Thanks Robert, I'll start poking on the dev guys on my side and let you know what happens - it will probably take some time as you can probably imagine :-) ______________________________________________________________ Clayton Dukes ______________________________________________________________ 2010/8/19 Fekete Róbert <frobert@balabit.hu>
Hi,
I'm glad that you found a solution. The only thing that I could think of as a workaround was to try the no-parse flag, but it's good that it wasn't needed.
Robert
On Thursday, August 19, 2010 17:34 CEST, Clayton Dukes <cdukes@gmail.com> wrote:
bing! (light bulb just went off). I wasn't thinking about the whole established vs. non established connection thing. I couldn't figure out why, if UDP wasn't sending a newline, it wasn't causing the same problem. I wasn't thinking about the fact that the connection was closing, thus ending the stream.
Thanks for the help!
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Clayton Dukes ______________________________________________________________
On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 11:29 AM, <syslogng@feystorm.net> wrote:
I explained it already :-) When the message comes in over TCP and doesnt end with a newline, syslog-ng assumes the message is going to be continued in another packet. When the cumulative total of all the messages exceeds the max message size it flushes the buffer out and you get all the messages mashed together at once. You can try filing a bug report on bugzilla.balabit.com and request a new flag or something that treats each packet on a tcp source as a separate message, but I'd say the problem is more cisco than syslog-ng since syslog-ng works fine with all other sources except cisco devices :-/ Look at it this way, every thing that sends logs out to tcp expects the receiving syslog daemon to treat a packet without a newline as a message to be continued in a later packet. If syslog-ng changed that default behavior, all these other things that expect the behavior would break.
-Patrick
Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 9:12:36 AM
From: Clayton Dukes <cdukes@gmail.com> <cdukes@gmail.com> To: Syslog-ng users' and developers' mailing list <syslog-ng@lists.balabit.hu> <syslog-ng@lists.balabit.hu> Subject: Re: [syslog-ng] TCP recv bug in syslog-ng v2.09?
Following up on this:
Interestingly, however, is that when I use tcpdump, I DO see each message coming in via TCP...so now I'm leaning back towards syslog-ng being the problem.
Here's what I can see:
UDP:
#tcpdump -vvv host 14.3.23.50 -i eth0
tcpdump: listening on eth0, link-type EN10MB (Ethernet), capture size 96 bytes
09:13:31.465239 IP (tos 0xb8, ttl 251, id 1323, offset 0, flags [none], proto UDP (17), length 134)
14.3.23.50.51526 > server.x.com.syslog: SYSLOG, length: 106
Facility local7 (23), Severity notice (5)
Msg: 2975: *Aug 19 12:34:19.465: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I[|syslog]
TCP:
#tcpdump -vvv host 14.3.23.50 -i eth0
09:46:29.902063 IP (tos 0x0, ttl 251, id 12253, offset 0, flags [none], proto TCP (6), length 146)
14.3.23.50.31746 > server.x.com.601: Flags [.], seq 233:339, ack 1, win 4128, length 106
09:46:29.902077 IP (tos 0x0, ttl 64, id 27779, offset 0, flags [DF], proto TCP (6), length 40)
server.x.com.601 > 14.3.23.50.31746: Flags [.], cksum 0xa3bb (correct), seq 1, ack 339, win 5840, length 0
So, it looks like the syslog message does end, but why is syslog-ng buffering and showing multiple TCP-based messages as a single message?
Do I have something misconfigured?
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Clayton Dukes ______________________________________________________________
On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 3:14 PM, Clayton Dukes <cdukes@gmail.com> wrote:
yikes! seriously? Guess I'll have to file a bug internally :-) Can someone else positively verify this? Or any suggestions on how I can so that we can recreate it in a lab?
______________________________________________________________
Clayton Dukes ______________________________________________________________
On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 2:52 PM, <syslogng@feystorm.net> wrote:
If I recall correctly its because cisco equipment doesnt terminate its log entries with newlines, so when sending via TCP, syslog-ng thinks the message is going to be continued in another packet (UDP is assumed to be 1 packet per log entry). The only way to fix this is an ugly hack to set the timeout so that when it doesnt get a reply within a certain time, it assumes the log entry ended. but if several log entries are sent within the timeout, then they'll all be mashed together into 1 syslog-ng entry.
