128 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
128 lines
4.6 KiB
Plaintext
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;
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; Logging Configuration
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;
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; In this file, you configure logging to files or to
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; the syslog system.
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;
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; "logger reload" at the CLI will reload configuration
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; of the logging system.
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[general]
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;
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; Customize the display of debug message time stamps
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; this example is the ISO 8601 date format (yyyy-mm-dd HH:MM:SS)
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;
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; see strftime(3) Linux manual for format specifiers. Note that there is also
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; a fractional second parameter which may be used in this field. Use %1q
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; for tenths, %2q for hundredths, etc.
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;
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;dateformat=%F %T ; ISO 8601 date format
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;dateformat=%F %T.%3q ; with milliseconds
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;
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;
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; This makes Asterisk write callids to log messages
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; (defaults to yes)
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;use_callids = no
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;
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; This appends the hostname to the name of the log files.
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;appendhostname = yes
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;
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; This determines whether or not we log queue events to a file
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; (defaults to yes).
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;queue_log = no
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;
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; Determines whether the queue_log always goes to a file, even
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; when a realtime backend is present (defaults to no).
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;queue_log_to_file = yes
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;
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; Set the queue_log filename
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; (defaults to queue_log)
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;queue_log_name = queue_log
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;
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; Log rotation strategy:
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; sequential: Rename archived logs in order, such that the newest
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; has the highest sequence number [default]. When
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; exec_after_rotate is set, ${filename} will specify
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; the new archived logfile.
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; rotate: Rotate all the old files, such that the oldest has the
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; highest sequence number [this is the expected behavior
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; for Unix administrators]. When exec_after_rotate is
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; set, ${filename} will specify the original root filename.
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; timestamp: Rename the logfiles using a timestamp instead of a
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; sequence number when "logger rotate" is executed.
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; When exec_after_rotate is set, ${filename} will
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; specify the new archived logfile.
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;rotatestrategy = rotate
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;
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; Run a system command after rotating the files. This is mainly
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; useful for rotatestrategy=rotate. The example allows the last
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; two archive files to remain uncompressed, but after that point,
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; they are compressed on disk.
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;
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; exec_after_rotate=gzip -9 ${filename}.2
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;
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;
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; For each file, specify what to log.
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;
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; For console logging, you set options at start of
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; Asterisk with -v for verbose and -d for debug
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; See 'asterisk -h' for more information.
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;
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; Directory for log files is configures in asterisk.conf
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; option astlogdir
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;
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[logfiles]
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;
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; Format is "filename" and then "levels" of debugging to be included:
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; debug
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; notice
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; warning
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; error
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; verbose(<level>)
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; dtmf
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; fax
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; security
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;
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; Special filename "console" represents the root console
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;
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; Filenames can either be relative to the standard Asterisk log directory
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; (see 'astlogdir' in asterisk.conf), or absolute paths that begin with
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; '/'.
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;
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; Verbose takes an optional argument, in the form of an integer level.
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; Verbose messages with higher levels will not be logged to the file. If
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; the verbose level is not specified, it will log verbose messages following
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; the current level of the root console.
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;
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; Special level name "*" means all levels, even dynamic levels registered
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; by modules after the logger has been initialized (this means that loading
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; and unloading modules that create/remove dynamic logger levels will result
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; in these levels being included on filenames that have a level name of "*",
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; without any need to perform a 'logger reload' or similar operation).
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; Note that there is no value in specifying both "*" and specific level names
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; for a filename; the "*" level means all levels. The only exception is if
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; you need to specify a specific verbose level. e.g, "verbose(3),*".
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;
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; We highly recommend that you DO NOT turn on debug mode if you are simply
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; running a production system. Debug mode turns on a LOT of extra messages,
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; most of which you are unlikely to understand without an understanding of
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; the underlying code. Do NOT report debug messages as code issues, unless
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; you have a specific issue that you are attempting to debug. They are
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; messages for just that -- debugging -- and do not rise to the level of
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; something that merit your attention as an Asterisk administrator. Debug
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; messages are also very verbose and can and do fill up logfiles quickly;
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; this is another reason not to have debug mode on a production system unless
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; you are in the process of debugging a specific issue.
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;
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;debug => debug
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;security => security
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console => notice,warning,error
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;console => notice,warning,error,debug
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messages => notice,warning,error
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;full => notice,warning,error,debug,verbose,dtmf,fax
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;syslog keyword : This special keyword logs to syslog facility
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;
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;syslog.local0 => notice,warning,error
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;
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