xref: /dragonfly/usr.sbin/syslogd/syslogd.8 (revision 0dace59e)
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28.\"     @(#)syslogd.8	8.1 (Berkeley) 6/6/93
29.\" $FreeBSD: src/usr.sbin/syslogd/syslogd.8,v 1.64 2008/12/07 18:45:30 trhodes Exp $
30.\"
31.Dd May 13, 2008
32.Dt SYSLOGD 8
33.Os
34.Sh NAME
35.Nm syslogd
36.Nd log systems messages
37.Sh SYNOPSIS
38.Nm
39.Op Fl 468ACcdknosuv
40.Op Fl a Ar allowed_peer
41.Op Fl b Ar bind_address
42.Op Fl f Ar config_file
43.Op Fl l Oo Ar mode : Oc Ns Ar path
44.Op Fl m Ar mark_interval
45.Op Fl P Ar pid_file
46.Op Fl p Ar log_socket
47.Sh DESCRIPTION
48The
49.Nm
50utility reads and logs messages to the system console, log files, other
51machines and/or users as specified by its configuration file.
52.Pp
53The options are as follows:
54.Bl -tag -width indent
55.It Fl 4
56Force
57.Nm
58to use IPv4 addresses only.
59.It Fl 6
60Force
61.Nm
62to use IPv6 addresses only.
63.It Fl 8
64Tells
65.Nm
66not to interfere with 8-bit data.  Normally
67.Nm
68will replace C1 control characters
69.Pq ISO 8859 and Unicode characters
70with their
71.Dq M- Ns Em x
72equivalent.
73Note, this option does not change the way
74.Nm
75alters control characters
76.Pq see Xr iscntrl 3 .
77They will always be replaced with their
78.Dq ^ Ns Em x
79equivalent.
80.It Fl A
81Ordinarily,
82.Nm
83tries to send the message to only one address
84even if the host has more than one A or AAAA record.
85If this option is specified,
86.Nm
87tries to send the message to all addresses.
88.It Fl a Ar allowed_peer
89Allow
90.Ar allowed_peer
91to log to this
92.Nm
93using UDP datagrams.
94Multiple
95.Fl a
96options may be specified.
97.Pp
98The
99.Ar allowed_peer
100option may be any of the following:
101.Bl -tag -width "ipaddr/masklen[:service]XX"
102.It Xo
103.Sm off
104.Ar ipaddr
105.No / Ar masklen
106.Op : Ar service
107.Sm on
108.Xc
109Accept datagrams from
110.Ar ipaddr
111(in the usual dotted quad notation) with
112.Ar masklen
113bits being taken into account when doing the address comparison.
114.Ar ipaddr
115can be also IPv6 address by enclosing the address with
116.Ql \&[
117and
118.Ql \&] .
119If specified,
120.Ar service
121is the name or number of an UDP service (see
122.Xr services 5 )
123the source packet must belong to.
124A
125.Ar service
126of
127.Ql \&*
128allows packets being sent from any UDP port.
129The default
130.Ar service
131is
132.Ql syslog .
133If
134.Ar ipaddr
135is IPv4 address, a missing
136.Ar masklen
137will be substituted by the historic class A or class B netmasks if
138.Ar ipaddr
139belongs into the address range of class A or B, respectively, or
140by 24 otherwise.
141If
142.Ar ipaddr
143is IPv6 address, a missing
144.Ar masklen
145will be substituted by 128.
146.It Xo
147.Sm off
148.Ar domainname Op : Ar service
149.Sm on
150.Xc
151Accept datagrams where the reverse address lookup yields
152.Ar domainname
153for the sender address.
154The meaning of
155.Ar service
156is as explained above.
157.It Xo
158.Sm off
159.No * Ar domainname Op : Ar service
160.Sm on
161.Xc
162Same as before, except that any source host whose name
163.Em ends
164in
165.Ar domainname
166will get permission.
167.El
168.Pp
169The
170.Fl a
171options are ignored if the
172.Fl s
173option is also specified.
174.It Fl b Ar bind_address
175Specify one specific IP address or hostname to bind to.
176If a hostname is specified,
177the IPv4 or IPv6 address which corresponds to it is used.
178.It Fl C
179Create log files that do not exist (permission is set to
180.Li 0600 ) .
181.It Fl c
182Disable the compression of repeated instances of the same line
183into a single line of the form
184.Dq Li "last message repeated N times"
185when the output is a pipe to another program.
186If specified twice, disable this compression in all cases.
187.It Fl d
188Put
189.Nm
190into debugging mode.
191This is probably only of use to developers working on
192.Nm .
193.It Fl f
194Specify the pathname of an alternate configuration file;
195the default is
196.Pa /etc/syslog.conf .
197.It Fl k
198Disable the translation of
199messages received with facility
200.Dq kern
201to facility
202.Dq user .
203Usually the
204.Dq kern
205facility is reserved for messages read directly from
206.Pa /dev/klog .
