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SYSTEMD-JOURNAL-UPLOAD(8) | systemd-journal-upload | SYSTEMD-JOURNAL-UPLOAD(8) |
NAME¶
systemd-journal-upload - Send journal messages over the networkSYNOPSIS¶
systemd-journal-upload [OPTIONS...] [-u/--url=URL]
[SOURCES...]
DESCRIPTION¶
systemd-journal-upload will upload journal entries to the URL specified with --url. Unless limited by one of the options specified below, all journal entries accessible to the user the program is running as will be uploaded, and then the program will wait and send new entries as they become available.OPTIONS¶
-u, --url=[https://]URL, --url=[http://] URLUpload to the specified address. URL may specify
either just the hostname or both the protocol and hostname. https is
the default.
--system, --user
Limit uploaded entries to entries from system services
and the kernel, or to entries from services of current user. This has the same
meaning as --system and --user options for journalctl(1).
If neither is specified, all accessible entries are uploaded.
-m, --merge
Upload entries interleaved from all available journals,
including other machines. This has the same meaning as --merge option
for journalctl(1).
-D, --directory=DIR
Takes a directory path as argument. Upload entries from
the specified journal directory DIR instead of the default runtime and
system journal paths. This has the same meaning as --directory option
for journalctl(1).
--file=GLOB
Takes a file glob as an argument. Upload entries from the
specified journal files matching GLOB instead of the default runtime
and system journal paths. May be specified multiple times, in which case files
will be suitably interleaved. This has the same meaning as --file
option for journalctl(1).
--cursor=
Upload entries from the location in the journal specified
by the passed cursor. This has the same meaning as --cursor option for
journalctl(1).
--after-cursor=
Upload entries from the location in the journal
after the location specified by the this cursor. This has the same
meaning as --after-cursor option for journalctl(1).
--save-state[=PATH]
Upload entries from the location in the journal
after the location specified by the cursor saved in file at PATH
(/var/lib/systemd/journal-upload/state by default). After an entry is
successfully uploaded, update this file with the cursor of that entry.
-h, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
--version
Print a short version string and exit.
EXIT STATUS¶
On success, 0 is returned; otherwise, a non-zero failure code is returned.EXAMPLES¶
Example 1. Setting up certificates for authentication Certificates signed by a trusted authority are used to verify that the server to which messages are uploaded is legitimate, and vice versa, that the client is trusted. A suitable set of certificates can be generated with openssl:openssl req -newkey rsa:2048 -days 3650 -x509 -nodes \ -out ca.pem -keyout ca.key -subj '/CN=Certificate authority/' cat >ca.conf <<EOF [ ca ] default_ca = this [ this ] new_certs_dir = . certificate = ca.pem database = ./index private_key = ca.key serial = ./serial default_days = 3650 default_md = default policy = policy_anything [ policy_anything ] countryName = optional stateOrProvinceName = optional localityName = optional organizationName = optional organizationalUnitName = optional commonName = supplied emailAddress = optional EOF touch index echo 0001 >serial SERVER=server CLIENT=client openssl req -newkey rsa:1024 -nodes -out $SERVER.csr -keyout $SERVER.key -subj "/CN=$SERVER/" openssl ca -batch -config ca.conf -notext -in $SERVER.csr -out $SERVER.pem openssl req -newkey rsa:1024 -nodes -out $CLIENT.csr -keyout $CLIENT.key -subj "/CN=$CLIENT/" openssl ca -batch -config ca.conf -notext -in $CLIENT.csr -out $CLIENT.pem
SEE ALSO¶
systemd-journal-remote(8), journalctl(1), systemd-journald.service(8), systemd-journal-gatewayd.service(8)systemd 230 |