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Webmin Administrator's Cookbook

You're reading from   Webmin Administrator's Cookbook Over 100 recipes to leverage the features of Webmin and master the art of administering your web or database servers.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849515849
Length 376 pages
Edition Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Michal Karzynski Michal Karzynski
Author Profile Icon Michal Karzynski
Michal Karzynski
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Webmin Administrator's Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Setting Up Your System FREE CHAPTER 2. User Management 3. Securing Your System 4. Controlling Your System 5. Monitoring Your System 6. Managing Files on Your System 7. Backing Up Your System 8. Running an Apache Web Server 9. Running a MySQL Database Server 10. Running a PostgreSQL Database Server 11. Running Web Applications 12. Setting Up an E-mail Server Index

Saving Syslog messages to a file


The standard logging protocol on Unix and related systems is called Syslog. Most modern Linux distributions use an implementation such as Rsyslog or Syslog-NG. They all perform the same tasks:

  • Allow software running on your system to send Syslog messages

  • Separate incoming messages by type and priority and save them to different files

Most system utilities send log messages to Syslog, but other server software (such as Apache, MySQL, or PostgreSQL), by default, save messages directly to files on disk.

Webmin allows you to control Syslog and decide which messages get saved to which files. In order to understand how Syslog separates messages, we need to explain two concepts: facilities and priorities.

Each message sent to Syslog is described by a facility level and priority level. Based on these properties, you can decide which messages to discard, which to save, and where.

A facility level describes what type of message this is. Since programs usually send all...

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