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29c77f71ba
Hi Eric I have written a small patch for the Busybox syslogd. With this patch one can limit the size of the messagfile. As soon as the limit is reached the syslogd can rotate or purge the messagefile(s) on his own. There is no necessity to use an external rotatescript. Even if logread does something similar, its very handy to have some messagefile after your box crash. I wrote this patch initial vor BB 0.6x where no cron daemon was avail. Now I adapted it for the new Version and i hope it is still useful. At least I still use it :-) bye Arnd
91 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
91 lines
2.9 KiB
Plaintext
#
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# For a description of the syntax of this configuration file,
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# see scripts/kbuild/config-language.txt.
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#
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menu "System Logging Utilities"
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config CONFIG_SYSLOGD
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bool "syslogd"
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default n
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help
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The syslogd utility is used to record logs of all the
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significant events that occur on a system. Every
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message that is logged records the date and time of the
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event, and will generally also record the name of the
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application that generated the message. When used in
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conjunction with klogd, messages from the Linux kernel
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can also be recorded. This is terribly useful,
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especially for finding what happened when somthing goes
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wrong. And something almost always will go wrong if
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you wait long enough....
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config CONFIG_FEATURE_ROTATE_LOGFILE
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bool " Rotate message files"
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default n
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depends on CONFIG_SYSLOGD
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help
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This enables syslogd to rotate the message files
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on his own. No need to use an external rotatescript.
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config CONFIG_FEATURE_REMOTE_LOG
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bool " Remote Log support"
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default n
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depends on CONFIG_SYSLOGD
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help
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When you enable this feature, the syslogd utility can
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be used to send system log messages to another system
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connected via a network. This allows the remote
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machine to log all the system messages, which can be
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terribly useful for reducing the number of serial
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cables you use. It can also be a very good security
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measure to prevent system logs from being tampered with
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by an intruder.
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config CONFIG_FEATURE_IPC_SYSLOG
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bool " Circular Buffer support"
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default n
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depends on CONFIG_SYSLOGD
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help
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When you enable this feature, the syslogd utility will
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use a circular buffer to record system log messages.
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When the buffer is filled it will continue to overwrite
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the oldest messaged. This can be very useful for
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systems with little or no perminant storage, since
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otherwise system logs can eventually fill up your
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entire filesystem, which may cause your system to
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break badly.
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config CONFIG_LOGREAD
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bool " logread"
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default y
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depends on CONFIG_FEATURE_IPC_SYSLOG
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help
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If you enabled Circular Buffer support, you almost
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certainly want to enable this feature as well. This
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utility will allow you to read the messages that are
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stored in the syslogd circular buffer.
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config CONFIG_KLOGD
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bool "klogd"
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default n
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depends on CONFIG_SYSLOGD
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help
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klogd is a utility which which intercepts and logs all
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messages from the Linux kernel and sends the messages
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out to the 'syslogd' utility so they can be logged. If
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you wish to record the messages produced by the kernel,
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you should enable this option.
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config CONFIG_LOGGER
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bool "logger"
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default n
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help
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The logger utility allows you to send arbitrary text
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messages to the system log (i.e. the 'syslogd' utility) so
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they can be logged. This is generally used to help locate
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problems that occur within programs and scripts.
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endmenu
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