Provided by: liblog-dispatch-perl_2.54-1_all bug

NAME

       Log::Dispatch::Syslog - Object for logging to system log.

VERSION

       version 2.54

SYNOPSIS

         use Log::Dispatch;

         my $log = Log::Dispatch->new(
             outputs => [
                 [
                     'Syslog',
                     min_level => 'info',
                     ident     => 'Yadda yadda'
                 ]
             ]
         );

         $log->emerg("Time to die.");

DESCRIPTION

       This module provides a simple object for sending messages to the system log (via UNIX
       syslog calls).

       Note that logging may fail if you try to pass UTF-8 characters in the log message. If
       logging fails and warnings are enabled, the error message will be output using Perl's
       "warn".

CONSTRUCTOR

       The constructor takes the following parameters in addition to the standard parameters
       documented in Log::Dispatch::Output:

       •   ident ($)

           This string will be prepended to all messages in the system log.  Defaults to $0.

       •   logopt ($)

           A string containing the log options (separated by any separator you like). See the
           openlog(3) and Sys::Syslog docs for more details.  Defaults to ''.

       •   facility ($)

           Specifies what type of program is doing the logging to the system log.  Valid options
           are 'auth', 'authpriv', 'cron', 'daemon', 'kern', 'local0' through 'local7', 'mail,
           'news', 'syslog', 'user', 'uucp'. Defaults to 'user'

       •   socket ($, \@, or \%)

           Tells what type of socket to use for sending syslog messages. Valid options are listed
           in "Sys::Syslog".

           If you don't provide this, then we let "Sys::Syslog" simply pick one that works, which
           is the preferred option, as it makes your code more portable.

           If you pass an array reference, it is dereferenced and passed to
           "Sys::Syslog::setlogsock()".

           If you pass a hash reference, it is passed to "Sys::Syslog::setlogsock()" as is.

       •   lock ($)

           If this is set to a true value, then the calls to "setlogsock()", "openlog()",
           "syslog()", and "closelog()" will all be guarded by a thread-locked variable.

           This is only relevant when running you are using Perl threads in your application.
           Setting this to a true value will cause the threads and threads::shared modules to be
           loaded.

           This defaults to false.

AUTHOR

       Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is Copyright (c) 2016 by Dave Rolsky.

       This is free software, licensed under:

         The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)