SSSD Manual pages


Table of Contents

sssd — System Security Services Daemon

OPTIONS

-d,--debug-level LEVEL

SSSD supports two representations for specifying the debug level. The simplest is to specify a decimal value from 0-9, which represents enabling that level and all lower-level debug messages. The more comprehensive option is to specify a hexadecimal bitmask to enable or disable specific levels (such as if you wish to suppress a level).

Please note that each SSSD service logs into its own log file. Also please note that enabling debug_level in the [sssd] section only enables debugging just for the sssd process itself, not for the responder or provider processes. The debug_level parameter should be added to all sections that you wish to produce debug logs from.

In addition to changing the log level in the config file using the debug_level parameter, which is persistent, but requires SSSD restart, it is also possible to change the debug level on the fly using the sss_debuglevel(8) tool.

Currently supported debug levels:

0, 0x0010: Fatal failures. Anything that would prevent SSSD from starting up or causes it to cease running.

1, 0x0020: Critical failures. An error that doesn't kill SSSD, but one that indicates that at least one major feature is not going to work properly.

2, 0x0040: Serious failures. An error announcing that a particular request or operation has failed.

3, 0x0080: Minor failures. These are the errors that would percolate down to cause the operation failure of 2.

4, 0x0100: Configuration settings.

5, 0x0200: Function data.

6, 0x0400: Trace messages for operation functions.

7, 0x1000: Trace messages for internal control functions.

8, 0x2000: Contents of function-internal variables that may be interesting.

9, 0x4000: Extremely low-level tracing information.

To log required bitmask debug levels, simply add their numbers together as shown in following examples:

Example: To log fatal failures, critical failures, serious failures and function data use 0x0270.

Example: To log fatal failures, configuration settings, function data, trace messages for internal control functions use 0x1310.

Note: The bitmask format of debug levels was introduced in 1.7.0.

Default: 0

--debug-timestamps=mode

1: Add a timestamp to the debug messages

0: Disable timestamp in the debug messages

Default: 1

--debug-microseconds=mode

1: Add microseconds to the timestamp in debug messages

0: Disable microseconds in timestamp

Default: 0

-f,--debug-to-files

Send the debug output to files instead of stderr. By default, the log files are stored in /var/log/sssd and there are separate log files for every SSSD service and domain.

This option is deprecated. It is replaced by --logger=files.

--logger=value

Location where SSSD will send log messages. This option overrides the value of the deprecated option --debug-to-files. The deprecated option will still work if the --logger is not used.

stderr: Redirect debug messages to standard error output.

files: Redirect debug messages to the log files. By default, the log files are stored in /var/log/sssd and there are separate log files for every SSSD service and domain.

journald: Redirect debug messages to systemd-journald

Default: not set

-D,--daemon

Become a daemon after starting up.

-i,--interactive

Run in the foreground, don't become a daemon.

-c,--config

Specify a non-default config file. The default is /etc/sssd/sssd.conf. For reference on the config file syntax and options, consult the sssd.conf(5) manual page.

-g,--genconf

Do not start the SSSD, but refresh the configuration database from the contents of /etc/sssd/sssd.conf and exit.

-s,--genconf-section

Similar to --genconf, but only refresh a single section from the configuration file. This option is useful mainly to be called from systemd unit files to allow socket-activated responders to refresh their configuration without requiring the administrator to restart the whole SSSD.

-?,--help

Display help message and exit.

--version

Print version number and exit.