Setting up centralized logging

Ahmed Sharif ahmed.sharif.bd at gmail.com
Wed Jan 14 18:32:17 UTC 2009


Hello Kenneth,

Syslog-ng seems to me perfect for centralized logging, though I haven't used
the other solution. The official documentation I got at
http://www.balabit.com/support/documentation/?product=syslog-ng is very
useful. I used it in a mixed OS environment (Solaris 10, RHEL5). Both
commercial and open source edition is available. You will get the details
here <http://www.balabit.com/dl/brochures/syslog-ng-v3.0-description-en.pdf>.
You may also find the following
forum<http://www.syslog.org/forum/index.php>very useful. Please ask
about any specific requirements/questions.

Thanks and Regards,

Ahmed Sharif

On Wed, Jan 14, 2009 at 10:12 PM, <m.roth2006 at rcn.com> wrote:

> Kenneth,
>
> >Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2009 15:42:22 +0100
> >From: "Kenneth Holter" <kenneho.ndu at gmail.com>
> >
> >We're planning on setting up centralized logging for our RHEL systems, and
> >have to decide on applications to use for collecting logs and analyzing
> >them.
> >Most of our systems are running RHEL, so we're looking for software that
> is
> >supported on this platform.
> >
> >The first issue would be to decide on which syslog implementation to use,
> >and "syslog-ng" seems to be very popular. Will this be included in EPEL or
> >such in near future?
> >Are there better options than syslog-ng?
>
> How *very* odd - at work, last week, we were just deciding on this, and
> setting it up. Anyway, my manager decided on syslog-ng, which has been
> around a long time, although I understand that rsyslog is coming in as the
> standard with CentOS.
>
> What we did was to set up one syslog server with syslog-ng. All the other
> servers were left with the stock syslog, which does allow you to specify
> that a copy of the log should also be sent to a remote server.
>
> For example, in the /etc/syslog.conf, for the std. syslog, you add:
> *.info;mail.none;authpriv.info;cron.none;kern.debug;daemon.err @<syslog
> server name>
>
> Then, on the syslog server, as I said, we put in syslog-ng. In its
> configuration file, I separated remote servers (and tcp and udp incoming
> logs), and then set up filters and destinations in
> <path>/<hostname><YYYYMMDD>/<logs>
>
> Setting up filters turned out to be incredibly easy. One post I found very
> helpful was
> <https://lists.balabit.hu/pipermail/syslog-ng/2007-May/010176.html>
> In my case, I used facility(secure) and match(strings I wanted), and dumped
> them in separate destinations.
>
> >
> >After collecting the syslog data, we'll need to analyze them. Swatch and
> SEC
> >are two options, as well as logwatch. The latter doesn't monitor in real
> >time, so I guess this one is out of the picture. Feedback on Swatch and
> SEC,
> >as well as other good options, is appreciated.
> <snip>
> Let us know how it goes. I'd be interested in knowing what you use.
>
>      mark
>
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