wildcard-file() source options
This section describes the options of the wildcard-file() source in syslog-ng OSE.
The wildcard-file() driver has the following options:
base-dir()
Type: | path without filename |
Default: |
Description: The path to the directory that contains the log files to monitor, for example, base-dir("/var/log"). To monitor also the subdirectories of the base directory, use the recursive(yes) option. For details, see recursive().
CAUTION: If you use multiple wildcard-file() sources in your configuration, make sure that the files and folders that match the wildcards do not overlap. That is, every file and folder should belong to only one file source. Monitoring a file from multiple wildcard sources can lead to data loss.
source s_files {
wildcard-file(
base-dir("/var/log")
filename-pattern("*.log")
recursive(no)
follow-freq(1)
);
};
default-facility()
Type: | facility string |
Default: | kern |
Description: This parameter assigns a facility value to the messages received from the wildcard-file source if the message does not specify one.
default-priority()
Type: | priority string |
Default: |
Description: This parameter assigns an emergency level to the messages received from the wildcard-file source if the message does not specify one. For example, default-priority(warning).
encoding()
Type: | string |
Default: |
Description: Specifies the character set (encoding, for example, UTF-8) of messages using the legacy BSD-syslog protocol. To list the available character sets on a host, execute the iconv -l command. For details on how encoding affects the size of the message, see Message size and encoding.
filename-pattern()
Type: | filename without path |
Default: |
Description: The filename to read messages from, without the path. You can use the * and ? wildcard characters, without regular expression and character range support. You cannot use the * and ? literally in the pattern.
For example, *filename-pattern(“.log”)** matches the syslog.log and auth.log files, but does not match the access_log file. The filename-pattern(“*log”) pattern matches all three.
-
*
matches an arbitrary string, including an empty string
-
?
matches an arbitrary character
CAUTION: If you use multiple wildcard-file() sources in your configuration, make sure that the files and folders that match the wildcards do not overlap. That is, every file and folder should belong to only one file source. Monitoring a file from multiple wildcard sources can lead to data loss.
source s_files {
wildcard-file(
base-dir("/var/log")
filename-pattern("*.log")
recursive(no)
follow-freq(1)
);
};
flags()
Type: | assume-utf8, empty-lines, expect-hostname, kernel, no-hostname, no-multi-line, no-parse, sanitize-utf8, store-legacy-msghdr, store-raw-message, syslog-protocol, threaded, validate-utf8 |
Default: | empty set |
Description: Specifies the log parsing options of the source.
-
assume-utf8: The assume-utf8 flag assumes that the incoming messages are UTF-8 encoded, but does not verify the encoding. If you explicitly want to validate the UTF-8 encoding of the incoming message, use the validate-utf8 flag.
-
empty-lines: Use the empty-lines flag to keep the empty lines of the messages. By default, syslog-ng OSE removes empty lines automatically.
-
expect-hostname: If the expect-hostname flag is enabled, syslog-ng OSE will assume that the log message contains a hostname and parse the message accordingly. This is the default behavior for TCP sources. Note that pipe sources use the no-hostname flag by default.
- guess-timezone: Attempt to guess the timezone of the message if this information is not available in the message. Works when the incoming message stream is close to real time, and the timezone information is missing from the timestamp.
- ignore-aux-data: This flag enables the source to ignore auxiliary data.
-
kernel: The kernel flag makes the source default to the LOG_KERN | LOG_NOTICE priority if not specified otherwise.
-
no-header: The no-header flag triggers syslog-ng OSE to parse only the
PRI
field of incoming messages, and put the rest of the message contents into ${MSG}.Its functionality is similar to that of the no-parse flag, except the no-header flag does not skip the
PRI
field.NOTE: Essentially, the no-header flag signals syslog-ng OSE that the syslog header is not present (or does not adhere to the conventions / RFCs), so the entire message (except from the
PRI
field) is put into ${MSG}.Example: using the no-header flag with the syslog-parser() parser
The following example illustrates using the no-header flag with the syslog-parser() parser:
parser p_syslog { syslog-parser( flags(no-header) ); };
-
no-hostname: Enable the no-hostname flag if the log message does not include the hostname of the sender host. That way syslog-ng OSE assumes that the first part of the message header is
PROGRAM
instead ofHOST
. For example:source s_dell { network( port(2000) flags(no-hostname) ); };
-
no-multi-line: The no-multi-line flag disables line-breaking in the messages: the entire message is converted to a single line. Note that this happens only if the underlying transport method actually supports multi-line messages. Currently the file() and pipe() drivers support multi-line messages.