207.It Fl m
208Select the number of minutes between
209.Dq mark
210messages; the default is 20 minutes.
211.It Fl n
212Disable dns query for every request.
213.It Fl o
214Prefix kernel messages with the full kernel boot file as determined by
215.Xr getbootfile 3 .
216Without this, the kernel message prefix is always
217.Dq Li kernel: .
218.It Fl p
219Specify the pathname of an alternate log socket to be used instead;
220the default is
221.Pa /var/run/log .
222.It Fl P
223Specify an alternative file in which to store the process ID.
224The default is
225.Pa /var/run/syslog.pid .
226.It Fl S
227Specify the pathname of an alternate log socket for privileged
228applications to be used instead; the default is
229.Pa /var/run/logpriv .
230.It Fl l
231Specify a location where
232.Nm
233should place an additional log socket.
234The primary use for this is to place additional log sockets in
235.Pa /var/run/log
236of various chroot filespaces.
237File permissions for socket can be specified in octal representation
238before socket name, delimited with a colon.
239Path to socket location must be absolute.
240.It Fl s
241Operate in secure mode.
242Do not log messages from remote machines.
243If
244specified twice, no network socket will be opened at all, which also
245disables logging to remote machines.
246.It Fl T
247Always use the local time and date for messages received from the network,
248instead of the timestamp field supplied in the message by the remote host.
249This is useful if some of the originating hosts can't keep time properly
250or are unable to generate a correct timestamp.
251.It Fl u
252Unique priority logging.
253Only log messages at the specified priority.
254Without this option, messages at the stated priority or higher are logged.
255This option changes the default comparison from
256.Dq =>
257to
258.Dq = .
259.It Fl v
260Verbose logging.
261If specified once, the numeric facility and priority are
262logged with each locally-written message.
263If specified more than once,
264the names of the facility and priority are logged with each locally-written
265message.
266.El
267.Pp
268The
269.Nm
270utility reads its configuration file when it starts up and whenever it
271receives a hangup signal.
272For information on the format of the configuration file,
273see
274.Xr syslog.conf 5 .
275.Pp
276The
277.Nm
278utility reads messages from the
279.Ux
280domain sockets
281.Pa /var/run/log
282and
283.Pa /var/run/logpriv ,
284from an Internet domain socket specified in
285.Pa /etc/services ,
286and from the special device
287.Pa /dev/klog
288(to read kernel messages).
289.Pp
290The
291.Nm
292utility creates its process ID file,
293by default
294.Pa /var/run/syslog.pid ,
295and stores its process
296ID there.
297This can be used to kill or reconfigure
298.Nm .
299.Pp
300The message sent to
301.Nm
302should consist of a single line.
303The message can contain a priority code, which should be a preceding
304decimal number in angle braces, for example,
305.Sq Aq 5 .
306This priority code should map into the priorities defined in the
307include file
308.In sys/syslog.h .
309.Pp
310For security reasons,
311.Nm
312will not append to log files that do not exist (unless
313.Fl C
314option is specified);
315therefore, they must be created manually before running
316.Nm .
317.Pp
318The date and time are taken from the received message.
319If the format of the timestamp field is incorrect,
320time obtained from the local host is used instead.
321This can be overridden by the
322.Fl T
323flag.
324.Sh FILES
325.Bl -tag -width /var/run/syslog.pid -compact
326.It Pa /etc/syslog.conf
327configuration file
328.It Pa /var/run/syslog.pid
329default process ID file
330.It Pa /var/run/log
331name of the
332.Ux
333domain datagram log socket
334.It Pa /var/run/logpriv
335.Ux
336socket for privileged applications
337.It Pa /dev/klog
338kernel log device
339.El
340.Sh SEE ALSO
341.Xr logger 1 ,
342.Xr syslog 3 ,
343.Xr services 5 ,
344.Xr syslog.conf 5 ,
345.Xr newsyslog 8
346.Sh HISTORY
347The
348.Nm
349utility appeared in
350.Bx 4.3 .
351.Pp
352The
353.Fl a ,
354.Fl s ,
355.Fl u ,
356and
357.Fl v
358options are
359.Fx 2.2
360extensions.
361.Sh BUGS
362The ability to log messages received in UDP packets is equivalent to
363an unauthenticated remote disk-filling service, and should probably be
364disabled by default.
365Some sort of
366.No inter- Ns Nm syslogd
367authentication mechanism ought to be worked out.
368To prevent the worst
369abuse, use of the
370.Fl a
371option is therefore highly recommended.
372.Pp
373The
374.Fl a
375matching algorithm does not pretend to be very efficient; use of numeric
376IP addresses is faster than domain name comparison.
377Since the allowed
378peer list is being walked linearly, peer groups where frequent messages
379are being anticipated from should be put early into the
380.Fl a
381list.
382.Pp
383The log socket was moved from
384.Pa /dev
385to ease the use of a read-only root file system.
386This may confuse
387some old binaries so that a symbolic link might be used for a
388transitional period.
389