CheckAuthLog Reference documentation: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
==Command Line Parameter Reference== | ==Command Line Parameter Reference== | ||
===-a username=== | |||
-a username | |||
Manually adds the user to the blocked users | |||
-c config_file: uses the named configuration file instead of checking in /etc/check_auth_log.conf | -c config_file: uses the named configuration file instead of checking in /etc/check_auth_log.conf | ||
-d username: deletes the block, thereby re-enabling mail sending for the user. | -d username: deletes the block, thereby re-enabling mail sending for the user. |
Revision as of 17:27, 13 June 2016
Running from Crontab
After installing and configuring Check Auth Log the best way to run it is to schedule it in crontab, for example:
vi /etc/crontab
The following entry will run CheckAuthLog every 5 minutes
*/5 * * * * root /path/to/check_auth_log
If you provide the configuration file in the standard location /etc/check_auth_log.conf there is no need to run with any parameters.
Command Line Parameter Reference
-a username
Manually adds the user to the blocked users
-c config_file: uses the named configuration file instead of checking in /etc/check_auth_log.conf -d username: deletes the block, thereby re-enabling mail sending for the user. -e email: sends a test blocking notification email to the specified address. Useful for testing email setup and template without having to trigger a block. -t activates tracing to standard output. Useful for debugging. -v prints the version and terminates -x extract the authenication entries from internal db. The database contains info on the authentication times and ip addresses. When new entries are added old ones are purged if no longer needed (older than expire time) -y extract the cache file entries from internal cache file db. The cache file contains info on the log lines already parsed and their offset in the mail log file. -z runs the self check routines only