-
no-parse: By default, syslog-ng OSE parses incoming messages as syslog messages. The no-parse flag completely disables syslog message parsing and processes the complete line as the message part of a syslog message. The syslog-ng OSE application will generate a new syslog header (timestamp, host, and so on) automatically and put the entire incoming message into the
MESSAGE
part of the syslog message (available using the ${MESSAGE} macro). This flag is useful for parsing messages not complying to the syslog format.If you are using the flags(no-parse) option, then syslog message parsing is completely disabled, and the entire incoming message is treated as the ${MESSAGE} part of a syslog message. In this case, syslog-ng OSE generates a new syslog header (timestamp, host, and so on) automatically. Note that even though flags(no-parse) disables message parsing, some flags can still be used, for example, the no-multi-line flag.
-
dont-store-legacy-msghdr: By default, syslog-ng OSE stores the original incoming header of the log message. This is useful if the original format of a non-syslog-compliant message must be retained (syslog-ng OSE automatically corrects minor header errors, for example, adds a whitespace before msg in the following message: Jan 22 10:06:11 host program:msg). If you do not want to store the original header of the message, enable the dont-store-legacy-msghdr flag.
-
sanitize-utf8: When using the sanitize-utf8 flag, syslog-ng OSE converts non-UTF-8 input to an escaped form, which is valid UTF-8.
-
store-raw-message: Save the original message as received from the client in the ${RAWMSG} macro. You can forward this raw message in its original form to another syslog-ng OSE node using the syslog-ng() destination, or to a SIEM system, ensuring that the SIEM can process it. Available only in 3.16 and later.
-
syslog-protocol: The syslog-protocol flag specifies that incoming messages are expected to be formatted according to the new IETF syslog protocol standard (RFC-5424), but without the frame header. Note that this flag is not needed for the syslog driver, which handles only messages that have a frame header.
-
threaded: The threaded flag enables multithreading for the destination. For details on multithreading, see Multithreading and scaling in syslog-ng OSE.
If a parsing or syntax error occurs, use
"threaded"
nested in quotation marks.flags( validate-utf8 "threaded" store-raw-message )
NOTE: The file destination uses multiple threads only if the destination filename contains macros.
- validate-utf8: The validate-utf8 flag enables encoding-verification for messages formatted according to the new IETF syslog standard (for details, see IETF-syslog messages. If the BOM1 character is missing, but the message is otherwise UTF-8 compliant, syslog-ng OSE automatically adds the BOM character to the message.
follow-freq()
Type: | number |
Default: | 1 |
Description: Indicates that the source should be checked periodically.
This is useful for files which always indicate readability, even though
no new lines were appended (e.g. regular file system files). If this value
is higher than zero, syslog-ng will not attempt to use ivykis file change
notification methods on the file (poll(), epoll(), etc.), but checks whether
the file changed every time the follow-freq() interval (in seconds) has elapsed.
Floating-point numbers (for example, 1.5) can be used as well.
CAUTION: As the follow-freq(), the monitor-method(), and the monitor-freq() options could have performance penalty effects, it is important to understand how the file and directory monitoring operates depending on these values. For details, refer to How content changes are followed in file() and wildcard-file() sources.
hook-commands()
Description: This option makes it possible to execute external programs when the relevant driver is initialized or torn down. The hook-commands() can be used with all source and destination drivers with the exception of the usertty() and internal() drivers.
NOTE: The syslog-ng OSE application must be able to start and restart the external program, and have the necessary permissions to do so. For example, if your host is running AppArmor or SELinux, you might have to modify your AppArmor or SELinux configuration to enable syslog-ng OSE to execute external applications.
Using the hook-commands() when syslog-ng OSE starts or stops
To execute an external program when syslog-ng OSE starts or stops, use the following options:
startup()
Type: | string |
Default: | N/A |
Description: Defines the external program that is executed as syslog-ng OSE starts.
shutdown()
Type: | string |
Default: | N/A |
Description: Defines the external program that is executed as syslog-ng OSE stops.
Using the hook-commands() when syslog-ng OSE reloads
To execute an external program when the syslog-ng OSE configuration is initiated or torn down, for example, on startup/shutdown or during a syslog-ng OSE reload, use the following options:
setup()
Type: | string |
Default: | N/A |
Description: Defines an external program that is executed when the syslog-ng OSE configuration is initiated, for example, on startup or during a syslog-ng OSE reload.
teardown()
Type: | string |
Default: | N/A |
Description: Defines an external program that is executed when the syslog-ng OSE configuration is stopped or torn down, for example, on shutdown or during a syslog-ng OSE reload.
Example: Using the hook-commands() with a network source
In the following example, the hook-commands() is used with the network() driver and it opens an iptables port automatically as syslog-ng OSE is started/stopped.
