Syslog: Difference between revisions

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{{cmd|$ logger "hello world"}}
{{cmd|$ logger "hello world"}}
== See also ==
* [https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Logging Gentoo Wiki - Logging]


[[category:System Administration]]
[[category:System Administration]]

Revision as of 20:39, 27 October 2023

Syslog collects log data from multiple programs either to RAM or to a file, and handles log rotation (similar to journald on systemd-based systems). Alpine installs syslog as provided by busybox per default, but it also packages other implementations, such as rsyslog and syslog-ng.

busybox syslog

Running syslogd

Depending on how you have installed Alpine, it is already running (check with ps a | grep syslogd). Otherwise enable it at boot and start it with the following commands:

# rc-update add syslog boot # rc-service syslog start

Configuration

Edit /etc/conf.d/syslog to change the options used when running syslogd. All available options can be looked up with syslogd --help.

Reading logs

# tail -f /var/log/messages Shows all messages and follows the log # tail -f /var/log/messages | grep ssh Only shows SSH related messages, also follows the log

When -C is enabled in the configuration:

# logread -f # logread -f | grep ssh

Writing logs

Many applications are able to write to the syslog by default (e.g. sshd). If you wish to write manually to it, use the logger program.

$ logger "hello world"

See also