The loggen manual page
Name
loggen
— Generate syslog messages at a specified rate
Synopsis
loggen [options]
target [port]
Description
loggen
application is distributed with the AxoSyslog system logging application, and is usually part of the AxoSyslog package.
The loggen
application is a tool to test and stress-test your syslog server and the connection to the server. It can send syslog messages to the server at a specified rate using a number of connection types and protocols, including TCP, UDP, and unix domain sockets. The messages can be generated automatically (repeating the PADD
string over and over), or read from a file or the standard input.
When loggen
finishes sending the messages, it displays the following statistics:
-
average rate
: The average rate of the sent messages in messages/second. -
count
: The total number of messages sent. -
time
: The time required to send the messages in seconds. -
average message size
: The average size of the sent messages in bytes. -
bandwidth
: The average bandwidth used for sending the messages in kilobytes/second.
Options
-
--active-connections <number-of-connections>
Number of connections
loggen
will use to send messages to the destination. This option is usable only when using TCP or TLS connections to the destination. Default value: 1The
loggen
utility waits until every connection is established before starting to send messages. See also the--idle-connections
option. -
--csv
or-C
Send the statistics of the sent messages to
stdout
as CSV. This can be used for plotting the message rate. -
--dgram
or-D
Use datagram socket (
UDP
orunix-dgram
) to send the messages to the target. Requires the--inet
option as well. -
dont-parse
or-d
Do not parse the lines read from the input files, send them as received.
-
--help
or-h
Display a brief help message.
-
--idle-connection <number-of-connections>
Number of idle connections
loggen
will establish to the destination. Note thatloggen
will not send any messages on idle connections, but the connection is kept open using keep-alive messages. This option is usable only when using TCP or TLS connections to the destination. See also the--active-connections
option. Default value: 0 -
--inet
or-i
Use the TCP (by default) or UDP (when used together with the
--dgram
option) protocol to send the messages to the target. -
--interval <seconds>
or-I <seconds>
The number of seconds
loggen
will run. Default value: 10Note When--interval
and--number
are used together,loggen
will send messages until the period set in--interval
expires or the amount of messages set in--number
is reached, whichever happens first. -
--ipv6
or-6
Specify the destination using its IPv6 address. Note that the destination must have a real IPv6 address.
-
--loop-reading
or-l
Read the file specified in
--read-file
option in loop: loggen will start reading from the beginning of the file when it reaches the end of the file. -
--number <number-of-messages>
or-n <number-of-messages>
Number of messages to generate.
Note When--interval
and--number
are used together,loggen
will send messages until the period set in--interval
expires or the amount of messages set in--number
is reached, whichever happens first. -
--no-framing
or-F
Do not use the framing of the IETF-syslog protocol style, even if the
--syslog-proto
option is set. -
--quiet
or-Q
Display statistics only when
loggen
is finished. If not set, the statistics are displayed every second. -
--permanent
or-T
Keep sending logs indefinitely, without time limit.
-
--rate <message/second>
or-r <message/second>
The number of messages generated per second for every active connection. Default value: 1000
If you want to change the message rate while loggen is running, send SIGUSR1 to double the message rate, or SIGUSR2 to halve it:
kill -USR1 <loggen-pid>``kill -USR2 <loggen-pid>
-
--read-file <filename>
or-R <filename>
Read the messages from a file and send them to the target. See also the
--skip-tokens
option.Specify
-
as the input file to read messages from the standard input (stdio). Note that when reading messages from the standard input,loggen
can only use a single thread. The-R -
parameters must be placed at end of command, like:loggen 127.0.0.1 1061 --read-file -
-
--sdata <data-to-send>
or-p <data-to-send>
Send the argument of the
--sdata
option as the SDATA part of IETF-syslog (RFC5424 formatted) messages. Use it together with the--syslog-proto
option. For example:--sdata "[test name=\\"value\\"]
-
--size <message-size>
or-s <message-size>
The size of a syslog message in bytes. Default value: 256. Minimum value: 127 bytes, maximum value: 8192 bytes.
-
--skip-tokens <number>
Skip the specified number of space-separated tokens (words) at the beginning of every line. For example, if the messages in the file look like
foo bar message
,--skip-tokens 2
skips thefoo bar
part of the line, and sends only themessage
part. Works only when used together with the--read-file
parameter. Default value: 0 -
--stream
or-S
Use a stream socket (TCP or unix-stream) to send the messages to the target.
-
--syslog-proto
or-P
Use the new IETF-syslog message format as specified in RFC5424. By default, loggen uses the legacy BSD-syslog message format (as described in RFC3164). See also the
--no-framing
option. -
--unix </path/to/socket>
or-x </path/to/socket>
Use a UNIX domain socket to send the messages to the target.
-
--use-ssl
or-U
Use an SSL-encrypted channel to send the messages to the target. Note that it is not possible to check the certificate of the target, or to perform mutual authentication.
-
--version
or-V
Display version number of
syslog-ng
.
Examples
The following command generates 100 messages per second for ten minutes, and sends them to port 2010 of the localhost via TCP. Each message is 300 bytes long.
loggen --size 300 --rate 100 --interval 600 127.0.0.1 2010
The following command is similar to the one above, but uses the UDP protocol.
loggen --inet --dgram --size 300 --rate 100 --interval 600 127.0.0.1 2010
Send a single message on TCP6 to the ::1
IPv6 address, port 1061:
loggen --ipv6 --number 1 ::1 1061
Send a single message on UDP6 to the ::1
IPv6 address, port 1061:
loggen --ipv6 --dgram --number 1 ::1 1061
Send a single message using a unix domain-socket:
loggen --unix --stream --number 1 </path/to/socket>
Read messages from the standard input (stdio
) and send them to the localhost:
loggen 127.0.0.1 1061 --read-file -
Files
/opt/syslog-ng/bin/loggen
See also
Getting help
- The up-to-date documentation of AxoSyslog is available on the AxoSyslog documentation site.
- For news and notifications about AxoSyslog, visit the Axoflow blog.
- If you want to contact the developers directly to help with problems or report issues, contact us on Discord or GitHub.
This manual page is maintained by Axoflow