t; Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2005 7:39 AM
> To: Anton Okmianski (aokmians)
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [Syslog] #1 - RFC3164, was: Consensus?
>
> [ Charset ISO-8859-1 unsupported, converting... ]
> > Which system is this source from?
>
> BSD
>
> &g
[ Charset ISO-8859-1 unsupported, converting... ]
> Which system is this source from?
BSD
> On Solaris, if you send \r\n characters, you will see "^M\n" in the log.
Yes and Solaris allows for non-ascii data through the use of escaping.
Darren
___
S
To: Rainer Gerhards
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [Syslog] #1 - RFC3164, was: Consensus?
>
> > Darren,
> ..
> > Please let us know which actual syslog deamons you mean (at
> best with
> > platform and version information).
> >
> > I would al
t; -Original Message-
> From: Darren Reed [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Sunday, November 27, 2005 9:23 PM
> To: Rainer Gerhards
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [Syslog] #1 - RFC3164, was: Consensus?
>
>
> > Darren,
> ..
> > Please let us k
> Darren,
..
> Please let us know which actual syslog deamons you mean (at best with
> platform and version information).
>
> I would also appreciate if you could do a quick test with them and post
> the results. If possible, please send two messages to them. One as such:
>
> "<34>Oct 11 22:14:15
Darren,
> > #1 testing and code review has shown that there is no point
> >in trying to preserve more than ; RFC 3164 provides
> >a false impression of common behaviour.
> >
> > This is controversal, but the facts are suggesting this is
> the way it
> > is.
> > We should try to reach co