# The syslogd listens on 127.0.0.1 TLS socket. # The client writes a message into a 127.0.0.1 TLS socket. # The syslogd writes it into a file and through a pipe. # The syslogd passes it via UDP to the loghost. # The server receives the message on its UDP socket. # Find the message in client, file, pipe, syslogd, server log. # Check that the file log contains the hostname and message. use strict; use warnings; use Socket; our %args = ( client => { connect => { domain => AF_INET, proto => "tls", addr => "127.0.0.1", port => 6514 }, loggrep => { qr/connect sock: 127.0.0.1 \d+/ => 1, get_testgrep() => 1, }, }, syslogd => { options => ["-S", "127.0.0.1:6514"], fstat => { qr/^root .* internet/ => 0, qr/ internet stream tcp \w+ 127.0.0.1:6514$/ => 1, }, ktrace => { qr{NAMI "/etc/ssl/private/127.0.0.1:6514.key"} => 1, qr{NAMI "/etc/ssl/127.0.0.1:6514.crt"} => 0, qr{NAMI "/etc/ssl/private/127.0.0.1.key"} => 1, qr{NAMI "/etc/ssl/127.0.0.1.crt"} => 1, }, loggrep => { qr{Keyfile /etc/ssl/private/127.0.0.1.key} => 1, qr{Certfile /etc/ssl/127.0.0.1.crt} => 1, }, }, file => { loggrep => { qr/ localhost /. get_testgrep() => 1, }, }, ); 1;