Skip to main content

public bugzilla

I've started creating a public bugzilla installation for syslog-ng in the last couple of days, however I was interrupted before being to finish it all.

I want to move all opened internal tickets to the public installation, but I only managed to review half of them. Not that it is a large task, I just got distracted all the time by my fellow collegues and customers. But that's the life of a software developer, right? :)

You can find this at http://bugzilla.balabit.com/ , although it is not yet officially announced. Once I'm done with reviewing/translating tickets, I'll send an official announcement to the mailing list.

Comments

Anonymous said…
The site is giving a 403 error

Popular posts from this blog

syslog-ng fun with performance

I like christmas for a number of reasons: in addition to the traditional "meet and have fun with your family", eat lots of delicious food and so on, I like it because this is the season of the year when I have some time to do whatever I feel like. This year I felt like doing some syslog-ng performance analysis. After reading Ulrich Deppert's series about stuff "What every programmer should know about memory" on LWN, I thought I'm more than prepared to improve syslog-ng performance. Before going any further, I'd recommend this reading to any programmer, it's a bit long but every second reading it is worth it. As you need to measure performance in order to improve it, I wrote a tool called "loggen". This program generates messages messages at a user-specifyable rate. Apart from the git repository you can get this tool from the latest syslog-ng snapshots. Loggen supports TCP, UDP and UNIX domain sockets, so really almost everything can be me

syslog-ng roadmap 2.1 & 2.2

We had a meeting on the syslog-ng roadmap today where we decided some important things, and I thought I'd use this channel to tell you about it. The Open Source Edition will see a 2.1 release incorporating all core changes currently in the Premium Edition and additionally the SQL destination driver. We are going to start development on the 2.2 PE features, but some of those will also be incorporated in the open source version: support for the latest work of IETF syslog protocols unique sequence numbering for messages support for parsing message contents Previously syslog-ng followed the odd/even version numbering to denote development/stable releases. I'm going to abandon this numbering now: the next syslog-ng OSE release is going to have a 2.1 version number and will basically come out with tested code changes only. The current feature set in PE were developed in a closed manner and I don't want to repeat this mistake. The features that were decided to be part of the Open

syslog-ng 3.0 and SNMP traps

Last time I've written about how syslog-ng is able to change message contents. I thought it'd be useful to give you a more practical example, instead of a generic description. It is quite common to convert SNMP traps to syslog messages. The easiest implementation is to run snmptrapd and have it create a log message based on the trap. There's a small issue though: snmptrapd uses the UNIX syslog() API, and as such it is not able to propagate the originating host of the SNMP trap to the hostname portion of the syslog message. This means that all traps are logged as messages coming from the host running snmptrapd, and the hostname information is part of the message payload. Of course it'd be much easier to process syslog messages, if this were not the case. A solution would be to patch snmptrapd to send complete syslog frames, but that would require changing snmptrapd source. The alternative is to use the new parse and rewrite features of syslog-ng 3.0. First, you need to f