logcheck 1.4.3 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
logcheck (1.4.3) unstable; urgency=medium [ Andreas Beckmann ] * Add logcheck.preinst to update header.txt if it matches a version shipped in old debian releases (woody-jessie), this avoid dpkg complaining about a modified conffile for people who installed logcheck in jessie or earlier (Closes: #1039591). -- Mathias Gibbens <email address hidden> Tue, 18 Jul 2023 10:54:10 +0000
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Debian logcheck Team
- Uploaded to:
- Sid
- Original maintainer:
- Debian logcheck Team
- Architectures:
- all
- Section:
- admin
- Urgency:
- Medium Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mantic | release | main | admin |
Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
---|---|---|
logcheck_1.4.3.dsc | 1.8 KiB | 468b9e34ec8151c255670079afa1a08d32a79da35e0abc75690d0348bcf7bf2b |
logcheck_1.4.3.tar.xz | 135.5 KiB | ad83ae80bd780bdae5eefd40ad59a3e97b85ad3a4962aa7c00d98ed3bdffcdd0 |
Available diffs
- diff from 1.4.2 to 1.4.3 (884 bytes)
No changes file available.
Binary packages built by this source
- logcheck: check the system log for unusual entries
Logcheck analyses the system log for unuexpected entries that could
indicate problems or security issues.
.
Log entries in the system log (produced by systemd-journald, rsyslog
or another system-log-dameon) are checked against a customisable
database of regular expressions (such as that provided by the
logcheck-database package) to identify routine messages: anything
that does not identified as routine is reported to the system
administrator.
.
Logcheck was originally part of the Abacus Project of security tools,
but has been rewritten.
- logcheck-database: database of system log rules for logcheck
This package brings a database of regular expressions for matching
system log entries. It is part of Logcheck, but might be used by
other log checkers.
- logtail: Identify new lines added to the end of log files
Each time logtail and logtail2 are run on a file they print lines
added since the last run.
.
They can be used by log checkers, such as logcheck, to identify new
entries in log files.
.
This package provides both logtail and logtail2. The latter is better
suited to log files that may be rotated between runs: if logtail2
finds that the inode of the file changed, it tries to find the file
it was rotated from using customisable heuristics. If it finds the
file, it will new find lines added to the old file as well as to the
new file.