The symbols referred to in this section are declared in the file syslog.h.
void
openlog (const char *ident, int option, int facility)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock fd | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
openlog
opens or reopens a connection to Syslog in preparation
for submitting messages.
ident is an arbitrary identification string which future
syslog
invocations will prefix to each message. This is intended
to identify the source of the message, and people conventionally set it
to the name of the program that will submit the messages.
If ident is NULL, or if openlog
is not called, the default
identification string used in Syslog messages will be the program name,
taken from argv[0].
Please note that the string pointer ident will be retained
internally by the Syslog routines. You must not free the memory that
ident points to. It is also dangerous to pass a reference to an
automatic variable since leaving the scope would mean ending the
lifetime of the variable. If you want to change the ident string,
you must call openlog
again; overwriting the string pointed to by
ident is not thread-safe.
You can cause the Syslog routines to drop the reference to ident and
go back to the default string (the program name taken from argv[0]), by
calling closelog
: See closelog.
In particular, if you are writing code for a shared library that might get
loaded and then unloaded (e.g. a PAM module), and you use openlog
,
you must call closelog
before any point where your library might
get unloaded, as in this example:
#include <syslog.h> void shared_library_function (void) { openlog ("mylibrary", option, priority); syslog (LOG_INFO, "shared library has been invoked"); closelog (); }
Without the call to closelog
, future invocations of syslog
by the program using the shared library may crash, if the library gets
unloaded and the memory containing the string "mylibrary"
becomes
unmapped. This is a limitation of the BSD syslog interface.
openlog
may or may not open the /dev/log socket, depending
on option. If it does, it tries to open it and connect it as a
stream socket. If that doesn’t work, it tries to open it and connect it
as a datagram socket. The socket has the “Close on Exec” attribute,
so the kernel will close it if the process performs an exec.
You don’t have to use openlog
. If you call syslog
without
having called openlog
, syslog
just opens the connection
implicitly and uses defaults for the information in ident and
options.
options is a bit string, with the bits as defined by the following single bit masks:
LOG_PERROR
¶If on, openlog
sets up the connection so that any syslog
on this connection writes its message to the calling process’ Standard
Error stream in addition to submitting it to Syslog. If off, syslog
does not write the message to Standard Error.
LOG_CONS
¶If on, openlog
sets up the connection so that a syslog
on
this connection that fails to submit a message to Syslog writes the
message instead to system console. If off, syslog
does not write
to the system console (but of course Syslog may write messages it
receives to the console).
LOG_PID
¶When on, openlog
sets up the connection so that a syslog
on this connection inserts the calling process’ Process ID (PID) into
the message. When off, openlog
does not insert the PID.
LOG_NDELAY
¶When on, openlog
opens and connects the /dev/log socket.
When off, a future syslog
call must open and connect the socket.
Portability note: In early systems, the sense of this bit was exactly the opposite.
LOG_ODELAY
¶This bit does nothing. It exists for backward compatibility.
If any other bit in options is on, the result is undefined.
facility is the default facility code for this connection. A
syslog
on this connection that specifies default facility causes
this facility to be associated with the message. See syslog
for
possible values. A value of zero means the default, which is
LOG_USER
.
If a Syslog connection is already open when you call openlog
,
openlog
“reopens” the connection. Reopening is like opening
except that if you specify zero for the default facility code, the
default facility code simply remains unchanged and if you specify
LOG_NDELAY and the socket is already open and connected, openlog
just leaves it that way.