logger - a shell command interface to the syslog(3) system log module
Synopsis
Description
Examples
See Also
Standards
logger [-isd] [-f file] [-p pri] [-t tag] [-u socket] [message ...]
Logger makes entries in the system log. It provides a shell command interface to the syslog(3) system log module.Options:
-i Log the process id of the logger process with each line. -s Log the message to standard error, as well as the system log. -f file Log the specified file. -p pri Enter the message with the specified priority. The priority may be specified numerically or as a facility.level pair. For example, -p local3.info logs the message(s) as info rmational level in the local3 facility. The default is user.notice. -t tag Mark every line in the log with the specified tag. -u sock Write to socket as specified with socket instead of builtin syslog routines. -d Use a datagram instead of a stream connection to this socket. -- End the argument list. This is to allow the message to start with a hyphen (-). message Write the message to log; if not specified, and the -f flag is not provided, standard input is logged. The logger utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs.
Valid facility names are: auth, authpriv (for security information of a sensitive nature), cron, daemon, ftp, kern, lpr, mail, news, security (deprecated synonym for auth), syslog, user, uucp, and local0 to local7, inclusive.
Valid level names are): alert, crit, debug, emerg, err, error (deprecated synonym for err), info, notice, panic (deprecated synonym for emerg), warning, warn (deprecated synonym for warning). For the priority order and intended purposes of these levels, see syslog(3).
logger System rebootedlogger -p local0.notice -t HOSTIDM -f /dev/idmc
syslog(3), syslogd(8)
The logger command is expected to be -p1003.2 compatible.
| June 6, 1993 | LOGGER (1) | BSD 4.3 |