The assumption in this example is that the LOGCHAIN chain is part of a larger ruleset that routes traffic to it. Whenever the syslog-ng OSE created rule is there, packets can flow, otherwise the port is closed.
source {
network(transport(udp)
hook-commands(
startup("iptables -I LOGCHAIN 1 -p udp --dport 514 -j ACCEPT")
shutdown("iptables -D LOGCHAIN 1")
)
);
};
keep-timestamp()
Accepted values: | yes | no |
Default: | yes |
Description: Specifies whether syslog-ng OSE should accept the timestamp received from the sending application or client. If disabled, the time of reception will be used instead. This option can be specified globally, and per-source as well. The local setting of the source overrides the global option if available.
CAUTION: To use the S_ macros, the keep-timestamp() option must be enabled (this is the default behavior of syslog-ng OSE).
log-fetch-limit()
Type: | number |
Default: | 100 |
Description: The maximum number of messages fetched from a source during a single poll loop. The destination queues might fill up before flow-control could stop reading if log-fetch-limit() is too high.
log-iw-size()
Type: | number |
Default: |
Description: The size of the initial window, this value is used during flow-control. Its value cannot be lower than 100, unless the dynamic-window-size() option is enabled. For details on flow-control, see Managing incoming and outgoing messages with flow-control.
log-msg-size()
Type: | number (bytes) |
Default: | Use the global log-msg-size() option, which defaults to 65536 (64 KiB). |
Description: Maximum length of an incoming message in bytes. This length includes the entire message (the data structure and individual fields). The maximal value that can be set is 268435456 bytes (256 MiB).
For messages using the IETF-syslog message format, the maximal
size of the value of an SDATA
field is 64 KiB.
NOTE: In most cases, log-msg-size() does not need to be set higher than 10 MiB.
For details on how encoding affects the size of the message, see Message size and encoding.
You can use human-readable units when setting configuration options. For details, see Notes about the configuration syntax.
Uses the value of the global option if not specified.
log-prefix() (DEPRECATED)
Type: | string |
Default: |
Description: A string added to the beginning of every log message. It can be used to add an arbitrary string to any log source, though it is most commonly used for adding kernel: to the kernel messages on Linux.
NOTE: This option is deprecated. Use program-override instead.
max-files()
Type: | integer |
Default: | 100 |
Description: Limits the number of files that the wildcard-file source monitors.
When using wildcards, syslog-ng OSE monitors every matching file (up to the limit set in the max-files() option), and can receive new log messages from any of the files. However, monitoring (polling) many files (that is, more than ten) has a significant overhead and may affect performance. On Linux this overhead is not so significant, because syslog-ng OSE uses the inotify feature of the kernel. Set the max-files() option at least to the number of files you want to monitor. If the wildcard-file source matches more files than the value of the max-files() option, it is random which files will syslog-ng OSE actually monitor. The default value of max-files() is 100.
monitor-freq()
Type: | number |
Default: | value of follow-freq() |
Description: Indicates how frequently changes to the source file creation, move, or deletion should be checked if monitor-method() is set to poll
.
Floating-point numbers (for example, 1.5) can be used as well. Please note, for backward compatibility reasons, the default value of monitor-freq() is equal to the value of follow-freq().
CAUTION: As the follow-freq(), the monitor-method(), and the monitor-freq() options could have performance penalty effects, it is important to understand how the file and directory monitoring operates depending on these values. For details, refer to How content changes are followed in file() and wildcard-file() sources.
monitor-method()
Accepted values: | auto | inotify | kqueue | poll |
Default: | auto |
Description: If the platform supports inotify
, syslog-ng OSE uses it
automatically to detect the creation, move, or deletion of source files. If the platform
supports kqueue
, that will be used. If neither is available, syslog-ng OSE
polls the aforementioned file changes as set in the monitor-freq() option. To force syslog-ng OSE
to poll the file changes even if inotify
or kqueue
is available, set this option to poll.
CAUTION: As the follow-freq(), the monitor-method(), and the monitor-freq() options could have performance penalty effects, it is important to understand how the file and directory monitoring operates depending on these values. For details, refer to How content changes are followed in file() and wildcard-file() sources.
multi-line-garbage()
Type: | regular expression |
Default: | empty string |
Description: Use the multi-line-garbage() option when processing multi-line messages that contain unneeded parts between the messages. Specify a string or regular expression that matches the beginning of the unneeded message parts. If the multi-line-garbage() option is set, syslog-ng OSE ignores the lines between the line matching the multi-line-garbage() and the next line matching multi-line-prefix(). See also the multi-line-prefix() option.
