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-rw-r--r--doc/property_replacer.html4
-rw-r--r--doc/queues.html6
-rw-r--r--doc/rsyslog_conf_global.html19
3 files changed, 24 insertions, 5 deletions
diff --git a/doc/property_replacer.html b/doc/property_replacer.html
index a6e9b518..7b604ea0 100644
--- a/doc/property_replacer.html
+++ b/doc/property_replacer.html
@@ -30,10 +30,6 @@ Currently supported are:</p>
socket. Should be useful for debugging.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
-<td><b>uxtradmsg</b></td>
-<td>will disappear soon - do NOT use!</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
<td><b>hostname</b></td>
<td>hostname from the message</td>
</tr>
diff --git a/doc/queues.html b/doc/queues.html
index f063e87c..75b70fbf 100644
--- a/doc/queues.html
+++ b/doc/queues.html
@@ -115,7 +115,11 @@ isolation. This is currently selected by specifying different <i>$WorkDirectory<
config directives before the queue creation statement.</p>
<p>To create a disk queue, use the "<i>$&lt;object&gt;QueueType Disk</i>" config
directive. Checkpoint intervals can be specified via "<i>$&lt;object&gt;QueueCheckpointInterval</i>",
-with 0 meaning no checkpoints. </p>
+with 0 meaning no checkpoints. Note that disk-based queues can be made very reliable
+by issuing a (f)sync after each write operation. Starting with version 4.3.2, this can
+be requested via "<i>&lt;object&gt;QueueSyncQueueFiles on/off</i> with the
+default being off. Activating this option has a performance penalty, so it should
+not be turned on without reason.</p>
<h2>In-Memory Queues</h2>
<p>In-memory queue mode is what most people have on their mind when they think
about computing queues. Here, the enqueued data elements are held in memory.
diff --git a/doc/rsyslog_conf_global.html b/doc/rsyslog_conf_global.html
index c7574e5d..6a8af77a 100644
--- a/doc/rsyslog_conf_global.html
+++ b/doc/rsyslog_conf_global.html
@@ -109,6 +109,9 @@ that no rebind is done. This directive is useful for use with load-balancers.</l
<li>$DefaultNetstreamDriver &lt;drivername&gt;, the default <a href="netstream.html">network stream driver</a> to use. Defaults to&nbsp;ptcp.$DefaultNetstreamDriverCAFile &lt;/path/to/cafile.pem&gt;</li>
<li>$DefaultNetstreamDriverCertFile &lt;/path/to/certfile.pem&gt;</li>
<li>$DefaultNetstreamDriverKeyFile &lt;/path/to/keyfile.pem&gt;</li>
+<li><b>$DefaultRuleset</b> <i>name</i> - changes the default ruleset for unbound inputs to
+the provided <i>name</i> (the default default ruleset is named
+&quot;RSYSLOG_DefaultRuleset&quot;).
<li><b>$CreateDirs</b> [<b>on</b>/off] - create directories on an as-needed basis</li>
<li><a href="rsconf1_dircreatemode.html">$DirCreateMode</a></li>
<li><a href="rsconf1_dirgroup.html">$DirGroup</a></li>
@@ -191,6 +194,17 @@ supported in order to be compliant to the upcoming new syslog RFC series.
<li><a href="rsconf1_maxopenfiles.html">$MaxOpenFiles</a></li>
<li><a href="rsconf1_moddir.html">$ModDir</a></li>
<li><a href="rsconf1_modload.html">$ModLoad</a></li>
+<li><b>$OMFileZipLevel</b> 0..9 [default 0] - if greater 0, turns on gzip compression
+of the output file. The higher the number, the better the compression, but also the
+more CPU is required for zipping.</li>
+<li><b>$OMFileIOBufferSize</b> &lt;size_nbr&gt;, default 4k, size of the buffer used to writing output data. The larger the buffer, the potentially better performance is. The default of 4k is quite conservative, it is useful to go up to 64k, and 128K if you used gzip compression (then, even higher sizes may make sense)</li>
+<li><b>$OMFileFlushOnTXEnd</b> &lt;[on/<b>off</b>]&gt;, default off, by default, omfile
+writes output using a buffered writer. Disk writes are only done when the buffer is
+full. So if an error happens during that write, data is potentially lost. In cases where
+this is unacceptable, set $OMFileFlushOnTXEnd to on. Then, data is written at the end
+of each transaction (for pre-v5 this means after <b>each</b> log message) and the usual
+error recovery thus can handle write errors without data loss. Note that this option
+severely reduces the effect of zip compression.</li>
<li><b>$RepeatedMsgContainsOriginalMsg</b> [on/<b>off</b>] - "last message repeated n times" messages, if generated,
have a different format that contains the message that is being repeated.
Note that only the first "n" characters are included, with n to be at least 80 characters, most
@@ -199,6 +213,11 @@ line is that n is large enough to get a good idea which message was repeated but
large enough for the whole message. (Introduced with 4.1.5). Once set, it affects all following actions.</li>
<li><a href="rsconf1_repeatedmsgreduction.html">$RepeatedMsgReduction</a></li>
<li><a href="rsconf1_resetconfigvariables.html">$ResetConfigVariables</a></li>
+<li><b>$Ruleset</b> <i>name</i> - starts a new ruleset or switches back to one already defined.
+All following actions belong to that new rule set.
+the <i>name</i> does not yet exist, it is created. To swith back to rsyslog's
+default ruleset, specify &quot;RSYSLOG_DefaultRuleset&quot;) as the name.
+All following actions belong to that new rule set.</li>
<li><b>$OptimizeForUniprocessor</b> [on/<b>off</b>] - turns on optimizatons which lead to better
performance on uniprocessors. If you run on multicore-machiens, turning this off lessens CPU load. The
default may change as uniprocessor systems become less common. [available since 4.1.0]</li>