Notes on IPv6 Handling in Rsyslog
Rsyslog fully* supports sending and receiving syslog messages via both IPv4 and IPv6. IPv6 is natively supported for both UDP and TCP. However, there are some options that control handling of IPv6 operations. I thought it is is a good idea to elaborate a little about them, so that you can probably find your way somewhat easier.
First of all, you can restrict rsyslog to using IPv4 or IPv6 addresses only by specifying the -4 or -6 command line option (now guess which one does what…). If you do not provide any command line option, rsyslog uses IPv4 and IPv6 addresses concurrently. In practice, that means the listener binds to both addresses (provided they are configured). When sending syslog messages, rsyslog uses IPv4 addresses when the receiver can be reached via IPv4 and IPv6 addresses if it can be reached via IPv6. If it can be reached on either IPv4 and v6, rsyslog leaves the choice to the socket layer. The important point to know is that it uses whatever connectivity is available to reach the destination.
There is one subtle difference between UDP and TCP. With the new IPv4/v6 ignorant code, rsyslog has potentially different ways to reach destinations. The socket layer returns all of these paths in a sorted array. For TCP, rsyslog loops through this array until a successful TCP connect can be made. If that happens, the other addresses are ignored and messages are sent via the successfully-connected socket.
For UDP, there is no such definite success indicator. Sure, the socket layer may detect some errors, but it may not notice other errors (due to the unreliable nature of UDP). By default, the UDP sender also tries one entry after the other in the sorted array of destination addresses. When a send fails, the next address is tried. When the send function finally succeeds, rsyslogd assumes the UDP packet has reached its final destination. However, if rsyslogd is started with the “-A” (capital A!) was given on the command line, rsyslogd will continue to send messages until the end of the destination address array is reached. This may result in duplicate messages, but it also provides some additional reliability in case a message could not be received. You need to be sure about the implications before applying this option. In general, it is NOT recommended to use the -A option.
*rsyslog does not support RFC 3195 over IPv6. The reason is that the RFC 3195 library, liblogging, supports IPv4, only. Currently, there are no plans to update either rsyslog to another RFC 3195 stack or update liblogging. There is simply no demand for 3195 solutions.
See also
Help with configuring/using Rsyslog
:
Mailing list - best route for general questions
GitHub: rsyslog source project - detailed questions, reporting issues that are believed to be bugs with
Rsyslog
See also
Contributing to Rsyslog
:
Source project: rsyslog project README.
Documentation: rsyslog-doc project README
Copyright 2008-2023 Rainer Gerhards (Großrinderfeld), and Others.