior is the opposite of
	      how older versions behave, so you might have to turn this on.

       -s domainlist
	      Specify a domainname that should be stripped  off	 before	 log-
	      ging.   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.

       -v     Print version and exit.

       -x     Disable name lookups  when  receiving  remote  messages.	 This
	      avoids  deadlocks	 when  the  nameserver is running on the same
	      machine that runs the syslog daemon.


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

	      kill -SIGNAL 'cat /var/run/syslogd.pid'


       SIGHUP This  lets syslogd perform a re-initialization.  All open files
	      are  closed,  the	 configuration	file  (default	is  /etc/sys-
	      log.conf)	 will be reread and the syslog(3) facility is started
	      again.

       SIGTERM
	      The syslogd will die.

       SIGINT, SIGQUIT
	      If debugging is enabled these are	 ignored,  otherwise  syslogd
	      will die.

       SIGUSR1
	      Switch  debugging on/off.	 This option can only be used if sys-
	      logd is started with the -d debug option.

       SIGCHLD
	      Wait for childs if some were born,  because  of  wall'ing	 mes-
	      sages.


CONFIGURATION FILE SYNTAX DIFFERENCES
       Syslogd	uses  a	 slightly different syntax for its configuration file
       than the original BSD sources.  Originally all messages of a  specific
       priority and above were forwarded to the log file.

	      For  example  the following line caused ALL output from daemons
	      using the daemon facilities (debug is the lowest	priority,  so
	      every higher will also match) to go into /usr/adm/daemons:

		   # Sample syslog.conf
		   daemon.debug		    /usr/adm/daemons

       Under  the  new scheme this behavior remains the same.  The difference
       is the addition of four new specifiers, the asterisk (*) wildcard, the
       equation sign (=), the exclamation mark (!), and the minus sign (-).

       The * specifies that all messages for the specified facility are to be
       directed to the destination.  Note that this  behavior  is  degenerate
       with  specifying a priority level of debug.  Users have indicated that
       the asterisk notation is more intuitive.

       The = wildcard is used to restrict logging to the  specified  priority
       class.	This  allows,  for  example, routing only debug messages to a
       particular logging source.

	      For example the following	 line  in  syslog.conf	would  direct
	      debug messages from all sources to the /usr/adm/debug file.

		   # Sample syslog.conf
		   *.=debug	       /usr/adm/debug

       The  !  is  used to exclude logging of the specified priorities.	 This
       affects all (!) possibilities of specifying priorities.

	      For example the following lines would log all messages  of  the
	      facility	mail  except  those  with  the	priority  info to the
	      /usr/adm/mail file.  And all messages from  news.info  (includ-
	      ing)   to	  news.crit   (excluding)  would  be  logged  to  the
	      /usr/adm/news file.

		   # Sample syslog.conf
		   mail.*;mail.!=info	    /usr/adm/mail
		   news.info;news.!crit	    /usr/adm/news

       You may use it intuitively as an exception specifier.  The above	 men-
       tioned interpretation is simply inverted.  Doing that you may use

	    mail.none
       or
	    mail.!*
       or
	    mail.!debug

       to  skip every message that comes with a mail facility.	There is much
       room to play with it. :-)

       The - may only be used to prefix	 a  filename  if  you  want  to	 omit
       sync'ing the file after every write to it.

       This  may  take some acclimatization for those individuals used to the
       pure BSD behavior but testers have indicated that this syntax is some-
       what  more  flexible  than  the BSD behavior.  Note that these changes
       should not affect standard syslog.conf(5) files.	  You  must  specifi-
       cally  modify the configuration files to obtain the enhanced behavior.


SUPPORT FOR REMOTE LOGGING
       These modifications provide network support to the  syslogd  facility.
       Network	support	 means	that  messages can be forwarded from one node
       running syslogd to another node running syslogd	where  they  will  be
       actually logged to a disk file.

       To  enable this you have to specify the -r option on the command line.
       The default behavior is that syslogd won't listen to the network.

       The strategy is to have syslogd listen on a  unix  domain  socket  for
       locally	generated  log messages.  This behavior will allow syslogd to
       inter-operate with the syslog found in the standard C library.  At the
       same  time  syslogd  listens  on the standard syslog port for messages
       forwarded from other hosts.  To have  this  work	 correctly  the	 ser-
       vices(5)	 files	(typically  found  in  /etc)  must have the following
       entry:

		   syslog	   514/udp

       If this entry is missing syslogd neither can receive  remote  messages
       nor  send  them, because the UDP port cant be opened.  Instead syslogd
       will die immediately, blowing out an error message.

