Systemd journal monitoring and notification tool with priority filtering, pattern matching and security violation detection.
Inspired by logcheck, but designed for systemd's journal with output that can be piped to other programs for notifications, monitoring, or alerting.
- Priority-based filtering: Filter messages by systemd priority levels (emerg, alert, crit, err, warning, notice, info, debug) - logcheck only supports pattern matching
- Per-service priority control: Set different priority thresholds for different services without writing individual ignore patterns
- Flexible output: Pipe to any command, send via email, or output to stdout - not limited to email only
- JSON output: Machine-readable format for integration with monitoring systems
- Cursor-based tracking: Only process new entries since last run using systemd journal cursors
- Priority-based filtering (emerg, alert, crit, err, warning, notice, info, debug)
- Per-identifier priority configuration
- Regex pattern matching for identifiers (case-sensitive; (?i) is supported)
- Regex pattern matching for ignore and violations patterns (always case-insensitive)
- Ignore patterns: Must match the entire message (implicit anchors)
- Violation patterns: Can match anywhere in the message (substring match)
- Two-level pattern hierarchy:
- Violations: Always shown (e.g., failed logins, security events)
- Ignore: Suppress matching messages (exact match)
- Pre-configured violation patterns for common services (sshd, sudo, su, smartd)
- Cursor-based tracking (only process new entries)
- Multiple output formats (short, json)
- Modular configuration via
/etc/journalcheck.yamland/etc/journalcheck.d/*.yaml
pip install journalcheckDownload the .deb file from the releases page and install:
sudo dpkg -i journalcheck_*.deb- download the public key:
curl -fsSL https://gms1.github.io/journalcheck/apt/public.gpg | sudo gpg --dearmor -o /usr/share/keyrings/journalcheck-archive-keyring.gpg- register the apt repository
echo "deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/journalcheck-archive-keyring.gpg] https://gms1.github.io/journalcheck/apt ./" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/journalcheck.list- install this package
sudo apt update && sudo apt install journalcheckpip install -e .Main config: /etc/journalcheck.yaml
Additional configs: /etc/journalcheck.d/*.yaml (merged automatically)
Example:
priority: warning
format: short
# Optional: pipe output to a command
output_command: "notify-send 'Journal Alert'"
# Optional: send output via email
email_to: "admin@example.com"
email_subject: "Journal Alerts"
identifiers:
ssh: # Exact match
priority: info
ignore:
- ".*session opened.*" # Full match: must match entire message
- ".*session closed.*"
violations:
- "Failed password" # Substring: matches anywhere in message
/^(?i)cron$/: # Match both "cron" and "CRON" using case-insensitive regex
priority: notice
ignore:
- ".*session opened.*"
- ".*session closed.*"Output Options:
- If
output_commandis set, output will be piped to that command - If
email_tois set, output will be sent via email using themailcommand - If neither is set, output goes to stdout by (default), except if running as systemd service
The following identifiers have pre-configured violation patterns that are automatically included:
- sshd: Failed password, Invalid user, Connection closed by authenticating user, etc.
- sudo: authentication failure, user NOT in sudoers, incorrect password attempt
- su: FAILED su, authentication failure
- smartd: SMART Failure, Attribute.*failed, Error.*occurred
- kernel: I/O error, Buffer I/O error, end_request: I/O error
You can add additional violations to these identifiers - they will be appended to the defaults.
journalcheckjournalcheck | grep sshjournalcheck > /var/log/journal-alerts.logjournalcheck | mail -s "Journal Alerts" admin@example.comThe package includes systemd service and timer units for automated checking.
Enable the timer:
sudo systemctl enable --now journalcheck.timerCheck timer status:
sudo systemctl status journalcheck.timer
sudo systemctl list-timers journalcheck.timerCustomize the schedule: The default schedule is hourly. To change it:
sudo systemctl edit journalcheck.timerAdd your custom schedule:
[Timer]
OnCalendar=dailySee systemd.time(7) for schedule syntax.
MIT License - see LICENSE file for details.