Customizing Logwatch: Difference between revisions

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  <font color=red># Ignore these hosts</font>
  <font color=red># Ignore these hosts</font>
  <font color=red>*Remove = 209.87.56.234</font>
  <font color=red>*Remove = 209.87.60.112</font>


  <font color=red>hostname</font> <font color=blue>~ #</font> '''emacs -nw /usr/share/logwatch/default.conf/logwatch.conf'''
  <font color=red>hostname</font> <font color=blue>~ #</font> '''emacs -nw /usr/share/logwatch/default.conf/logwatch.conf'''

Latest revision as of 22:24, 14 October 2016

There are three basic customizations we often perform:

  1. set up logwatch cron-job to mail us the daily output from watching the logs. A Mar '09 update to logwatch-7.3.6 inexplicably removed the mail-outs!
  2. increase the header-information with machine-specific info (hardware, admininstrator(s), usage, etc):
  3. 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 or nullmailer must be installed and working (to receive the daily logwatch summary).

Cron Job

As-installed, under logwatch 7.3.6, this is the file we see under /etc/cron.daily/00-logwatch:

#!/bin/sh

if [ -x /usr/sbin/logwatch.pl ] ; then
	exec /usr/sbin/logwatch.pl 2>&1 > /dev/null
fi

Instead, we need to make these changes (shown in red):

hostname # emacs -nw /etc/cron.daily/00-logwatch

#!/bin/sh

if [ -x /usr/sbin/logwatch.pl ] ; then
	exec /usr/sbin/logwatch.pl --mailto root --output mail 2>&1 > /dev/null
fi


Logwatch Headers

Use this template, to create /usr/share/logwatch/custom_header (ASCII, plain-text file; previous Gentoo and other distributions used /etc/log.d/custom_header).

Machine info:  Pentium4 2.4GHz, 1GB, GigE, 40GB+120GB, RivaTNT
 Running RedHat 9 Linux
 Located in Podium shared server-room, SFU Surrey campus
 Used by John Doe <john_doe@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>

Yet Another Example:

Machine info:  Core2Duo 2.66GHz, 4GB, GigE, 3Ware 9650SE-4LP with 2x75GB Raptor RAID1,
  nvidia QuadroFX1700 512MB
 Running Gentoo Linux (amd64/2008.0/desktop profile)
 Located in office 3726, Podium, SFU Surrey Campus
 Used by Gordon Pritchard <gordonp+zero@sfu.ca)
 Into service March 2008.  ACS-leased Dell Precision T3400
 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 help remember which machines have up-to-date kernels, we want logwatch to assist us by printing the kernel-version in the header. Using a Gentoo example, add the bold / red lines to /usr/sbin/logwatch.pl:

hostname ~ # emacs -nw /usr/sbin/logwatch.pl

  &output( $index_par, "\n ################### Logwatch $Version ($VDate) #################### \n", "line");
  }
 
  &output( $index_par, "       Processing Initiated: " . localtime(time) . "\n", "line");
  &output( $index_par, "       Date Range Processed: $Config{'range'}\n", "line");
  &output( $index_par, "                             $print_range\n", "line") if ($Config{'range'} ne 'all');
  &output( $index_par, "                             Period is " . GetPeriod() . ".\n", "line")
     if ($Config{'range'} ne 'all');
  &output( $index_par, "     Detail Level of Output: $Config{'detail'}\n", "line");
  &output( $index_par, "             Type of Output: $Config{'output'}\n", "line");
  &output( $index_par, "          Logfiles for Host: $Config{'hostname'}\n", "line");
  &output( $index_par, "                     Kernel: " . `/bin/uname -r` . "\n", "line");
  &output( $index_par, "\n" . `/bin/cat  $BaseDir/custom_header` . "\n", "line");
  
  if ( $outtype_html ) {
     &output( $index_par, "\n", "stop");
  } else {
     &output( $index_par, "################################################################## \n", "line");


Logwatch Information Order

The scripts located in /usr/share/logwatchscripts/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 # mv /usr/share/logwatch/scripts/services/zz-disk_space /usr/share/logwatch/scripts/services/aa-disk_space

One more thing to do - there is a corresponding configuration file which we simply move (rename) to align with the above:

  • Current Gentoo shown:
zero # mv /usr/share/logwatch/default.conf/services/zz-disk_space.conf /usr/share/logwatch/default.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


Filtering Noise (aka clutter-reduction)

We'll edit two files, to enhance clarity of the resulting email (add or edit the lines in red):

hostname ~ # emacs -nw /usr/share/logwatch/default.conf/services/sshd.conf

# Which logfile group...
LogFile = secure
##LogFile = messages

# Ignore these hosts
*Remove = 209.87.60.112
hostname ~ # emacs -nw /usr/share/logwatch/default.conf/logwatch.conf
Service = All

# You can also disable certain services (when specifying all)
Service = "-barracuda"      # Prevent log-clutter with system temp/voltages
                            # which are captured/displayed by the barracuda filter
Service = "-sendmail-largeboxes"
                            # noisily, erroneeously reported (no sendmail here)
Service = "-zz-network"     # Prevents execution of zz-network service, which
                            # prints useful network configuration info.