       To cause messages to be forwarded to another host replace  the  normal
       file  line  in the syslog.conf file with the name of the host to which
       the messages is to be sent prepended with an @.

	      For example, to forward ALL messages to a remote host  use  the
	      following syslog.conf entry:

		   # Sample syslogd configuration file to
		   # messages to a remote host forward all.
		   *.*		  @hostname

	      To  forward all kernel messages to a remote host the configura-
	      tion file would be as follows:

		   # Sample configuration file to forward all kernel
		   # messages to a remote host.
		   kern.*	  @hostname


       If the remote hostname cannot be	 resolved  at  startup,	 because  the
       name-server  might not be accessible (it may be started after syslogd)
       you don't have to worry.	 Syslogd will retry to resolve the  name  ten
       times  and  then	 complain.   Another  possibility to avoid this is to
       place the hostname in /etc/hosts.

       With normal syslogds you would get syslog-loops if you send  out	 mes-
       sages  that were received from a remote host to the same host (or more
       complicated to a third host that sends it back to the first  one,  and
       so  on).	  In my domain (Infodrom Oldenburg) we accidently got one and
       our disks filled up with the same single message. :-(

       To avoid this in further times no messages that were received  from  a
       remote host are sent out to another (or the same) remote host anymore.
       If there are scenarios where this doesn't make sense, please  drop  me
       (Joey) a line.

       If  the remote host is located in the same domain as the host, syslogd
       is running on, only the simple hostname will be logged instead of  the
       whole fqdn.

       In  a  local  network you may provide a central log server to have all
       the important information kept on one machine.  If  the	network	 con-
       sists  of  different  domains you don't have to complain about logging
       fully qualified names instead of simple hostnames.  You	may  want  to
       use the strip-domain feature -s of this server.	You can tell the sys-
       logd to strip off several domains other than the	 one  the  server  is
       located in and only log simple hostnames.

       Using  the -l option there's also a possibility to define single hosts
       as local machines.  This, too, results in logging  only	their  simple
       hostnames and not the fqdns.

       The  UDP socket used to forward messages to remote hosts or to receive
       messages from them is only opened when  it  is  needed.	 In  releases
       prior to 1.3-23 it was opened every time but not opened for reading or
       forwarding respectively.


OUTPUT TO NAMED PIPES (FIFOs)
       This version of syslogd has support for logging output to named	pipes
       (fifos).	  A  fifo  or named pipe can be used as a destination for log
       messages by prepending a pipy symbol (''|'') to the name of the	file.
       This  is handy for debugging.  Note that the fifo must be created with
       the mkfifo command before syslogd is started.

	      The following configuration file routes debug messages from the
	      kernel to a fifo:

		   # Sample configuration to route kernel debugging
		   # messages ONLY to /usr/adm/debug which is a
		   # named pipe.
		   kern.=debug		    |/usr/adm/debug


INSTALLATION CONCERNS
       There  is  probably  one	 important consideration when installing this
       version of syslogd.  This version of syslogd is	dependent  on  proper
       formatting of messages by the syslog function.  The functioning of the
       syslog function in the  shared  libraries  changed  somewhere  in  the
       region  of  libc.so.4.[2-4].n.  The specific change was to null-termi-
       nate the message	 before	 transmitting  it  to  the  /dev/log  socket.
       Proper  functioning  of	this version of syslogd is dependent on null-
       termination of the message.

       This problem will typically manifest itself if old  statically  linked
       binaries are being used on the system.  Binaries using old versions of
       the syslog function will cause empty lines to be	 logged	 followed  by
       the  message with the first character in the message removed.  Relink-
       ing these binaries to newer versions of the shared libraries will cor-
       rect this problem.

       Both the syslogd(8) and the klogd(8) can either be run from init(8) or
       started as part of the rc.*  sequence.  If it is started from init the
       option  -n  must	 be  set, otherwise you'll get tons of syslog daemons
       started.	 This is because init(8) depends on the process ID.


SECURITY THREATS
       There is the potential for the syslogd daemon to be used as a  conduit
       for  a  denial  of  service attack.  Thanks go to John Morrison (jmor-
       riso@rflab.ee.ubc.ca) for alerting me to this potential.	 A rogue pro-
       gram(mer)  could very easily flood the syslogd daemon with syslog mes-
       sages 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 syslogd to be run as a non-
	      root process.  ALSO NOTE that this will prevent usage of remote
	      logging  since  syslogd  will  be unable to bind to the 514/UDP
	      socket.

