Software: nginx/1.23.4. PHP/5.6.40-65+ubuntu20.04.1+deb.sury.org+1 uname -a: Linux foro-restaurado-2 5.15.0-1040-oracle #46-Ubuntu SMP Fri Jul 14 21:47:21 UTC 2023 uid=33(www-data) gid=33(www-data) groups=33(www-data) Safe-mode: OFF (not secure) /usr/share/doc/sudo/examples/ drwxr-xr-x |
Viewing file: Select action/file-type: # This is a sample syslog.conf fragment for use with Sudo. # # By default, sudo logs to "authpriv" if your system supports it, else it # uses "auth". The facility can be set via the --with-logfac configure # option or in the sudoers file. # To see what syslog facility a sudo binary uses, run `sudo -V' as *root*. # # NOTES: # The whitespace in the following line is made up of <TAB> # characters, *not* spaces. You cannot just cut and paste! # # If you edit syslog.conf you need to send syslogd a HUP signal. # Ie: kill -HUP process_id # # Syslogd will not create new log files for you, you must first # create the file before syslogd will log to it. Eg. # 'touch /var/log/sudo' # This logs successful and failed sudo attempts to the file /var/log/auth # If your system has the authpriv syslog facility, use authpriv.debug auth.debug /var/log/auth # To log to a remote machine, use something like the following, # where "loghost" is the name of the remote machine. # If your system has the authpriv syslog facility, use authpriv.debug auth.debug @loghost |
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