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System Administration Guide: Advanced Administration     Oracle Solaris 10 8/11 Information Library
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Document Information

About This Book

1.  Managing Terminals and Modems (Overview)

2.  Setting Up Terminals and Modems (Tasks)

3.  Managing Serial Ports With the Service Access Facility (Tasks)

4.  Managing System Resources (Overview)

5.  Displaying and Changing System Information (Tasks)

6.  Managing Disk Use (Tasks)

7.  Managing UFS Quotas (Tasks)

8.  Scheduling System Tasks (Tasks)

9.  Managing System Accounting (Tasks)

10.  System Accounting (Reference)

11.  Managing System Performance (Overview)

12.  Managing System Processes (Tasks)

13.  Monitoring System Performance (Tasks)

14.  Troubleshooting Software Problems (Overview)

15.  Managing System Messages

Viewing System Messages

How to View System Messages

System Log Rotation

Customizing System Message Logging

How to Customize System Message Logging

Enabling Remote Console Messaging

Using Auxiliary Console Messaging During Run Level Transitions

Using the consadm Command During an Interactive Login Session

How to Enable an Auxiliary (Remote) Console

How to Display a List of Auxiliary Consoles

How to Enable an Auxiliary (Remote) Console Across System Reboots

How to Disable an Auxiliary (Remote) Console

16.  Managing Core Files (Tasks)

17.  Managing System Crash Information (Tasks)

18.  Troubleshooting Miscellaneous Software Problems (Tasks)

19.  Troubleshooting File Access Problems (Tasks)

20.  Resolving UFS File System Inconsistencies (Tasks)

21.  Troubleshooting Software Package Problems (Tasks)

Index

Customizing System Message Logging

You can capture additional error messages that are generated by various system processes by modifying the /etc/syslog.conf file. By default, the /etc/syslog.conf file directs many system process messages to the /var/adm/messages files. Crash and boot messages are stored here as well. To view /var/adm messages, see How to View System Messages.

The /etc/syslog.conf file has two columns separated by tabs:

facility.level ... action
facility.level

A facility or system source of the message or condition. May be a comma-separated listed of facilities. Facility values are listed in Table 15-1. A level, indicates the severity or priority of the condition being logged. Priority levels are listed in Table 15-2.

Do not put two entries for the same facility on the same line, if the entries are for different priorities. Putting a priority in the syslog file indicates that all messages of that all messages of that priority or higher are logged, with the last message taking precedence. For a given facility and level, syslogd matches all messages for that level and all higher levels.

action

The action field indicates where the messages are forwarded.

The following example shows sample lines from a default /etc/syslog.conf file.

user.err                                        /dev/sysmsg
user.err                                        /var/adm/messages
user.alert                                      `root, operator'
user.emerg                                      *

This means the following user messages are automatically logged:


Note - Placing entries on separate lines might cause messages to be logged out of order if a log target is specified more than once in the /etc/syslog.conf file. Note that you can specify multiple selectors in a single line entry, each separated by a semi-colon.


The most common error condition sources are shown in the following table. The most common priorities are shown in Table 15-2 in order of severity.

Table 15-1 Source Facilities for syslog.conf Messages

Source
Description
kern
The kernel
auth
Authentication
daemon
All daemons
mail
Mail system
lp
Spooling system
user
User processes

Note - The number of syslog facilities that can be activated in the /etc/syslog.conf file is unlimited.


Table 15-2 Priority Levels for syslog.conf Messages

Priority
Description
emerg
System emergencies
alert
Errors requiring immediate correction
crit
Critical errors
err
Other errors
info
Informational messages
debug
Output used for debugging
none
This setting doesn't log output

How to Customize System Message Logging

  1. Become superuser or assume an equivalent role.

    Roles contain authorizations and privileged commands. For more information about roles, see Configuring RBAC (Task Map) in System Administration Guide: Security Services.

  2. Edit the /etc/syslog.conf file, adding or changing message sources, priorities, and message locations according to the syntax described in syslog.conf(4).
  3. Exit the file, saving the changes.

Example 15-2 Customizing System Message Logging

This sample /etc/syslog.conf user.emerg facility sends user emergency messages to root and individual users.

user.emerg                                      `root, *'