When receiving multi-line messages from a source when the multi-line-garbage() option is set, but no matching line is received between two lines that match multi-line-prefix(), syslog-ng OSE will continue to process the incoming lines as a single message until a line matching multi-line-garbage() is received.
To use the multi-line-garbage() option, set the multi-line-mode() option to prefix-garbage.
CAUTION: If the multi-line-garbage() option is set, syslog-ng OSE discards lines between the line matching the multi-line-garbage() and the next line matching multi-line-prefix().
multi-line-mode()
Type: | indented | regexp |
Default: | empty string |
Description: Use the multi-line-mode() option when processing multi-line messages. The syslog-ng OSE application provides the following methods to process multi-line messages:
-
The indented mode can process messages where each line that belongs to the previous line is indented by whitespace, and the message continues until the first non-indented line. For example, the Linux kernel (starting with version 3.5) uses this format for /dev/log, as well as several applications, like Apache Tomcat.
Example: Processing indented multi-line messages
source s_tomcat { file("/var/log/tomcat/xxx.log" multi-line-mode(indented)); };
-
The prefix-garbage mode uses a string or regular expression (set in multi-line-prefix()) that matches the beginning of the log messages, ignores newline characters from the source until a line matches the regular expression again, and treats the lines between the matching lines as a single message. For details on using multi-line-mode(prefix-garbage), see the multi-line-prefix() and multi-line-garbage() options.
-
The prefix-suffix mode uses a string or regular expression (set in multi-line-prefix()) that matches the beginning of the log messages, ignores newline characters from the source until a line matches the regular expression set in multi-line-suffix(), and treats the lines between multi-line-prefix() and multi-line-suffix() as a single message. Any other lines between the end of the message and the beginning of a new message (that is, a line that matches the multi-line-prefix() expression) are discarded. For details on using multi-line-mode(prefix-suffix), see the multi-line-prefix() and multi-line-suffix() options.
The prefix-suffix mode is similar to the prefix-garbage mode, but it appends the garbage part to the message instead of discarding it.
TIP: To format multi-line messages to your individual needs, consider the following:
To make multi-line messages more readable when written to a file, use a template in the destination and instead of the ${MESSAGE} macro, use the following: $(indent-multi-line ${MESSAGE}). This expression inserts a tab after every newline character (except when a tab is already present), indenting every line of the message after the first. For example:
destination d_file { file ("/var/log/messages" template("${ISODATE} ${HOST} $(indent-multi-line ${MESSAGE})\n") ); };
For details on using templates, see Templates and macros.
- To actually convert the lines of multi-line messages to single line (by replacing the newline characters with whitespaces), use the flags(no-multi-line) option in the source.
multi-line-prefix()
Type: | regular expression starting with the ^ character |
Default: | empty string |
Description: Use the multi-line-prefix() option to process multi-line messages, that is, log messages that contain newline characters (for example, Tomcat logs). Specify a string or regular expression that matches the beginning of the log messages (always start with the ^ character). Use as simple regular expressions as possible, because complex regular expressions can severely reduce the rate of processing multi-line messages. If the multi-line-prefix() option is set, syslog-ng OSE ignores newline characters from the source until a line matches the regular expression again, and treats the lines between the matching lines as a single message. See also the multi-line-garbage() option.
TIP: To format multi-line messages to your individual needs, consider the following:
To make multi-line messages more readable when written to a file, use a template in the destination and instead of the ${MESSAGE} macro, use the following: $(indent-multi-line ${MESSAGE}). This expression inserts a tab after every newline character (except when a tab is already present), indenting every line of the message after the first. For example:
destination d_file { file ("/var/log/messages" template("${ISODATE} ${HOST} $(indent-multi-line ${MESSAGE})\n") ); };
For details on using templates, see Templates and macros.
- To actually convert the lines of multi-line messages to single line (by replacing the newline characters with whitespaces), use the flags(no-multi-line) option in the source.
Example: Processing Tomcat logs
The log messages of the Apache Tomcat server are a typical example for multi-line log messages. The messages start with the date and time of the query in the YYYY.MM.DD HH:MM:SS format, as you can see in the following example.
