man logwatch (Administration système) - system log analyzer and reporter
NAME
logwatch - system log analyzer and reporter
SYNOPSIS
logwatch [--detail level ] [--logfile log-file-group ] [--service service-name ] [--print] [--mailto address ] [--archives] [--range range ] [--debug level ] [--save file-name ] [--logdir directory ] [--hostname hostname ] [--splithosts] [--multiemail] [--output output-type ] [--numeric] [--version] [--help|--usage]
DESCRIPTION
LogWatch is a customizable, pluggable log-monitoring system. It will go through your logs for a given period of time and make a report in the areas that you wish with the detail that you wish. Logwatch is being used for Linux and many types of UNIX.
OPTIONS
- --detail level
- This is the detail level of the report. level can be a positive integer, or high, med, low, which correspond to the integers 10, 5, and 0, repectively.
- --logfile log-file-group
- This will force LogWatch to process only the set of logfiles defined by log-file-group (i.e. messages, xferlog, ...). LogWatch will therefore process all services that use those logfiles. This option can be specified more than once to specify multiple logfile-groups.
- --service service-name
- This will force LogWatch to process only the service specified in service-name (i.e. login, pam, identd, ...). LogWatch will therefore also process any log-file-groups necessary to process these services. This option can be specified more than once to specify multiple services to process. A useful service-name is All which will process all services (and logfile-groups) for which you have filters installed.
- Print the results to stdout (i.e. the screen).
- --mailto address
- Mail the results to the email address or user specified in address.
- --range range
- You can specify a date-range to process. Common ranges are Yesterday, Today, All, and Help. Additional options are listed when invoked with the Help parameter.
- --archives
- Each log-file-group has basic logfiles (i.e. /var/log/messages) as well as archives (i.e. /var/log/messages.? or /var/log/messages.?.gz). When used with "--range all", this option will make LogWatch search through the archives in addition to the regular logfiles. For other values of --range, LogWatch will search the appropriate archived logs.
- --debug level
- For debugging purposes. level can range from 0 to 100. This will really clutter up your output. You probably don't want to use this.
- --save file-name
- Save the output to file-name instead of displaying or mailing it.
- --logdir directory
- Look in directory for log files instead of the default directory.
- --hostname hostname
- Use hostname for the reports instead of this system's hostname. In addition, if HostLimit is set in the logwatch.conf configuration file (see MORE INFORMATION, below), then only logs from this hostname will be processed (where appropriate).
- --numeric
- Inhibits additional name lookups, displaying IP addresses numerically.
- --usage
- Displays usage information
- --help
- same as --usage.
FILES
- /usr/share/logwatch/
- This directory contains all the perl executables and configuration files shipped with the logwatch distribution.
- /etc/logwatch
- This directory contains local configuration files that override the default configuration. See MORE INFORMATION below for more information.
EXAMPLES
logwatch --service ftpd-xferlog --range all --detail high --print --archives This will print out all FTP transfers that are stored in all current and archived xferlogs. logwatch --service pam_pwdb --range yesterday --detail high --print This will print out login information for the previous day...
MORE INFORMATION
The directory /usr/share/doc/logwatch-* contains several files with additional documentation: HOWTO-Customize-LogWatch Documents the directory structure of LogWatch configuration and executable files, and describes how to customize LogWatch by overriding these default files. License Describes the License under which LogWatch is distributed. Additional clauses may be specified in individual files. README Describes how to install, where to find it, mailing lists, and other useful information.
AUTHOR
Kirk Bauer <kirk@kaybee.org> http://www.kaybee.org/~kirk ftp://ftp.kaybee.org/pub/redhat/RPMS