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Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | examples/sudo_logsrvd.conf | 159 |
1 files changed, 159 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/examples/sudo_logsrvd.conf b/examples/sudo_logsrvd.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2bcf442 --- /dev/null +++ b/examples/sudo_logsrvd.conf @@ -0,0 +1,159 @@ +# +# sudo logsrv configuration +# + +[server] +# The host name or IP address and port to listen on with an optional TLS +# flag. If no port is specified, port 30343 will be used for plaintext +# connections and port 30344 will be used to TLS connections. +# The following forms are accepted: +# listen_address = hostname(tls) +# listen_address = hostname:port(tls) +# listen_address = IPv4_address(tls) +# listen_address = IPv4_address:port(tls) +# listen_address = [IPv6_address](tls) +# listen_address = [IPv6_address]:port(tls) +# +# The (tls) suffix should be omitted for plaintext connections. +# +# Multiple listen_address settings may be specified. +# The default is to listen on all addresses. +#listen_address = *:30343 +#listen_address = *:30344(tls) + +# The file containing the ID of the running sudo_logsrvd process. +#pid_file = /var/run/sudo/sudo_logsrvd.pid + +# If set, enable the SO_KEEPALIVE socket option on the connected socket. +#tcp_keepalive = true + +# The amount of time, in seconds, the server will wait for the client to +# respond. A value of 0 will disable the timeout. The default value is 30. +#timeout = 30 + +# If set, server certificate will be verified at server startup and +# also connecting clients will perform server authentication by +# verifying the server's certificate and identity. +#tls_verify = true + +# Whether to verify client certificates for TLS connections. +# By default client certs are not checked. +#tls_checkpeer = false + +# Path to the certificate authority bundle file in PEM format. +# Required if 'tls_verify' or 'tls_checkpeer' is set. +#tls_cacert = /etc/ssl/sudo/cacert.pem + +# Path to the server's certificate file in PEM format. +# Required for TLS connections. +#tls_cert = /etc/ssl/sudo/certs/logsrvd_cert.pem + +# Path to the server's private key file in PEM format. +# Required for TLS connections. +#tls_key = /etc/ssl/sudo/private/logsrvd_key.pem + +# TLS cipher list (see "CIPHER LIST FORMAT" in the openssl-ciphers manual). +# NOTE that this setting is only effective if the negotiated protocol +# is TLS version 1.2. +# The default cipher list is HIGH:!aNULL. +#tls_ciphers_v12 = HIGH:!aNULL + +# TLS cipher list if the negotiated protocol is TLS version 1.3. +# The default cipher list is TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384. +#tls_ciphers_v13 = TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 + +# Path to the Diffie-Hellman parameter file in PEM format. +# If not set, the server will use the OpenSSL defaults. +#tls_dhparams = /etc/ssl/sudo/logsrvd_dhparams.pem + +[iolog] +# The top-level directory to use when constructing the path name for the +# I/O log directory. The session sequence number, if any, is stored here. +#iolog_dir = /var/log/sudo-io + +# The path name, relative to iolog_dir, in which to store I/O logs. +# Note that iolog_file may contain directory components. +#iolog_file = %{seq} + +# If set, I/O logs will be compressed using zlib. Enabling compression can +# make it harder to view the logs in real-time as the program is executing. +#iolog_compress = false + +# If set, I/O log data is flushed to disk after each write instead of +# buffering it. This makes it possible to view the logs in real-time +# as the program is executing but reduces the effectiveness of compression. +#iolog_flush = true + +# The group to use when creating new I/O log files and directories. +# If iolog_group is not set, the primary group-ID of the user specified +# by iolog_user is used. If neither iolog_group nor iolog_user +# are set, I/O log files and directories are created with group-ID 0. +#iolog_group = wheel + +# The user to use when setting the user-ID and group-ID of new I/O +# log files and directories. If iolog_group is set, it will be used +# instead of the user's primary group-ID. By default, I/O log files +# and directories are created with user and group-ID 0. +#iolog_user = root + +# The file mode to use when creating I/O log files. The file permissions +# will always include the owner read and write bits, even if they are +# not present in the specified mode. When creating I/O log directories, +# search (execute) bits are added to match the read and write bits +# specified by iolog_mode. +#iolog_mode = 0600 + +# The maximum sequence number that will be substituted for the "%{seq}" +# escape in the I/O log file. While the value substituted for "%{seq}" +# is in base 36, maxseq itself should be expressed in decimal. Values +# larger than 2176782336 (which corresponds to the base 36 sequence +# number "ZZZZZZ") will be silently truncated to 2176782336. +#maxseq = 2176782336 + +[eventlog] +# Where to log accept, reject and alert events. +# Accepted values are syslog, logfile, or none. +# Defaults to syslog +#log_type = syslog + +# Event log format. +# Supported log formats are "sudo" and "json" +# Defaults to sudo +#log_format = sudo + +[syslog] +# The maximum length of a syslog payload. +# On many systems, syslog(3) has a relatively small log buffer. +# IETF RFC 5424 states that syslog servers must support messages +# of at least 480 bytes and should support messages up to 2048 bytes. +# Messages larger than this value will be split into multiple messages. +#maxlen = 960 + +# The syslog facility to use for event log messages. +# The following syslog facilities are supported: authpriv (if your OS +# supports it), auth, daemon, user, local0, local1, local2, local3, +# local4, local5, local6, and local7. +#facility = authpriv + +# Syslog priority to use for event log accept messages, when the command +# is allowed by the security policy. The following syslog priorities are +# supported: alert, crit, debug, emerg, err, info, notice, warning, none. +#accept_priority = notice + +# Syslog priority to use for event log reject messages, when the command +# is not allowed by the security policy. +#reject_priority = alert + +# Syslog priority to use for event log alert messages reported by the +# client. +#alert_priority = alert + +[logfile] +# The path to the file-based event log. +# This path must be fully-qualified and start with a '/' character. +#path = /var/log/sudo + +# The format string used when formatting the date and time for +# file-based event logs. Formatting is performed via strftime(3) so +# any format string supported by that function is allowed. +#time_format = %h %e %T |