2010.06.09. 12:07:39 org.apache.catalina.startup.Catalina start
SEVERE: Catalina.start:
LifecycleException: service.getName(): “Catalina”; Protocol handler start failed: java.net.BindException: Address already in use null:8080
at org.apache.catalina.connector.Connector.start(Connector.java:1138)
at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardService.start(StandardService.java:531)
at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardServer.start(StandardServer.java:710)
at org.apache.catalina.startup.Catalina.start(Catalina.java:583)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597)
at org.apache.catalina.startup.Bootstrap.start(Bootstrap.java:288)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:39)
at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:25)
at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:597)
at org.apache.commons.daemon.support.DaemonLoader.start(DaemonLoader.java:177)
2010.06.09. 12:07:39 org.apache.catalina.startup.Catalina start
INFO: Server startup in 1206 ms
2010.06.09. 12:45:08 org.apache.coyote.http11.Http11Protocol pause
INFO: Pausing Coyote HTTP/1.1 on http-8080
2010.06.09. 12:45:09 org.apache.catalina.core.StandardService stop
INFO: Stopping service Catalina
To process these messages, specify a regular expression matching the timestamp of the messages in the multi-line-prefix() option. Such an expression is the following:
source s_file{
file("/var/log/tomcat6/catalina.2010-06-09.log"
follow-freq(0)
multi-line-mode(regexp)
multi-line-prefix("[0-9]{4}\.[0-9]{2}\.[0-9]{2}\.")
flags(no-parse));
};
Note that flags(no-parse) is needed to prevent syslog-ng OSE trying to interpret the date in the message.
multi-line-suffix()
Type: | regular expression |
Default: | empty string |
Description: Use the multi-line-suffix() option when processing multi-line messages. Specify a string or regular expression that matches the end of the multi-line message.
To use the multi-line-suffix() option, set the multi-line-mode() option to prefix-suffix. See also the multi-line-prefix() option.
multi-line-timeout()
Type: | number |
Default: | N/A |
Description: Specifies the time (in seconds) syslog-ng OSE waits without reading new data from the source, before the last (potentially partial) message is flushed and sent through the pipeline as a LogMessage.
Since the multi-line source detects the end of a message via finding the beginning of the subsequent message (indented or no-garbage/suffix mode), this option can be used to flush the last multi-line message in the file after a given time.
There is no default value, so it must be explicitly configured with a value higher than follow-freq(). We recommend it to be set to a multiple of follow-freq().
Example: multi-line-timeout()
source s_multi {
file("/some/folder/events"
multi-line-mode("prefix-garbage")
multi-line-prefix('^EVENT: ')
multi-line-timeout(10)
flags("no-parse")
);
}
For more details see the blog post Multi-line-timeout: making sure your last multi-line message is not lost.
pad-size()
Type: | number |
Default: | 0 |
Description: Specifies input padding. Some operating systems (such as HP-UX) pad all messages to block boundary. This option can be used to specify the block size. The syslog-ng OSE application will pad reads from the associated device to the number of bytes set in pad-size(). Mostly used on HP-UX where /dev/log is a named pipe and every write is padded to 2048 bytes. If pad-size() was given and the incoming message does not fit into pad-size(), syslog-ng OSE will not read anymore from this pipe and displays the following error message:
Padding was set, and couldn’t read enough bytes
program-override()
Type: | string |
Default: |
Description: Replaces the ${PROGRAM} part of the message with the parameter string. For example, to mark every message coming from the kernel, include the program-override("kernel") option in the source containing /proc/kmsg.
recursive()
Accepted values: | yes | no |
Default: | no |
Description: When enabled, syslog-ng OSE monitors every subdirectory of the path set in the base-dir() option, and reads log messages from files with matching filenames. The recursive option can be used together with wildcards in the filename.
CAUTION: If you use multiple wildcard-file() sources in your configuration, make sure that the files and folders that match the wildcards do not overlap. That is, every file and folder should belong to only one file source. Monitoring a file from multiple wildcard sources can lead to data loss.
Example: Monitoring multiple directories
The following example reads files having the .log extension from the /var/log/ directory and its subdirectories, including for example, the /var/log/apt/history.log file.
source s_file_subdirectories {
wildcard-file(
base-dir("/var/log")
filename-pattern("*.log")
recursive(yes)
monitor-freq(0.5)
follow-freq(1)
log-fetch-limit(200)
);
};
tags()
Type: | string |
Default: |
Description: Label the messages received from the source with custom tags. Tags must be unique, and enclosed between double quotes. When adding multiple tags, separate them with comma, for example, tags(“dmz”, “router”). This option is available only in syslog-ng OSE 3.1 and later.
time-zone()
Type: | name of the timezone, or the timezone offset |
Default: |
Description: The default timezone for messages read from the source. Applies only if no timezone is specified within the message itself.
The timezone can be specified by using the name, for example, time-zone(“Europe/Budapest”)), or as the timezone offset in +/-HH:MM format, for example, +01:00). On Linux and UNIX platforms, the valid timezone names are listed under the /usr/share/zoneinfo directory.