Syslog
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See also a guide to [[Syslog-NG Installation|installing Syslog-NG]]. | See also a guide to [[Syslog-NG Installation|installing Syslog-NG]]. | ||
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Revision as of 06:49, 3 January 2009
The Syslog, or System Log service, is a background process that receives events from other running services and, based on a simple set of 'rules', will write the events to a specified location, typically a file on the local drive. It is used on almost all UNIX and Unix-like platforms. The Microsoft equivalent on the Windows platform would be the Event Viewer.
The Syslog service is installed as a core component of FreeBSD and is operational by default. It runs as a listening service on the local host and typically writes to a log file on the local drive.
The default configuration notes events from the security, authentication, ftp, mail and other key service depending on the 'level' of importance. These levels range between simply informative messages to critical ones, with varying degrees of importance in-between. These levels are noted below.
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Operation
The Syslog service can operate in a local listening mode which is the default as well as a network listening mode.
Local
The Syslog uses a configuration file to act as a rule set by which it determines the service and level of events to log and where to log them to. A default installation from FreeBSD will log anything informative (or higher) from the mail service to a log file stored in /var/log/maillog, and log any notices (or higher) from the authentication service to the primary console window.
The 'or higher' used above is a feature of Syslog where a specified level is the lowest level of detrail required and anything higher will also be logged. The levels are noted below. As an example noting 'informative' from the mail service will log all events since it is the lowest level, however noting 'notice' from the authentication service will not log 'informative' events below it.
Network operation
By default the Syslog service listens to the local host only. This is useful for monitoring in-host services but is limited to each server writing logs locally and for the network administrator to login to each server to view them. This is where a central Syslog server is useful. Such a server should have a large local disk to store a larger volume of logs.
In order to enable the Syslog server to listen to external devices capable of raising Syslog events (or indeed other FreeBSD servers) the following requires adding to the rc.conf file:
syslogd_flags=""
Once added the Syslog service can be restarted or the server rebooted to permit it to listen to the wider network but be aware that this should only be done on a trusted network. It is possible for a malicious person to flood the Syslog service with events to fill the local drive and cause various problems.
Levels
The following levels are available within Syslog.
Level | Name | Description |
---|---|---|
EMERG | Emergency | Total failure. |
ALERT | Alert | System corruption of a database, for example. |
CRIT | Critical | Typically used for hardware errors, for example. |
ERR | Errors | - |
WARNING | Warnings | - |
NOTICE | Notice | Possible action required but not essential. |
INFO | Informative | No action required. |
DEBUG | Debugging | Generally not used except for capturing everything for fault-finding. |
Certain hardware devices that can raise Syslog events (including Cisco equipment) often use a numerical variation of the above levels, however it is recommended that these are not used in the FreeBSD Syslog configuration.
Testing
It is possible to create (or spoof) an event from the console using the logger command. This is useful when testing a Syslog configuration that is unlikely to happen at a given time, such as a 'critical' level event from a newly installed service.
The logger command takes the following form:
logger -p service.level "test message in quotes"
Where the -p signifies the use of a level (the 'p' standing for priority), which a working example on a default FreeBSD configuration would be:
logger -p mail.warning "You have entered a warning into the mail service log"
Reading the mail service log reveals that the event has been written:
[root@syslog /]# tail /var/log/maillog Feb 4 10:46:10 syslog newsyslog[469]: logfile first created Feb 4 10:46:29 syslog sm-mta[613]: starting daemon (8.14.2): SMTP+queueing@00:30:00 Feb 4 10:46:44 syslog sm-msp-queue[617]: starting daemon (8.14.2): queueing@00:30:00 Feb 4 13:39:48 syslog drmodiford: You have entered a warning into the mail service log
The Syslog service can also log events to the root console, which a working example on a default FreeBSD configuration would be:
logger -p auth.notice "Message appears on the console."
The above message will be written on the root console, which would mean on a headless server such messages going unnoticed - but they are fortunately logged to the authentication service log file:
[root@syslog /]# tail /var/log/auth.log Feb 4 10:46:10 syslog newsyslog[469]: logfile first created Feb 4 10:46:14 syslog sshd[607]: Server listening on :: port 22. Feb 4 10:46:14 syslog sshd[607]: Server listening on 0.0.0.0 port 22. Feb 4 10:51:10 syslog login: login on ttyv0 as drmodiford Feb 4 10:51:14 syslog su: drmodiford to root on /dev/ttyv0 Feb 4 12:14:55 syslog sshd[73815]: Accepted keyboard-interactive/pam for drmodiford from 10.0.0.6 port 4726 ssh2 Feb 4 12:15:02 syslog su: drmodiford to root on /dev/ttyp0 Feb 4 13:45:55 syslog drmodiford: Message appears on the console.
You may have seen such 'pop-up' messages appear when you su into root user.
See also
See also a guide to installing Syslog-NG.