Provided by: epylog_1.0.8-1_all bug

NAME

       epylog - Syslog new log notifier and parser.

SYNOPSIS

       epylog [-c epylog.conf] [-d LOGLEVEL] [--last PERIOD]
              [--store-offsets] [--quiet] [--cron]

DESCRIPTION

       Epylog is a new log notifier and parser which runs periodically out of cron, looks at your
       logs, processes the entries in order to present them in a more comprehensive  format,  and
       then  provides you with the output. It is written specifically with large network clusters
       in mind where a lot of machines (around 50 and upwards) log  to  the  same  loghost  using
       syslog or syslog-ng.

       Alternatively,  Epylog can be invoked from the command line and provide a log report based
       on a certain provided time period. In this case it relies on syslog timestamps to find the
       offsets,  as  opposed  to  the  end-of-log offsets stored during the last run, though this
       behavior is not as reliable and is easily thwarted by skewed clocks.

OPTIONS

       -c config.file
              Provide an alternative  config  file  to  Epylog.  By  default,  it  will  look  in
              /etc/epylog/epylog.conf.

       -d LOGLEVEL
              Logging  level.  The  default  is  1.  0 will produce no output except for critical
              errors (useful for cron runs). 2 and above are debugging  levels.  5  is  the  most
              verbose.

       --last PERIOD
              Will make a report on events that occurred in the last PERIOD. PERIOD can be either
              "hour", "day", "week", "month", or more granular: "1h", "2h", "3d", "2w", etc. When
              --last is specified, epylog will ignore the saved offsets and locate the entries by
              timestamps. CAUTION: this process is not to be trusted, since  the  timestamps  are
              not  checked  for  any validity when arriving to the loghost. One reporting machine
              with a skewed clock may confuse Epylog enough to miss a lot of valid entries.

       --store-offsets
              When specified,  will  store  the  offset  of  the  last  log  entry  processed  in
              offsets.xml.  During  the cron runs epylog relies on the offset information to find
              out what new  entries  to  process.  This  is  more  trustworthy  than  relying  on
              timestamps. The default behavior is not to store the offsets, as this allows to run
              epylog both from cron and manually without the two interfering with each-other. The
              location  of  offset.xml  is  specified in epylog.conf. See epylog.conf(5) for more
              details.

       --quiet
              In every way identical to -d 0.

       --cron This is essentially --quiet --store-offsets, plus a lockfile will  be  created  and
              consulted,  preventing more than one instance of epylog from running. You can still
              run epylog manually -- the lockfile is only checked when running in --cron mode.

FEATURES

              The core of epylog is written in python. It handles things like timestamp  lookups,
              unwrapping  of  "last message repeated" lines, handling of rotated files, preparing
              and publishing the reports, etc.

              The modules are pluggable and can be  either  "internal",  written  in  python,  or
              external.  External  modules can be written in any language, but at a price of some
              convenience. For more info see epylog-modules(5).

INITIAL RUN

              Depending on the size of your logs, you  might  want  to  initialize  your  offsets
              before  letting  epylog run from cron. When the offsets.xml file is missing, epylog
              will by default process the entire log, and depending on your  configuration,  that
              can be a lot of entries. A good way to init epylog is to run:

              epylog --last day --store-offsets

FILES

       /etc/epylog/epylog.conf
       /usr/sbin/epylog
       /etc/cron.daily/epylog.cron
       /etc/epylog/*
       /var/lib/epylog/*
       /usr/share/epylog/modules/*

EXAMPLES

       The useful way to run from a command line is with --last. E.g.:

       epylog --last day
       epylog --last 2w

       When running from cron, you want to store the offsets and not rely on timestamps. There is
       a mode that allows you to do this:

       epylog --cron

AUTHORS

       Konstantin Ryabitsev <icon@linux.duke.edu>

SEE ALSO

       epylog.conf(5) epylog-modules(5)