The predefined facilities group together related messages, but you can also use regular expression matching to specify more exactly which messages from a facility are logged to a file, a user terminal, or a remote destination.
To specify the text string that must (or must not) appear in a message for the message to be logged to a destination, include the match statement and specify the regular expression which the text string must match:
match "regular-expression";
You can include this statement at the following hierarchy levels:
In specifying the regular expression, use the notation defined in POSIX Standard 1003.2 for extended (modern) UNIX regular expressions. Explaining regular expression syntax is beyond the scope of this document, but POSIX standards are available from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE, http://www.ieee.org).
Table 15 specifies which character or characters are matched by some of the regular expression operators that you can use in the match statement. In the descriptions, the term term refers to either a single alphanumeric character or a set of characters enclosed in square brackets, parentheses, or braces.
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Note: The match statement is not case-sensitive. |
Table 15: Regular Expression Operators for the match Statement
Using Regular Expressions
Filter messages that belong to the interactive-commands facility, directing those that include the string configure to the terminal of the root user:
system loggingregular expression operatorsregular expression operatorssystem logging[edit system syslog]
user root {
interactive-commands any;
match “.*configure.*”;
}
Messages like the following appear on the root user’s terminal when a user issues a configure command to enter configuration mode:
- timestamp router-name mgd[PID]: UI_CMDLINE_READ_LINE:
User 'user', command 'configure private'
Filter messages that belong to the daemon facility and have severity error or higher, directing them to the file /var/log/process-errors. Omit messages generated by the SNMP process (snmpd), instead directing them to the file /var/log/snmpd-errors:
[edit system syslog]
file process-errors {
daemon error;
match “!(.*snmpd.*)”;
}
file snmpd-errors {
daemon error;
match “.*snmpd.*”;
}