Sent: Tuesday, August 17, 2010 12:28:28 PM From: Clayton Dukes <cdukes@gmail.com> <cdukes@gmail.com> To: Syslog-ng users' and developers' mailing list <syslog-ng@lists.balabit.hu> <syslog-ng@lists.balabit.hu> Subject: [syslog-ng] TCP recv bug in syslog-ng v2.09?
Hey guys, Are there any known bugs for syslog-ng v2.09 that won't allow a cisco router to send logs over tcp? I can see a connection established in syslog-ng. I also see the message come in via tcpdump, but nothing in syslog-ng's output. If I change the router from tcp to udp, messages come in as expected.
*Router config:*
logging source-interface Loopback0 logging 172.18.224.150 logging host 172.18.224.190 transport tcp
*syslog-ng config:*
source s_all { udp(); tcp(ip(11.31.130.99) port(8002) max-connections(300)); tcp(ip(172.18.224.190) port(601) max-connections(300)); };
*debug output:* I commented out the line above for the other interface (11.31.130.99), restarted and this is all I see: Syslog connection accepted; from='AF_INET(14.3.23.50:63845)', to='AF_INET(172.18.224.190:601)'
*tcpdump:*
14:13:46.914566 IP (tos 0x0, ttl 251, id 4303, offset 0, flags [none], proto TCP (6), length 134) 14.3.23.50.63845 > xxx.com.601: Flags [.], seq 230:324, ack 1, win 4128, length 94
*Router debug:*
*Aug 17 17:34:19.772: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by pnoc on vty0 (172.18.224.151) *Aug 17 17:34:20.776: Released port 15205 in Transport Port Agent for TCP IP type 1 delay 240000 *Aug 17 17:34:20.776: TCB 0x850F9754 destroyed *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: TCB83648E60 created *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: TCB83648E60 setting property TCP_PID (8) 845083E4 *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: TCB83648E60 setting property TCP_NO_DELAY (1) 845083E8 *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: TCB83648E60 setting property TCP keepalive timeout (17) 845084A0 *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: TCP: Random local port generated 63845, network 1 *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: TCB83648E60 bound to 14.3.23.50.63845 *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: Reserved port 63845 in Transport Port Agent for TCP IP type 1 *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: TCP: sending SYN, seq 3300233565, ack 0 *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: TCP0: Connection to 172.18.224.190:601, advertising MSS 536 *Aug 17 17:34:25.775: TCP0: state was CLOSED -> SYNSENT [63845 -> 172.18.224.190(601)] *Aug 17 17:34:25.779: TCP0: state was SYNSENT -> ESTAB [63845 -> 172.18.224.190(601)] *Aug 17 17:34:25.779: TCP: tcb 83648E60 connection to 172.18.224.190:601, peer MSS 1460, MSS is 536 *Aug 17 17:34:25.779: TCB83648E60 connected to 172.18.224.190.601 *Aug 17 17:34:25.779: %SYS-6-LOGGINGHOST_STARTSTOP: Logging to host 172.18.224.190 port 601 started - reconnection
______________________________________________________________
Clayton Dukes ______________________________________________________________
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Member info: https://lists.balabit.hu/mailman/listinfo/syslog-ng Documentation: http://www.balabit.com/support/documentation/?product=syslog-ng FAQ: http://www.campin.net/syslog-ng/faq.html
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Member info: https://lists.balabit.hu/mailman/listinfo/syslog-ng Documentation: http://www.balabit.com/support/documentation/?product=syslog-ng FAQ: http://www.campin.net/syslog-ng/faq.html
Member info: https://lists.balabit.hu/mailman/listinfo/syslog-ng Documentation: http://www.balabit.com/support/documentation/?product=syslog-ng FAQ: http://www.campin.net/syslog-ng/faq.html