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-rw-r--r-- | doc/rsyslog_recording_pri.html | 6 |
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/rsyslog_recording_pri.html b/doc/rsyslog_recording_pri.html index cf11e3e5..a092980c 100644 --- a/doc/rsyslog_recording_pri.html +++ b/doc/rsyslog_recording_pri.html @@ -44,13 +44,13 @@ from the syslog message when output is written. Everything outside of the percent signs is literal text, which is simply written as specified.</p> <p>Thankfully, rsyslog provides message properties for the priority. These are called "PRI", "syslogfacility" and "syslogpriority" (case is important!). They are numerical -values. Starting with rsyslog 1.13.4, there is also a property "PRI-text", which -contains the priority in friendly text format (e.g. "syslog.info"). For the rest +values. Starting with rsyslog 1.13.4, there is also a property "pri-text", which +contains the priority in friendly text format (e.g. "local0.err<133>"). For the rest of this article, I assume that you run version 1.13.4 or higher.</p> <p>Recording the priority is now a simple matter of adding the respective field to the template. It now looks like this:</p> <p align="center"> -<code>$template TraditionalFormatWithPRI,"%PRI-text%: %timegenerated% %HOSTNAME% %syslogtag%%msg:::drop-last-lf%\n"</code> +<code>$template TraditionalFormatWithPRI,"%pri-text%: %timegenerated% %HOSTNAME% %syslogtag%%msg:::drop-last-lf%\n"</code> </p> <p>Now we have the right template - but how to write it to a file? You probably have a line like this in your syslog.conf:</p> |