Customizing Logwatch: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 11:53, 8 March 2006
There are two basic customizations which we often perform:
- increase the header-information with machine-specific info (hardware, admininstrator(s), usage, etc):
- adjust the order of the information - we care very much about disk-usage, and prefer it first
Start by ensuring logwatch is actually installed! A mail-transport agent (MTA) like Postfix must be installed and working (to receive the daily logwatch summary).
Logwatch Headers
Use this template, to create /etc/log.d/custom_header (ASCII, plain-text file)
Machine info: Pentium4 2.4GHz, 1GB, GigE, 40GB+120GB, RivaTNT Running RedHat 9 Linux Located in Research Server Room A (Beta Space, Surrey Campus) Used by Davis Marques <dmarques@sfu.ca> Into service xxx. Re-purposed Dec. 15, 2004 Administered by Gordon Pritchard <gordonp+corsair@sfu.ca>
Another example:
Machine info: Pentium4 dual-core 3GHz, 2GB, GigE, 80GB, ATI-R300-mobility Running Gentoo Linux Located in office 525 / The Axis (Beta Space, Surrey Campus) Used by Gordon Pritchard <gordonp+zero@sfu.ca) Into service September 6, 2005. Administered by Gordon Pritchard <gordonp+zero@sfu.ca>
To include this custom header, we now have to modify the main logwatch Perl script logwatch.pl to add the bold / red line:
- on a RedHat 9 machine, this file is /etc/log.d/scripts/logwatch.pl:
$printing = 'y'; print OUTFILE "\n ################### LogWatch $Version ($VDate) #################### \n"; print OUTFILE " Processing Initiated: " . localtime(time) . "\n"; print OUTFILE " Date Range Processed: $Config{'range'}\n"; print OUTFILE " Detail Level of Output: $Config{'detail'}\n"; print OUTFILE " Logfiles for Host: $Config{'hostname'}\n"; print OUTFILE "\n" . `/bin/cat $BaseDir/custom_header` . "\n"; print OUTFILE "################################################################ \n\n"; }
- on a Gentoo machine, this file is /usr/sbin/logwatch.pl:
outline( $index_par, "\n ################### LogWatch $Version ($VDate) #################### \n"); } outline( $index_par, " Processing Initiated: " . localtime(time) . "\n"); outline( $index_par, " Date Range Processed: $Config{'range'}\n"); outline( $index_par, " $print_range\n") if ($Config{'range'} ne 'all'); outline( $index_par, " Period is " . GetPeriod() . ".\n") if ($Config{'range'} ne 'all'); outline( $index_par, " Detail Level of Output: $Config{'detail'}\n"); outline( $index_par, " Type of Output: $Config{'output'}\n"); outline( $index_par, " Logfiles for Host: $Config{'hostname'}\n"); outline( $index_par, "\n" . `/bin/cat $BaseDir/custom_header` . "\n"); if ( $outtype_html or $outtype_htmlembed ) { outline( $index_par, "\n"); } else { outline( $index_par, "################################################################## \n");
Logwatch Information Order
The scripts locate in /etc/log.d/scripts/services/ are run according to their file-name ordering. Simply renaming a file changes it's relationship to other information. We should move zz-disk_space to aa-disk_space to have our disk-usage appear right after the custom header; as root:
zero services # mv /etc/log.d/scripts/services/zz-disk_space /etc/log.d/scripts/services/aa-disk_space
But wait - there's more!! This disk-space script evolves through the various releases, often suppressing output if nothing prior is printed. And, (now) as the first entry, nothing prior will ever get printed :-O So, we'll strip out all the conditionals, and produce a pared-down script /etc/log.d/scripts/services/aa-disk_space which forever more will always give us our disk-usage as the first thing:
Gentoo:
#!/bin/bash ########################################################################## # $Id: aa-disk_space,v 1.8 2005/02/24 17:08:05 kirk Exp $ ########################################################################## echo df -hP | head -n1; df -hP | grep '^[/ ]'
RedHat 9:
#!/bin/bash ########################################################################## # $Id: disk_space,v 1.1 2003/01/13 04:00:59 kirk Exp $ ########################################################################## echo echo echo "------------------ Disk Space --------------------" echo df -h echo
One more thing to do - there is a corresponding configuration file which we simply move (rename) to align with the above:
- on both Gentoo, and RedHat 9, this file is /etc/log.d/conf/services/zz-disk_space.conf
zero # mv /etc/log.d/conf/services/zz-disk_space.conf /etc/log.d/conf/services/aa-disk_space.conf
To test it all, invoke the daily logwatch cron-job manually (Gentoo shown; others similar):
zero # sh /etc/cron.daily/00-logwatch