Stand-alone Example syslogp() Application ========================================= This is a *very* simple stand-alone example application. The purpose is to show how to use the sysklogd 2.x API, e.g. `syslogp()`, to use "new" RFC5424 features like MsgID. Included in this directory are two files: - `example.c`: actual C code example - `example.mk`: plain Makefile for building `example` Provided the two files are in the same (writable) directory, you can build the application like this: make -f example.mk GNU Autotools ------------- If you want to use GNU autoconf & automake instead. The following is recommended in `configure.ac` and `Makefile.am` to build your application. ```sh # configure.ac (snippet) # Check for pkg-config tool, required for next step PKG_PROG_PKG_CONFIG # Check for required libraries PKG_CHECK_MODULES([syslog], [libsyslog >= 2.0]) ``` and ```Makefile # Makefile.am (snippet) bin_PROGRAMS = example example_SOURCES = example.c example_CFLAGS = $(syslog_CFLAGS) example_LDADD = $(syslog_LIBS) ``` **NOTE:** Most free/open source software that uses `configure` default to install to `/usr/local`. However, some Linux distributions do no longer search that path for installed software, e.g. Fedora and Alpine Linux. To help your configure script find its dependencies you have to give the `pkg-config` a prefix path: PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR=/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig ./configure License ------- This example code, `example.c`, this README.md and the `example.mk` Makefile are free and unencumbered software released into the public domain.