syslogd with circular buffer

boyska 504af5cce6 FIX unit tests 5 éve
cmd f4e6370abd make tail with param ?l= (HTTP only) 5 éve
.drone.yml 5b7ddb62a6 drone CI 5 éve
README.md 5b4e85fabb readme: how to integrate in your server 5 éve
format.go a5999adb8d add basic circolog-tail client 5 éve
hub.go f4e6370abd make tail with param ?l= (HTTP only) 5 éve
hub_test.go 504af5cce6 FIX unit tests 5 éve

README.md

A syslog daemon implementing circular buffer, in-memory storage.

This is useful when you want to keep some (heavy detailed) log available, but you don't want to log too many things to disk.

On your "main" syslog, send some message to this one!

Integration examples

In these examples I'll refer to the usage of UNIX sockets. They are more secure than TCP/UDP sockets because they have file permissions, they can be "masked" using mount namespaces, etc. However, circlogd supports udp/tcp sockets easily, so that should not be an issue.

syslog-ng

To integrate into syslog-ng, put this in /etc/syslog-ng/conf.d/circolog.conf

destination d_circolog {
        unix-dgram("/run/circolog-syslog.sock"
                   flags(syslog-protocol)
                  );
};
log { source(s_src); destination(d_circolog); };

and run circologd -syslogd-socket /run/circolog-syslog.sock -query-socket /run/circolog-query.sock

Client

curl might be enough of a client for most uses.

curl --unix-socket /run/circolog-query.sock localhost/

will give you everything that circologd has in memory

If you want to "follow" (as in tail -f) you need to use the websocket interface. However, I don't know of any websocket client supporting UNIX domain socket, so you have two options:

  1. wait until I write a proper circolog-tail client implementing it all
  2. Use circologd with -query-addr 127.0.0.1:9080, add some iptables rule to prevent non-root to access that port, and run ws ws://localhost:9080/ws. You'll get all the "backlog", and will follow new log messages.