Le 23/10/2018 à 09:23, Steve Litt a écrit :

    Just to be simple and clear:

    syslog() is a member of the C library which allows any application to send messages to the system logging facility, through the socket /var/log/syslog and some lock mechanism (probably using a semaphore) to prevent two applications to write in the same time. See man syslog.

    There is a menagerie of logging daemons which can read these messages and sort and dispatch them to various places (eg syslog-ng and rsyslog) rsyslog has been the default on Debian for many years, before it was replaced by systemd.

    All daemons provided by Devuan that I kown of send their messages by invoking syslog() and don't need the help of an application like logger to do it.

    Logger is a way to redirect to syslog one of the output paths of an application, by the mean of a pipe, or for a script to send such messages. Logger reads messages and sends them by invoking the syslog() function. If you force a daemon to send its messages through stderr and redirect this stderr to the input of logger, you just add complexity and overhead and loose flexibility; better let the daemon invoke syslog() right away.

    Note that syslog servers, like rsyslog, can also be fed by many other paths than the syslog socket, but this is another story.

        Didier


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