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sample.syslog.conf
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1.1.1.1 (vendor branch):
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Mon Jul 22 10:46:11 2013 UTC (11 years, 5 months ago) by
misho
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CVS tags:
v1_8_8p0,
v1_8_8,
v1_8_7p0,
v1_8_7,
v1_8_5p1,
v1_8_3p2,
v1_8_10p3_0,
v1_8_10p3,
HEAD
1.8.7
# This is a sample syslog.conf fragment for use with Sudo.
#
# By default, sudo logs to "authpriv" if your system supports it, else it
# uses "auth". The facility can be set via the --with-logfac configure
# option or in the sudoers file.
# To see what syslog facility a sudo binary uses, run `sudo -V' as *root*.
#
# NOTES:
# The whitespace in the following line is made up of <TAB>
# characters, *not* spaces. You cannot just cut and paste!
#
# If you edit syslog.conf you need to send syslogd a HUP signal.
# Ie: kill -HUP process_id
#
# Syslogd will not create new log files for you, you must first
# create the file before syslogd will log to it. Eg.
# 'touch /var/log/sudo'
# This logs successful and failed sudo attempts to the file /var/log/auth
# If your system has the authpriv syslog facility, use authpriv.debug
auth.debug /var/log/auth
# To log to a remote machine, use something like the following,
# where "loghost" is the name of the remote machine.
# If your system has the authpriv syslog facility, use authpriv.debug
auth.debug @loghost
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