Next: Syslog Example, Previous: closelog, Up: Submitting Syslog Messages [Contents][Index]
The symbols referred to in this section are declared in the file syslog.h.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:LogMask | AS-Unsafe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
setlogmask
sets a mask (the “logmask”) that determines which
future syslog
calls shall be ignored. If a program has not
called setlogmask
, syslog
doesn’t ignore any calls. You
can use setlogmask
to specify that messages of particular
priorities shall be ignored in the future.
A setlogmask
call overrides any previous setlogmask
call.
Note that the logmask exists entirely independently of opening and closing of Syslog connections.
Setting the logmask has a similar effect to, but is not the same as, configuring Syslog. The Syslog configuration may cause Syslog to discard certain messages it receives, but the logmask causes certain messages never to get submitted to Syslog in the first place.
mask is a bit string with one bit corresponding to each of the
possible message priorities. If the bit is on, syslog
handles
messages of that priority normally. If it is off, syslog
discards messages of that priority. Use the message priority macros
described in syslog, vsyslog and the LOG_MASK
to construct
an appropriate mask value, as in this example:
LOG_MASK(LOG_EMERG) | LOG_MASK(LOG_ERROR)
or
~(LOG_MASK(LOG_INFO))
There is also a LOG_UPTO
macro, which generates a mask with the bits
on for a certain priority and all priorities above it:
LOG_UPTO(LOG_ERROR)
The unfortunate naming of the macro is due to the fact that internally, higher numbers are used for lower message priorities.
Next: Syslog Example, Previous: closelog, Up: Submitting Syslog Messages [Contents][Index]