Log Type Commands

The log command takes a log type parameter, as can be seen from the command syntax [audit|event]:

$ log
USAGE:
------
log [audit|event] locallog on|off             - Enable or disable audit/event logging
log [audit|event] remotelog                   - Get the config for remote system logging
log [audit|event] remotelog <IP:port>|off     - Configure a remote system for sending logs
log [audit|event] status                      - Get the status for audit/event logging

For an overview of the log types and formats, see:

For each available log type, the other parameter options are the same. In the examples below, the types are either audit or event.

To enable or disable local audit and event logging, use the command and its respective option:

  • log audit locallog on|off
  • log event locallog on|off

Important

In a clustered environment, logging should be enabled or disabled on all application nodes in order to generate or stop logs completely, since a single transaction queue is utilized in the cluster and transactions can run on all application nodes. For commands on a cluster, see the cluster run command: Remote Execution in Clusters.

If local logs are enabled, local log files of the type are available:

  • Audit log files can be viewed as with all logs: log view platform/audit.log
  • Event logs: log view platform/event.log

To enable remote logs of a type requires a remote system IP address and port as input parameters. The location and format of the logged data on the remote system would depend on the syslog application being used and the configuration of that application.

For remote system requirements, see: Log Types.

Note

When audit or event logging is enabled or disabled locally or remotely, the syslog service restarts.

Remote log type disable CLI output example:

$ log audit remotelog off
You are about to restart syslog. Do you wish to continue? yes
You have new mail in /var/mail/<username>

The log type status for both local and remote logging can be checked with: log audit status or log event status, for example:

$ log audit status
     audit:
         ip: 112.19.42.249:10514
         locallog: true

To check only the remote logging status of a log type: log audit remotelog or log event remotelog, for example:

$ log audit remotelog
      ip: 112.19.42.249:10514

Note

  • The internal rsyslog statistics are checked every 60 seconds to detect failed actions. If a failure is detected, the failure notification is retransmitted every 10 minutes.

  • If the remote syslog server stops receiving logs, an email message or SNMP trap is generated, with the email message:

    Subject: Log processing failure
    
    Message: System unable to send <event type> messages to <IP>
    

    In the case of an SNMP trap:

    mteHotTrigger: Log processing failure
    
    mteHotContextName: System unable to send <event type> messages to <IP>
    
  • If the remote syslog server stops receiving logs, the local disk space of the queue of logs can grow to a maximum of 1GB before logs are not queued and log messages are discarded.

See Warnings and Notifications to set up the notification.