Depending upon your distro, you may be running rsyslogd anyways. Debian
defaults to it at least, I think red hats do too, but I am not sure on that.
-Eric
On Mon, Jun 13, 2016 at 11:37 AM Joachim Zobel <jz-2...@heute-morgen.de>
wrote:
>
> On 13.06.2016 18:04, Eric
Albert,
That is a great idea! I used to do just this, worked wonders. Joachim,
see the tutorial:
"This paper describes an approach with rsyslogd, an alternative enhanced
syslog daemon natively supporting MySQL and PostgreSQL. "
http://www.rsyslog.com/doc/v8-stable/tutorials/database.html
Hi
I know this is a bit un-timely. But I wanted to reply so that this
information was publicly available. For what seems an unknown reason to
me, the following will not work->
interface-name=wan,eth0
interface-name=lan,eth1
However this will->
interface-name=wan.domain.tld,eth0
Richard,
I believe I have the exact same requirements if I am reading this
correctly, and I have not found a solution either. If you do please let me
know!
This was my post a while back
start
I have a setup currently where I have a VPN that is transient, but when it
is connected, I
(sorry for that delay, work's been crazy)
I did get it working by using FQDN format `sub.domain.tld` -->
interface-name=sub1.domain.tld,eth0
interface-name=sub2.domain.tld,br0
but just having `single` would never work. I noticed you had `single` as
well as `sub.domain.tld` set does `single` as
I have a setup currently where I have a VPN that is transient, but when it
is connected, I need to query the on-net DNS server for `domain.tld` to hit
`secure(s).domain.tld` but when the VPN is disconnected I need to continue
to query the public DNS servers for the normal `public.domain.tld`
Hi all, I haven't been able to get interface-name to work, tried toggling
off and on a number of different options to no avail. I am running 2.7.5.
interface-name=hostnamex,eth0
The rest of the options I have on are:
# this tells dnsmasq to never pass short names to the upstream DNS servers.
If