systemd-journal-uploadsystemdDeveloperZbigniewJędrzejewski-Szmekzbyszek@in.waw.plsystemd-journal-upload8systemd-journal-uploadSend journal messages over the networksystemd-journal-uploadOPTIONS-u/--url=URLSOURCESDescriptionsystemd-journal-upload will upload journal
entries to the URL specified with . 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.
OptionsUpload to the specified
address. URL may specify either
just the hostname or both the protocol and
hostname. https is the default.
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
and options
for
journalctl1. If
neither is specified, all accessible entries are uploaded.
Upload entries interleaved from all available
journals, including other machines. This has the same meaning
as option for
journalctl1.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
option for
journalctl1.
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
option for
journalctl1.
Upload entries from the location in the
journal specified by the passed cursor. This has the same
meaning as option for
journalctl1.Upload entries from the location in the
journal after the location specified by
the this cursor. This has the same meaning as
option for
journalctl1.
=PATHUpload 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.
Exit statusOn success, 0 is returned; otherwise, a non-zero
failure code is returned.ExamplesSetting up certificates for authenticationCertificates 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
Generated files ca.pem,
server.pem, and
server.key should be installed on server,
and ca.pem,
client.pem, and
client.key on the client. The location of
those files can be specified using
TrustedCertificateFile=,
ServerCertificateFile=,
ServerKeyFile=, in
/etc/systemd/journal-remote.conf and
/etc/systemd/journal-upload.conf
respectively. The default locations can be queried by using
systemd-journal-remote --help and
systemd-journal-upload --help.See Alsosystemd-journal-remote8,
journalctl1,
systemd-journald.service8,
systemd-journal-gatewayd.service8