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

       5.     Use  step 4 and if the problem persists and is not secondary to
	      a rogue program/daemon get a 3.5 ft (approx. 1 meter) length of
	      sucker rod* and have a chat with the user in question.

	      Sucker  rod  def.	 --  3/4, 7/8 or 1in. hardened steel rod, male
	      threaded on each end.  Primary use in the oil industry in West-
	      ern  North  Dakota  and other locations to pump 'suck' oil from
	      oil wells.  Secondary uses are for the construction  of  cattle
	      feed  lots  and for dealing with the occasional recalcitrant or
	      belligerent individual.


DEBUGGING
       When debugging is turned on using -d option then syslogd will be	 very
       verbose	by writing much of what it does on stdout.  Whenever the con-
       figuration file is reread and re-parsed you'll see a  tabular,  corre-
       sponding	 to  the  internal  data structure.  This tabular consists of
       four fields:

       number This field contains a serial number  starting  by	 zero.	 This
	      number  represents  the position in the internal data structure
	      (i.e. the array).	 If one number is left out then	 there	might
	      be an error in the corresponding line in /etc/syslog.conf.

       pattern
	      This  field  is  tricky  and  represents the internal structure
	      exactly.	Every column stands for a  facility  (refer  to	 sys-
	      log(3)).	 As you can see, there are still some facilities left
	      free for former use, only the left most are used.	 Every	field
	      in a column represents the priorities (refer to syslog(3)).

       action This  field  describes  the  particular action that takes place
	      whenever a message is received that matches the pattern.	Refer
	      to the syslog.conf(5) manpage for all possible actions.

       arguments
	      This  field  shows  additional  arguments to the actions in the
	      last field.  For file-logging this is the filename for the log-
	      file; for user-logging this is a list of users; for remote log-
	      ging this is the hostname of the machine to log  to;  for	 con-
	      sole-logging  this is the used console; for tty-logging this is
	      the specified tty; wall has no additional arguments.

FILES
       /etc/syslog.conf
	      Configuration file for syslogd.  See syslog.conf(5)  for	exact
	      information.
       /dev/log
	      The  Unix domain socket to from where local syslog messages are
	      read.
       /var/run/syslogd.pid
	      The file containing the process id of syslogd.

BUGS
       If an error occurs in one line the whole rule is ignored.

       Syslogd doesn't change the filemode of opened logfiles at any stage of
       process.	  If  a file is created it is world readable.  If you want to
       avoid this, you have to create it and change permissions on your	 own.
       This  could  be	done  in combination with rotating logfiles using the
       savelog(8) program that is shipped  in  the  smail  3.x	distribution.
       Remember that it might be a security hole if everybody is able to read
       auth.* messages as these might contain passwords.


SEE ALSO
       syslog.conf(5),	klogd(8),  logger(1),  syslog(2),   syslog(3),	 ser-
       vices(5), savelog(8)


COLLABORATORS
       Syslogd	is  taken  from BSD sources, Greg Wettstein (greg@wind.enjel-
       lic.com) performed the port to Linux, Martin  Schulze  (joey@linux.de)
       fixed  some bugs and added several new features.	 Klogd was originally
       written by Steve	 Lord  (lord@cray.com),	 Greg  Wettstein  made	major
       improvements.

       Dr. Greg Wettstein
       Enjellic Systems Development
       Oncology Research Division Computing Facility
       Roger Maris Cancer Center
       Fargo, ND
       greg@wind.enjellic.com

       Stephen Tweedie
       Department of Computer Science
       Edinburgh University, Scotland
       sct@dcs.ed.ac.uk

       Juha Virtanen
       jiivee@hut.fi

       Shane Alderton
       shane@ion.apana.org.au

       Martin Schulze
       Infodrom Oldenburg
       joey@linux.de



Version 1.3		       12 October 1998			  SYSKLOGD(8)


UNIX/Linux commands referenced on this page:
  1. file
  2. which
  3. as
  4. at
  5. time
  6. hostname
  7. more
  8. write
  9. enable
  10. domainname
  11. host
  12. cut
  13. kill
  14. cat
  15. info
  16. play
  17. replace
  18. make
  19. strip
  20. mkfifo
  21. route
  22. init
  23. chat
  24. column
  25. free
  26. last
  27. wall
  28. id