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journalcheck

(C) Alexander Koch

A simple replacement for logcheck for usage with journald

Journalcheck aims at being a simple replacement for logcheck when using journald for system logs. It calls journalctl to obtain all messages that have been recorded since its last invocation, pipes the output through egrep with a given set of filters, and passes the remaining messages to stdout. Journalcheck therefore works with volatile system logs as well.

Dependencies

  • systemd (journalctl)
  • coreutils (split)
  • grep (egrep)

Usage

Journalcheck is best run as regular user (no need for root privileges!) via cron:

MAILTO=user@localhost

# m  h  dom mon dow   command
*/30 *  *   *   *     journalcheck

With a local MTA/MDA set up correctly, you will receive all log entries not matching the white-list by mail. In addition to the ones shipped with journalcheck, it looks in ~/.journalcheck.d for user-defined filters.

For cron-less systems making use of systemd .timer units instead, there are example units in example. They rely on checkrun.sh for mail functionality.

Configuration

Journalcheck is configurable through the following environment variables (default values in brackets):

  • JC_FILTERS_GLOBAL (/usr/lib/journalcheck): Directory for system-wide filters
  • JC_FILTERS_USER (~/.journalcheck.d): Directory for user-defined filters
  • JC_CURSOR_FILE (~/.journalcheck.cursor): Last run timestamp file
  • JC_NUM_THREADS (no. of logical CPUs): Number of worker threads to spawn
  • JC_LOGLEVEL (0..5): Priority (loglevel) filter

Help Wanted

As I only have a limited set of machines and applications running to derive filters from, I rely heavily on contributions in order to provide a universal filter set. Pull requests are welcome!

License

Journalcheck is released under the terms of the MIT License, see LICENSE file.