Bug 18671

Summary: syslogd accepts arbitrary timestamps on messages
Product: [Retired] Red Hat Linux Reporter: Tim <tim_r>
Component: sysklogdAssignee: Jason Vas Dias <jvdias>
Status: CLOSED CURRENTRELEASE QA Contact: David Lawrence <dkl>
Severity: medium Docs Contact:
Priority: medium    
Version: 6.2CC: abartlet, dr
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Hardware: All   
OS: Linux   
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Fixed In Version: Doc Type: Bug Fix
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Last Closed: 2004-08-30 21:35:44 UTC Type: ---
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Description Tim 2000-10-09 03:33:47 UTC
syslogd accepts arbitrary timestamps on messages read from /dev/log. If 
the message matches the pattern "??? ?? ??:??:?? " then it will be treated 
as a timestamp. syslogd should always prefix the message with the local 
machine's timestamp, and for backwards compatability, remove anything that 
looks like a timestamp from the start of the message to avoid the 
timestamp appearing twice. This is similar to bug id 10222.

Comment 1 Jason Vas Dias 2004-08-30 21:35:44 UTC
Just clearing out old bugs here. This one was fixed ages ago!
Current version of sysklogd is 1.41-22 .