# # read this with 'perldoc docs/logging.pod' # =head1 qpsmtpd logging; user documentation Qpsmtpd has a modular logging system. Here's a few things you need to know: * The built-in logging prints log messages to STDERR. * A variety of logging plugins is included, each with its own behavior. * When a logging plugin is enabled, the built-in logging is disabled. * plugins/logging/warn mimics the built-in logging. * Multiple logging plugins can be enabled simultaneously. Read the POD within each logging plugin (perldoc plugins/logging/B) to learn if it tickles your fancy. =head2 enabling plugins To enable logging plugins, edit the file I and uncomment the entries for the plugins you wish to use. =head2 logging level The 'master switch' for loglevel is I. Qpsmtpd and active plugins will output all messages that are less than or equal to the value specified. The log levels correspond to syslog levels: LOGDEBUG = 7 LOGINFO = 6 LOGNOTICE = 5 LOGWARN = 4 LOGERROR = 3 LOGCRIT = 2 LOGALERT = 1 LOGEMERG = 0 LOGRADAR = 0 Level 6, LOGINFO, is the level at which most servers should start logging. At level 6, each plugin should log one and occasionally two entries that summarize their activity. Here's a few sample lines: (connect) ident::geoip: SA, Saudi Arabia (connect) ident::p0f: Windows 7 or 8 (connect) earlytalker: pass: remote host said nothing spontaneous (data_post) domainkeys: skip: unsigned (data_post) spamassassin: pass, Spam, 21.7 < 100 (data_post) dspam: fail: agree, Spam, 1.00 c 552 we agree, no spam please (#5.6.1) Three plugins fired during the SMTP connection phase and 3 more ran during the data_post phase. Each plugin emitted one entry stating their findings. If you aren't processing the logs, you can save some disk I/O by reducing the loglevel, so that the only messages logged are ones that indicate a human should be taking some corrective action. =head2 log location If qpsmtpd is started using the distributed run file (cd ~smtpd; ./run), then you will see the log entries printed to your terminal. This solution works great for initial setup and testing and is the simplest case. A typical way to run qpsmtpd is as a supervised process with daemontools. If daemontools is already set up, setting up qpsmtpd may be as simple as: C If svcscan is running, the symlink will be detected and tcpserver will run the 'run' files in the ./ and ./log directories. Any log entries emitted will get handled per the instructions in log/run. The default location specified in log/run is log/main/current. =head2 plugin loglevel Most plugins support a loglevel argument after their config/plugins entry. The value can be a whole number (N) or a relative number (+/-N), where N is a whole number from 0-7. See the descriptions of each below. C C ATTN plugin authors: To support loglevel in your plugin, you must store the loglevel settings from the plugins/config entry $self->{_args}{loglevel}. A simple and recommended example is as follows: sub register { my ( $self, $qp ) = shift, shift; $self->log(LOGERROR, "Bad arguments") if @_ % 2; $self->{_args} = { @_ }; } =head3 whole number If loglevel is a whole number, then all log activity in the plugin is logged at that level, regardless of the level the plugin author selected. This can be easily understood with a couple examples: The master loglevel is set at 6 (INFO). The mail admin sets a plugin loglevel to 7 (DEBUG). No messages from that plugin are emitted because DEBUG log entries are not <= 6 (INFO). The master loglevel is 6 (INFO) and the plugin loglevel is set to 5 or 6. All log entries will be logged because 5 is <= 6. This behavior is very useful to plugin authors. While testing and monitoring a plugin, they can set the level of their plugin to log everything. To return to 'normal' logging, they just update their config/plugins entry. =head3 relative Relative loglevel arguments adjust the loglevel of each logging call within a plugin. A value of I would make every logging entry one level less severe, where a value of I would make every logging entry one level more severe. For example, if a plugin has a loglevel setting of -1 and that same plugin logged a LOGDEBUG, it would instead be a LOGINFO message. Relative values makes it easy to control the verbosity and/or severity of individual plugins. =head1 qpsmtpd logging system; developer documentation Qpsmtpd now (as of 0.30-dev) supports a plugable logging architecture, so that different logging plugins can be supported. See the example logging plugins in plugins/logging, specifically the L and L files for examples of how to write your own logging plugins. =head1 Internal support for pluggable logging Any code in the core can call C<$self->log()> and those log lines will be dispatched to each of the registered logging plugins. When C is called from a plugin, the plugin and hook names are automatically included in the parameters passed the logging hooks. All plugins which register for the logging hook should expect the following parameters to be passed: $self, $transaction, $trace, $hook, $plugin, @log where those terms are: =over 4 =item C<$self> The object which was used to call the log() method; this can be any object within the system, since the core code will automatically load logging plugins on behalf of any object. =item C<$transaction> This is the current SMTP transaction (defined as everything that happens between HELO/EHLO and QUIT/RSET). If you want to defer outputting certain log lines, you can store them in the transaction object, but you will need to bind the C hook in order to retrieve that information before it is discarded when the transaction is closed (see the L plugin for an example of doing this). =item C<$trace> This is the log level (as shown in config.sample/loglevel) that the caller asserted when calling log(). If you want to output the textural representation (e.g. C) of this in your log messages, you can use the log_level() function exported by Qpsmtpd::Constants (which is automatically available to all plugins). =item C<$hook> This is the hook that is currently being executed. If log() is called by any core code (i.e. not as part of a hook), this term will be C. =item C<$plugin> This is the plugin name that executed the log(). Like C<$hook>, if part of the core code calls log(), this wil be C. See L for a way to prevent logging your own plugin's log entries from within that plugin (the system will not infinitely recurse in any case). =item C<@log> The remaining arguments are as passed by the caller, which may be a single term or may be a list of values. It is usually sufficient to call C to deal with these terms, but it is possible that some plugin might pass additional arguments with signficance. =back Note: if you register a handler for certain hooks, e.g. C, there may be additional terms passed between C<$self> and C<$transaction>. See L for and example.