.\" Copyright (c) 2001-2003 The Open Group, All Rights Reserved .TH "CLOSELOG" P 2003 "IEEE/The Open Group" "POSIX Programmer's Manual" .\" closelog .SH NAME closelog, openlog, setlogmask, syslog \- control system log .SH SYNOPSIS .LP \fB#include .br .sp void closelog(void); .br void openlog(const char *\fP\fIident\fP\fB, int\fP \fIlogopt\fP\fB, int\fP \fIfacility\fP\fB); .br int setlogmask(int\fP \fImaskpri\fP\fB); .br void syslog(int\fP \fIpriority\fP\fB, const char *\fP\fImessage\fP\fB, \&... /*\fP \fIarguments\fP \fB*/); \fP \fB .br \fP .SH DESCRIPTION .LP The \fIsyslog\fP() function shall send a message to an implementation-defined logging facility, which may log it in an implementation-defined system log, write it to the system console, forward it to a list of users, or forward it to the logging facility on another host over the network. The logged message shall include a message header and a message body. The message header contains at least a timestamp and a tag string. .LP The message body is generated from the \fImessage\fP and following arguments in the same manner as if these were arguments to \fIprintf\fP(), except that the additional conversion specification \fB%m\fP shall be recognized; it shall convert no arguments, shall cause the output of the error message string associated with the value of \fIerrno\fP on entry to \fIsyslog\fP(), and may be mixed with argument specifications of the \fB"%\fP\fIn\fP\fB$"\fP form. If a complete conversion specification with the \fBm\fP conversion specifier character is not just \fB%m\fP , the behavior is undefined. A trailing may be added if needed. .LP Values of the \fIpriority\fP argument are formed by OR'ing together a severity-level value and an optional facility value. If no facility value is specified, the current default facility value is used. .LP Possible values of severity level include: .TP 7 LOG_EMERG A panic condition. .TP 7 LOG_ALERT A condition that should be corrected immediately, such as a corrupted system database. .TP 7 LOG_CRIT Critical conditions, such as hard device errors. .TP 7 LOG_ERR Errors. .TP 7 LOG_WARNING .sp Warning messages. .TP 7 LOG_NOTICE Conditions that are not error conditions, but that may require special handling. .TP 7 LOG_INFO Informational messages. .TP 7 LOG_DEBUG Messages that contain information normally of use only when debugging a program. .sp .LP The facility indicates the application or system component generating the message. Possible facility values include: .TP 7 LOG_USER Messages generated by arbitrary processes. This is the default facility identifier if none is specified. .TP 7 LOG_LOCAL0 Reserved for local use. .TP 7 LOG_LOCAL1 Reserved for local use. .TP 7 LOG_LOCAL2 Reserved for local use. .TP 7 LOG_LOCAL3 Reserved for local use. .TP 7 LOG_LOCAL4 Reserved for local use. .TP 7 LOG_LOCAL5 Reserved for local use. .TP 7 LOG_LOCAL6 Reserved for local use. .TP 7 LOG_LOCAL7 Reserved for local use. .sp .LP The \fIopenlog\fP() function shall set process attributes that affect subsequent calls to \fIsyslog\fP(). The \fIident\fP argument is a string that is prepended to every message. The \fIlogopt\fP argument indicates logging options. Values for \fIlogopt\fP are constructed by a bitwise-inclusive OR of zero or more of the following: .TP 7 LOG_PID Log the process ID with each message. This is useful for identifying specific processes. .TP 7 LOG_CONS Write messages to the system console if they cannot be sent to the logging facility. The \fIsyslog\fP() function ensures that the process does not acquire the console as a controlling terminal in the process of writing the message. .TP 7 LOG_NDELAY Open the connection to the logging facility immediately. Normally the open is delayed until the first message is logged. This is useful for programs that need to manage the order in which file descriptors are allocated. .TP 7 LOG_ODELAY Delay open until \fIsyslog\fP() is called. .TP 7 LOG_NOWAIT Do not wait for child processes that may have been created during the course of logging the message. This option should be used by processes that enable notification of child termination using SIGCHLD, since \fIsyslog\fP() may otherwise block waiting for a child whose exit status has already been collected. .sp .LP The \fIfacility\fP argument encodes a default facility to be assigned to all messages that do not have an explicit facility already encoded. The initial default facility is LOG_USER. .LP The \fIopenlog\fP() and \fIsyslog\fP() functions may allocate a file descriptor. It is not necessary to call \fIopenlog\fP() prior to calling \fIsyslog\fP(). .LP The \fIcloselog\fP() function shall close any open file descriptors allocated by previous calls to \fIopenlog\fP() or \fIsyslog\fP(). .LP The \fIsetlogmask\fP() function shall set the log priority mask for the current process to \fImaskpri\fP and return the previous mask. If the \fImaskpri\fP argument is 0, the current log mask is not modified. Calls by the current process to \fIsyslog\fP() with a priority not set in \fImaskpri\fP shall be rejected. The default log mask allows all priorities to be logged. A call to \fIopenlog\fP() is not required prior to calling \fIsetlogmask\fP(). .LP Symbolic constants for use as values of the \fIlogopt\fP, \fIfacility\fP, \fIpriority\fP, and \fImaskpri\fP arguments are defined in the \fI\fP header. .SH RETURN VALUE .LP The \fIsetlogmask\fP() function shall return the previous log priority mask. The \fIcloselog\fP(), \fIopenlog\fP(), and \fIsyslog\fP() functions shall not return a value. .SH ERRORS .LP No errors are defined. .LP \fIThe following sections are informative.\fP .SH EXAMPLES .SS Using openlog() .LP The following example causes subsequent calls to \fIsyslog\fP() to log the process ID with each message, and to write messages to the system console if they cannot be sent to the logging facility. .sp .RS .nf \fB#include .sp char *ident = "Process demo"; int logopt = LOG_PID | LOG_CONS; int facility = LOG_USER; \&... openlog(ident, logopt, facility); \fP .fi .RE .SS Using setlogmask() .LP The following example causes subsequent calls to \fIsyslog\fP() to accept error messages, and to reject all other messages. .sp .RS .nf \fB#include .sp int result; int mask = LOG_MASK (LOG_ERR); \&... result = setlogmask(mask); \fP .fi .RE .SS Using syslog .LP The following example sends the message \fB"This is a message"\fP to the default logging facility, marking the message as an error message generated by random processes. .sp .RS .nf \fB#include .sp char *message = "This is a message"; int priority = LOG_ERR | LOG_USER; \&... syslog(priority, message); \fP .fi .RE .SH APPLICATION USAGE .LP None. .SH RATIONALE .LP None. .SH FUTURE DIRECTIONS .LP None. .SH SEE ALSO .LP \fIprintf\fP() , the Base Definitions volume of IEEE\ Std\ 1003.1-2001, \fI\fP .SH COPYRIGHT Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard is the referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .