If you have: /home/username01/[etc,dev,tmp,bin,lib] /home/username02/[etc,dev,tmp,bin,lib] /home/username03/[etc,dev,tmp,bin,lib] /home/username04/[etc,dev,tmp,bin,lib] I believe you will need: syslogd -a "/home/username01/dev/log" -a "/home/username02/dev/log" -a "/home/username03/dev/log" -a "/home/username04/dev/log" - or something like this. I don't know the syntax for multiples "-a"... Regards Lincoln On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 9:39 PM, Sean Carolan <scarolan at gmail.com> wrote: >> I solved a similar issue with jail and syslog adding a "-a >> /home/jail/dev/log" parameter to syslog startup. > > In our environment the chroot jail is /home/username. Does this mean > we need a /home/username/dev/log for each and every user? If the > daemon is chroot'd to /home/username wouldn't this be the case? > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > -- Lincoln Zuljewic Silva More contact info.: http://www.system.adm.br/contact.php "How often must a question be asked before it’s considered a frequently asked question?"