The systemd-journal() source is used on various Linux distributions, such as RHEL (from RHEL7) and CentOS. The systemd-journal() source driver can read the structured name-value format of the journald system service, making it easier to reach the custom fields in the message. By default, syslog-ng OSE adds the .journald. prefix to the name of every parsed value.
The systemd-journal() source driver is designed to read only local messages through the systemd-journal API. It is not possible to set the location of the journal files, or the directories.
|
|
NOTE:
The log-msg-size() option is not applicable for this source. Use the max-field-size() option instead. |
|
|
NOTE:
This source will not handle the following cases:
|
|
|
NOTE:
If you are using RHEL-7, the default source in the configuration is systemd-journal() instead of unix-dgram("/dev/log") and file("/proc/kmsg"). If you are using unix-dgram("/dev/log") or unix-stream("/dev/log") in your configuration as a source, syslog-ng OSE will revert to using systemd-journal() instead. |
|
|
Caution:
Only one systemd-journal() source can be configured in the configuration file. If there are more than one systemd-journal() sources configured, syslog-ng OSE will not start. |
systemd-journal(options);
To send all fields through the syslog protocol, enter the prefix in the following format: ".SDATA.<name>".
@version: 3.16
source s_journald {
systemd-journal(prefix(".SDATA.journald."));
};
destination d_network {
syslog("server.host");
};
log {
source(s_journald);
destination(d_network);
};@version: 3.16
source s_journald {
systemd-journal(prefix(".SDATA.journald."));
};
filter f_uid {"${.SDATA.journald._UID}" eq "1000"};
destination d_network {
syslog("server.host");
};
log {
source(s_journald);
filter(f_uid);
destination(d_network);
};@version: 3.16
source s_local {
systemd-journal(prefix("journald."));
};
destination d_network {
network("server.host" template("$(format_json --scope rfc5424 --key journald.*)\n"));
};
log {
source(s_local);
destination(d_network);
};The journal contains credential information about the process that sent the log message. The syslog-ng OSE application makes this information available in the following macros:
| Journald field | syslog-ng predefined macro |
|---|---|
| MESSAGE | $MESSAGE |
| _HOSTNAME | $HOST |
| _PID | $PID |
| _COMM or SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER | $PROGRAM If both _COMM and SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER exists, syslog-ng OSE uses SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER |
| SYSLOG_FACILITY | $FACILITY_NUM |
| PRIORITY | $LEVEL_NUM |
© 2025 One Identity LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of Use Privacy Cookie Preference Center