On Fri, 30 Jun 2006, Rob Munsch wrote:

> >You do know, of course, that you can entirely suppress the writing of 
> >rejectlog, I presume (write_rejectlog=false).
> >  
> >
> w'yeah, but that's kind of the opposite of the original goal :).

I realize that!

> I note that the same entry routing thru mainlog is mail.info level, and 
> the rejectlog entries are mail.notice (this is when using syslog of 
> course; -ng in this case).

I am not a syslog person and I'm not familiar with how it is used. It 
was bolted onto Exim at some point as a result of user demand. 
Consequently, I'm not surprised that it isn't compatible with "syslog 
culture".

> All exim's log options seem confined to binary on-off switches; log this 
> or don't, and if so, i'll put it where i goshdarnwell please.

Well, in the non-syslog world, there's only the mainlog to put it on 
(with some duplication to rejectlog, but you can turn that off). I just 
never thought (think!) in a syslog-ish way. Sorry. Old dog, new tricks,
etc...

> I'd suggest (which is why i jumped in here) using syslog-ng to modify 
> its uncooperative output.  We've a central loghost setup here, and one 
> of the projects i'm planning time for is to see if i can use -ng to 
> tweak exim's entries in the chost; organizing the format without 
> dropping any info.  Anyone else doing this..?

There are items on Exim's Wish List that are concerned with logging, in 
particular to give more control. Items like this:

(301) 27-Oct-04 M Use an "ACL" to filter logging                         
      
But nothing has been done, as far as I know.


-- 
Philip Hazel            University of Cambridge Computing Service
Get the Exim 4 book:    http://www.uit.co.uk/exim-book

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