I implemented your changes and I can say that almost everything came
back to work correctly, but...
At the beginning, I had seven .log files been incremented by the syslog
and now I have only one .log file been incremented.
What can be still wrong?
Hugs,
--
Wagner Pereira
PoP-SP/RNP - Ponto de Presença da RNP em São Paulo
CCE/USP - Centro de Computação Eletrônica da Universidade de São Paulo
http://www.pop-sp.rnp.br
Tel. (11) 3091-8901
Em 7/5/2010 12:28, Clayton Dukes escreveu:
Hi Wagner,
A couple of problems with your config:
1. I believe that prior to syslog-ng v3.x, you could only have one
source defined.
try removing your source net definition, it's a duplicate of "s_all"
and there's no need for it.
- be sure to update any reference to "net" and change them to "s_all"
2. You have destinations and filters with the same name, I'm pretty
sure this is not allowed.
Try something like this:
source s_all {
# message generated by Syslog-NG
internal();
# standard Linux log source (this is the default place for the
syslog()
# function to send logs to)
unix-stream("/dev/log");
# messages from the kernel
file("/proc/kmsg" log_prefix("kernel: "));
# use the following line if you want to receive remote UDP
logging messages
# (this is equivalent to the "-r" syslogd flag)
udp();
};
At this moment, I must to turn back to log into the .log files, at the
same way of the beginning. This is urgent for now. (Below is my
syslog-ng.conf file)
Next, my boss is asking me to test the Syslog plugin for Cacti.
Finally, if this solution doesn't solve our demand, I will consider to
re-install and test the Logzilla.
---------------------
#
# Configuration file for syslog-ng under Debian
#
# attempts at reproducing default syslog behavior
# the standard syslog levels are (in descending order of priority):
# emerg alert crit err warning notice info debug
# the aliases "error", "panic", and "warn" are deprecated
# the "none" priority found in the original syslogd configuration is
# only used in internal messages created by syslogd
######
# options
options {
# disable the chained hostname format in logs
# (default is enabled)
chain_hostnames(0);
# the time to wait before a died connection is re-established
# (default is 60)
time_reopen(10);
# the time to wait before an idle destination file is closed
# (default is 60)
time_reap(360);
# the number of lines buffered before written to file
# you might want to increase this if your disk isn't catching
with
# all the log messages you get or if you want less disk activity
# (say on a laptop)
# (default is 0)
#sync(0);
# the number of lines fitting in the output queue
log_fifo_size(2048);
# enable or disable directory creation for destination files
create_dirs(yes);
# default owner, group, and permissions for log files
# (defaults are 0, 0, 0600)
#owner(root);
group(adm);
perm(0640);
# default owner, group, and permissions for created directories
# (defaults are 0, 0, 0700)
#dir_owner(root);
#dir_group(root);
dir_perm(0755);
# enable or disable DNS usage
# syslog-ng blocks on DNS queries, so enabling DNS may lead to
# a Denial of Service attack
# (default is yes)
use_dns(yes);
# maximum length of message in bytes
# this is only limited by the program listening on the /dev/log
Unix
# socket, glibc can handle arbitrary length log messages, but
-- for
# example -- syslogd accepts only 1024 bytes
# (default is 2048)
#log_msg_size(2048);
#Disable statistic log messages.
stats_freq(0);
# Some program send log messages through a private implementation.
# and sometimes that implementation is bad. If this happen syslog-ng
# may recognise the program name as hostname. Whit this option
# we tell the syslog-ng that if a hostname match this regexp than
that
# is not a real hostname.
bad_hostname("^gconfd$");
};
######
# sources
# all known message sources
source s_all {
# message generated by Syslog-NG
internal();
# standard Linux log source (this is the default place for the
syslog()
# function to send logs to)
unix-stream("/dev/log");
# messages from the kernel
file("/proc/kmsg" log_prefix("kernel: "));
# use the following line if you want to receive remote UDP
logging messages
# (this is equivalent to the "-r" syslogd flag)
udp();
};
source net {
unix-stream("/dev/log");
internal();
udp(ip(0.0.0.0) port(514));
};
# these files are meant for the mail system log files
# and provide re-usable destinations for {mail,cron,...}.info,
# {mail,cron,...}.notice, etc.
destination df_facility_dot_info { file("/var/log/$FACILITY.info"); };
destination df_facility_dot_notice { file("/var/log/$FACILITY.notice");
};
destination df_facility_dot_warn { file("/var/log/$FACILITY.warn"); };
destination df_facility_dot_err { file("/var/log/$FACILITY.err"); };
destination df_facility_dot_crit { file("/var/log/$FACILITY.crit"); };
# these files are meant for the news system, and are kept separated
# because they should be owned by "news" instead of "root"
destination df_news_dot_notice { file("/var/log/news/news.notice"
owner("news")); };
destination df_news_dot_err { file("/var/log/news/news.err"
owner("news")); };
destination df_news_dot_crit { file("/var/log/news/news.crit"
owner("news")); };
# some more classical and useful files found in standard syslog
configurations
destination df_debug { file("/var/log/debug"); };
destination df_messages { file("/var/log/messages"); };
# pipes
# a console to view log messages under X
destination dp_xconsole { pipe("/dev/xconsole"); };
# consoles
# this will send messages to everyone logged in
destination du_all { usertty("*"); };
# some filters to select messages of priority greater or equal to info,
warn,
# and err
# (equivalents of syslogd's *.info, *.warn, and *.err)
filter f_at_least_info { level(info..emerg); };
filter f_at_least_notice { level(notice..emerg); };
filter f_at_least_warn { level(warn..emerg); };
filter f_at_least_err { level(err..emerg); };
filter f_at_least_crit { level(crit..emerg); };
# all messages of priority debug not coming from the auth, authpriv,
news, and
# mail facilities
filter f_debug { level(debug) and not facility(auth, authpriv, news,
mail); };
# all messages of info, notice, or warn priority not coming form the
auth,
# authpriv, cron, daemon, mail, and news facilities
filter f_messages {
level(info,notice,warn)
and not facility(auth,authpriv,cron,daemon,mail,news);
};
# messages with priority emerg
filter f_emerg { level(emerg); };
# complex filter for messages usually sent to the xconsole
filter f_xconsole {
facility(daemon,mail)
or level(debug,info,notice,warn)
or (facility(news)
and level(crit,err,notice));
};
filter Cisco7206 {
host("10.0.0.2");
};
filter Metrosampa-USP_CCE {
host("10.0.0.3");
};
######
# logs
# order matters if you use "flags(final);" to mark the end of
processing in a
# "log" statement
# these rules provide the same behavior as the commented original
syslogd rules
When I installed Syslog-ng, I configured it to log all the device's
activities into the .log files. It worked well for some weeks.
In the last week, I tried to use Logzilla ( former PhP-Syslog-ng) but I
can't successful, then I removed Logzilla yesterday.
After I removed Logzilla, I noticed that all the activities are been
recorded into the /var/log/messages file and no longer into the .log
files I've created for this purpose, originally.
What should I configure to turn logging in those .log files? I already
have the syslog-ng.conf configured properly.
Thanks in advance.
--
Wagner Pereira
PoP-SP/RNP - Ponto de Presença da RNP em São Paulo
CCE/USP - Centro de Computação Eletrônica da Universidade de São Paulo http://www.pop-sp.rnp.br
Tel. (11) 3091-8901