syslog-ng — syslog-ng system logger application
syslog-ng
[options]
This manual page is only an abstract, for the complete documentation of syslog-ng, see the syslog-ng Documentation page or the syslog-ng page.
The syslog-ng PE application is a flexible and highly scalable system logging application. Typically, syslog-ng is used to manage log messages and implement centralized logging, where the aim is to collect the log messages of several devices on a single, central log server. The different devices - called syslog-ng clients - all run syslog-ng, and collect the log messages from the various applications, files, and other sources. The clients send all important log messages to the remote syslog-ng server, where the server sorts and stores them.
Run syslog-ng PE process with the specified POSIX capability flags.
If the --no-caps
option is not set, and the host supports CAP_SYSLOG, syslog-ng PE uses the following capabilities: "cap_net_bind_service, cap_net_broadcast, cap_net_raw, cap_dac_read_search, cap_dac_override, cap_chown, cap_fowner=p cap_syslog=ep"
If the --no-caps
option is not set, and the host does not support CAP_SYSLOG, syslog-ng PE uses the following capabilities: "cap_net_bind_service, cap_net_broadcast, cap_net_raw,cap_dac_read_search, cap_dac_override, cap_chown, cap_fowner=p cap_sys_admin=ep"
For example:
/opt/syslog-ng/sbin/syslog-ng -Fv --caps cap_sys_admin,cap_chown,cap_dac_override,cap_net_bind_service,cap_fowner=pi
Note that the capabilities are not case sensitive, the following command is also good: /opt/syslog-ng/sbin/syslog-ng -Fv --caps CAP_SYS_ADMIN,CAP_CHOWN,CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE,CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE,CAP_FOWNER=pi
For details on the capability flags, see the following man pages: cap_from_text(3)
and capabilities(7)
Use the specified configuration file.
Change root to the specified directory. The configuration file is read after chrooting so, the configuration file must be available within the chroot. That way it is also possible to reload the syslog-ng configuration after chrooting. However, note that the --user
and --group
options are resolved before chrooting.
Set the location of the syslog-ng control socket. Default value: /var/run/syslog-ng.ctl
Start syslog-ng in debug mode.
A comma-separated list of the modules that are loaded automatically. Modules not loaded automatically can be loaded by including the @module <modulename>
statement in the syslog-ng PE configuration file. The following modules are loaded by default: affile, afprog, afsocket, afuser, basicfuncs, csvparser, dbparser, syslogformat, aflogstore, diskq, confighash, afsql. Available only in syslog-ng Premium Edition 4.1 and later.
Enable syslog-ng to write core files in case of a crash to help support and debugging.
Set the minimal number of required file descriptors (fd-s). This sets how many files syslog-ng can keep open simultaneously. Default value: 4096
. Note that this does not override the global ulimit setting of the host.
Do not daemonize, run in the foreground. When running in the foreground, syslog-ng PE starts from the current directory ($CWD
) so it can create core files (normally, syslog-ng PE starts from $PREFIX/var
).
Switch to the specified group after initializing the configuration file.
Display a brief help message.
Display the list and description of the available modules. Note that not all of these modules are loaded automatically, only the ones specified in the --default-modules option. Available only in syslog-ng Premium Edition 4 F1 and later.
Run syslog-ng as root, without capability-support. This is the default behavior. On Linux, it is possible to run syslog-ng as non-root with capability-support if syslog-ng was compiled with the --enable-linux-caps
option enabled. (Execute syslog-ng --version to display the list of enabled build parameters.)
To run syslog-ng PE with specific capabilities, use the --caps
option.
Set the path and name of the syslog-ng.persist
file where the persistent options and data are stored.
Set path to the PID file where the pid of the main process is stored.
After processing the configuration file and resolving included files and variables, write the resulting configuration into the specified output file. Available only in syslog-ng Premium Edition 4 F1 and later.
Sets how to run syslog-ng: in the foreground
(mainly used for debugging), in the background
as a daemon, or in safe-background
mode. By default, syslog-ng runs in safe-background
mode. This mode creates a supervisor process called supervising syslog-ng
, that restarts syslog-ng if it crashes.
Specify the location of the file used for disk-based buffering. By default, this file is located at /opt/syslog-ng/var/
.
Log internal messages of syslog-ng to stderr. Mainly used for debugging purposes in conjunction with the --foreground
option. If not specified, syslog-ng will log such messages to its internal source.
Verify that the configuration file is syntactically correct and exit. Note that the syntax check does not catch duplicate configuration elements, for example, if you define two file destinations which point to the same file.
Switch to the specified user after initializing the configuration file (and optionally chrooting). Note that it is not possible to reload the syslog-ng configuration if the specified user has no privilege to create the /dev/log
file.
Enable verbose logging used to troubleshoot syslog-ng.
Display version number and compilation information, and also the list and short description of the available modules. For detailed description of the available modules, see the --module-registry option. Note that not all of these modules are loaded automatically, only the ones specified in the --default-modules option.
Sets the number of worker threads syslog-ng PE can use, including the main syslog-ng PE thread. Note that certain operations in syslog-ng PE can use threads that are not limited by this option. This setting has effect only when syslog-ng PE is running in multithreaded mode. Available only in syslog-ng Premium Edition 4 F1 and later. See The syslog-ng Premium Edition 6 LTS Administrator Guide for details.
You can set default settings for syslog-ng PE — syslog-ng PE will always run with these default command-line parameters. You can specify your default settings in the following files:
/etc/default/syslog-ng
/etc/sysconfig/syslog-ng
(only for RedHat platforms)
$SYSLOGNG_PREFIX/etc/default/syslog-ng
, where $SYSLOGNG_PREFIX is the installation directory of syslog-ng PE. For version 4.0, this is /opt/syslog-ng
During startup, syslog-ng PE will automatically use the settings from these files if they exist. You can set the following options:
The number of seconds the init script will wait for syslog-ng PE to shut down properly. If the syslog-ng PE process does not shut down during this period, it is terminated with a SIGKILL signal. Increase this value if you have lots of separate disk-buffer files (for example, to 60 seconds).
A string of additional command-line options for the syslog-ng daemon.
|
NOTE:
For the detailed documentation of syslog-ng PE see the syslog-ng Documentation page If you experience any problems or need help with syslog-ng, visit the syslog-ng FAQ or the syslog-ng mailing list. For news and notifications about of syslog-ng, visit the syslog-ng Blog. |
This manual page was written by the One Identity Documentation Team <documentation@balabit.com>.
Copyright© 2000-2018One Identity. Published under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works (by-nc-nd) 3.0 license. For details, see https://creativecommons.org//. The latest version is always available at the syslog-ng Documentation page.
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Nutzungsbedingungen Datenschutz Cookie Preference Center