revision 1.101 (which did not introduce the bug but made it harder to fix)
PR: misc/40363
Submitted by: David Dunham <dwdunham@isilon.com>
MFC after: 2 weeks
that already exists for hosts: being able to specify a section that applies
to every program *except* the one in question.
The normal syntax for program specification is still valid. For the new
capability, one uses:
!-program
Since there is no way to specify a program beginning with a dash in the old
syntax, as it would be interpreted as the case above, the following
alternative syntax to the original capability is provided:
!+program
This shouldn't introduce incompatibilities with any syslogd configuration
in production because -stable's syslogd does not support a dash anywhere in
the program specification.
MFC after: 2 weeks
for it.
While I'm here, add a the ability to say "!level" in a way which
should be compatible with Linux's syslogd.
PR: 28935
No objections: audit
MFC after: 2 weeks
EHOSTDOWN. These are often transient errors (when the remote host
reboots, temporary network problems, etc.), and we'd rather err on the
side of caution and keep trying send messages that never arrive than
just give up.
Note that this is not an implementation of the "back-off" methods
given in the PR. Those just seem too complicated. Why not just keep
trying each time? Trying and failing doesn't really consume
significantly more resources than if we were successful for each
message.
PR: bin/31029
MFC after: 1 week
do not stop copying it into a buffer when encountering a
non-alphanumerical character. Only stop at unprintable characters.
This makes syslogd work correctly with executables like `interp.bin',
`httpd_old', etc.
PR: misc/40941
MFC after: 1 week
with the old behavior available via the -o option (it might still be
useful if one has many kernels and cares which messages came from
which). If the boot file is not used as the prefix, it is still
logged once at startup.
This change is prompted by the fact that the boot file is now much
longer ("/boot/kernel/kernel" vs. "/kernel"), which significanlty
bloats the syslogd output.
Reviewed by: peter
than really solve it. This approach (inspired by Ruslan's patch) solves
the real problem by stripping the local domain off the host name in the
config line structure.
Also mark a bunch of code sections that either do not check the return value
of a strdup(), malloc() or calloc() call, or do not properly handle a NULL
return.
1.64, i.e. July of last year. Also fix a minor style bug in the same code.
PR: bin/28634
Pointy hat to: dwmalone
Pointed out by: my buggy DSL router's remote logging facility
__unused, and change local variables named `sin' (struct
sockaddr_in) to `sin4'. (`sin' conflicts with the definition of
sin(3), which gcc assumes to be defined even if math.h isn't
included (it's a builtin). This is probably a bug in gcc.)
- Apply WARNS=1. WARNS=2 was not used because this program assigns
string literals to (struct iovec).iov_base for writing, and the only
clean way to silence -Wwrite-strings in that case would be to
strdup() and consequently free() those literals, which I considered
too disruptive.
Reviewed by: bde (partially)
the system on which it is running. The hostname is reloaded when
'HUPped' and a log message generated to note a change (before anyone
points it out, this is not an added security feature).
PR: bin/24444
Reviewed by: freebsd-audit
Approved by: ru
MFC after: 2 weeks
- Lose any stray host bits that a user may have entered when providing
a network number and netmask to the `-a' option for IPv6. This is
corresponding to 1.79 that is for IPv4 only.
MFC after: 1 week
user unless they come directly from the kernel. Document this and
add a flag to syslogd which prevents this conversion.
Sort getopt args while I'm at it.
PR: 21788
Submitted by: Andre Albsmeier <andre.albsmeier@mchp.siemens.de>
Remove extra parens from my host selection commit.
Add white space after if, while, for and switch.
Get rid of braces around a single statement if.
There should be no functional changes in this commit.
Reviewed by: sheldonh
a similar way to the way it can select messages from a given program.
Lines beginning with "+hostname" or "#+hostname" select messaes
from that hostname and lines beginning with "-hostname" or "#-hostname"
match messages not from that hostname.
There are some significant style issues left in the original program
selection code and the man page. This should be cleared up in some
later commits.
Reviewed by: sheldonh
Based on an original patch by: Bernd Walter <ticso@cicely8.cicely.de>
Man page stylist: sheldonh