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Full Discussion: syslog
Operating Systems Solaris syslog Post 302087126 by BOFH on Tuesday 29th of August 2006 08:13:55 PM
Old 08-29-2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by csaunders
So i beleive if i take the loghost entry out of /etc/hosts and then alter the mail line in syslog.conf to look like this... i should be ok

mail.debug /var/log/syslog

anyone think this is a bad idea?
I know that on some syslog implementations you can use spaces to separate the facility from the log. On Solaris (at least Solaris 6, which was the last time I worked with a syslog dedicated server), you must have only tabs between the facility and the log file name.

I just checked OS X, Mandrake Linux and OpenBSD and all use tabs.

Make sure the file exists before you restart syslog (yea I saw your earlier post that said it was zero bytes, just a note for the folks at home Smilie ).

Again, you might try using logger:

logger -p mail.debug -t testing "Testing to see if syslog is really working."

If you have an existing entry, you can replace mail.debug with one of those facilities and check that log. Basically make sure syslog itself is working so you know what you're trying to fix. Perhaps your mail program isn't configured to log to mail.debug (need to increase a debug level for example).

Carl
 

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LOGGER(1)							   User Commands							 LOGGER(1)

NAME
logger -- a shell command interface to the syslog(3) system log module SYNOPSIS
logger [-dhisV] [-f file] [-n server] [-P port] [-p pri] [-t tag] [-u socket] [message] DESCRIPTION
logger makes entries in the system log. It provides a shell command interface to the syslog(3) system log module. Options: -d, --udp Use datagram (UDP) instead of the default stream connection (TCP). -i, --id Log the process ID of the logger process with each line. -f, --file file Log the contents of the specified file. This option cannot be combined with a command-line message. -h, --help Display a help text and exit. -n, --server server Write to the specified remote syslog server using UDP instead of to the builtin syslog routines. -P, --port port Use the specified UDP port. The default port number is 514. -p, --priority priority Enter the message into the log with the specified priority. The priority may be specified numerically or as a facility.level pair. For example, -p local3.info logs the message as informational in the local3 facility. The default is user.notice. -s, --stderr Output the message to standard error as well as to the system log. -t, --tag tag Mark every line to be logged with the specified tag. -u, --socket socket Write to the specified socket instead of to the builtin syslog routines. -V, --version Display version information and exit. -- End the argument list. This is to allow the message to start with a hyphen (-). message Write the message to log; if not specified, and the -f flag is not provided, standard input is logged. The logger utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. Valid facility names are: auth, authpriv (for security information of a sensitive nature), cron, daemon, ftp, kern (can't be generated from user process), lpr, mail, news, security (deprecated synonym for auth), syslog, user, uucp, and local0 to local7, inclusive. Valid level names are: alert, crit, debug, emerg, err, error (deprecated synonym for err), info, notice, panic (deprecated synonym for emerg), warning, warn (deprecated synonym for warning). For the priority order and intended purposes of these levels, see syslog(3). EXAMPLES
logger System rebooted logger -p local0.notice -t HOSTIDM -f /dev/idmc logger -n loghost.example.com System rebooted SEE ALSO
syslog(3), syslogd(8) STANDARDS
The logger command is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible. AVAILABILITY
The logger command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/. util-linux August 2011 util-linux
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