By default, Shorewall directs NetFilter to log using syslog (8). Syslog
classifies log messages by a facility and a priority (using
the notation facility.priority).
The facilities defined by syslog are auth, authpriv, cron, daemon,
kern, lpr, mail, mark, news, syslog, user, uucp and local0 through
local7.
Throughout the Shorewall documentation, I will use the term level
rather than priority since level is the term used by NetFilter.
The syslog documentation uses the term priority.
Syslog Levels
Syslog levels are a method of describing to syslog (8) the importance
of a message and a number of Shorewall parameters have a syslog level
as their value.
Valid levels are:
7
debug
6
info
5
notice
4
warning
3
err
2
crit
1
alert
0
emerg
For most Shorewall logging, a level of 6 (info) is appropriate.
Shorewall log messages are generated by NetFilter and are logged using
the kern facility and the level that you specify. If you are unsure
of the level to choose, 6 (info) is a safe bet. You may specify levels
by name or by number.
Syslogd writes log messages to files (typically in /var/log/*) based
on their facility and level. The mapping of these facility/level pairs
to log files is done in /etc/syslog.conf (5). If you make changes to this
file, you must restart syslogd before the changes can take effect.
Configuring a Separate Log for Shorewall Messages
There are a couple of limitations to syslogd-based logging:
- If you give, for example, kern.info it's own log destination then
that destination will also receive all kernel messages of levels 5 (notice)
through 0 (emerg).
- All kernel.info messages will go to that destination and not just
those from NetFilter.
Beginning with Shorewall version 1.3.12, if your kernel has ULOG
target support (and most vendor-supplied kernels do), you may also specify
a log level of ULOG (must be all caps). When ULOG is used, Shorewall will
direct netfilter to log the related messages via the ULOG target which will
send them to a process called 'ulogd'. The ulogd program is available from
http://www.gnumonks.org/projects/ulogd and can be configured to log all
Shorewall message to their own log file.
Note: The ULOG logging mechanism is completely separate from
syslog. Once you switch to ULOG, the settings in /etc/syslog.conf have absolutely
no effect on your Shorewall logging (except for Shorewall status messages
which still go to syslog).
You will need to have the kernel source available to compile ulogd.
Download the ulod tar file and:
- Be sure that /usr/src/linux is linked to your kernel source tree
- cd /usr/local/src (or wherever you do your builds)
- tar -zxf source-tarball-that-you-downloaded
- cd ulogd-version
- ./configure
- make
- make install
If you are like me and don't have a development environment on your firewall,
you can do the first six steps on another system then either NFS mount
your /usr/local/src directory or tar up the /usr/local/src/ulogd-version
directory and move it to your firewall system.
Now on the firewall system, edit /usr/local/etc/ulogd.conf and set:
- syslogfile <file that you wish to log to>
- syslogsync 1
I also copied the file /usr/local/src/ulogd-version/ulogd.init
to /etc/init.d/ulogd. I had to edit the line that read "daemon /usr/local/sbin/ulogd"
to read daemon /usr/local/sbin/ulogd -d". On a RedHat system, a simple
"chkconfig --level 3 ulogd on" starts ulogd during boot up. Your init system
may need something else done to activate the script.
You will need to change all instances of log levels (usually 'info') in
your configuration files to 'ULOG' - this includes entries in the policy,
rules and shorewall.conf files. Here's what I have:
[root@gateway shorewall]# grep ULOG *
policy:loc fw REJECT ULOG
policy:net all DROP ULOG 10/sec:40
policy:all all REJECT ULOG
rules:REJECT:ULOG loc net tcp 6667
shorewall.conf:TCP_FLAGS_LOG_LEVEL=ULOG
shorewall.conf:RFC1918_LOG_LEVEL=ULOG
[root@gateway shorewall]#
Finally edit /etc/shorewall/shorewall.conf and set LOGFILE=<file
that you wish to log to>. This tells the /sbin/shorewall program
where to look for the log when processing its "show log", "logwatch" and
"monitor" commands.
Updated 1/11/2003 - Tom Eastep
Copyright ©
2001, 2002, 2003 Thomas M. Eastep