58
Important events like a login failure or a firmware update are logged to a selection of logging
destinations (see Figure 6-29). Each of those events belongs to an event group, which can
be activated separately.
The common way to log events is to use the internal log list of the DKVM-IP1 switch. To show
the log list, click on “Event Log” on the “Maintenance” page. In the Event Log Settings you
can choose how many log entries are shown on each page. Furthermore, you can clear the
log file here.
List logging enabled
The common way to log events is to use the internal log list of the DKVM-IP1 switch . To
show the log list, click on “Event Log” on the “Maintenance” page.
Since the DKVM-IP1 switch's system memory is used to save all the information, the
maximum number of possible log list entries is restricted to 1.000 events. Every entry that
exceeds this limit overrides the oldest one, automatically.
Warning
If the reset button on the HTML frontend is used to restart the DKVM-IP1 switch,
all logging information is saved permanently and is available after the DKVM-IP1
switch has been started. If the DKVM-IP1 switch loses power or a hard reset is
performed, all logging data will be lost. To avoid this, use one of the following log
methods.
NFS Logging enabled
Define a NFS server, where a directory or a static link have to be exported, to write all
logging data to a file that is located there. To write logging data from more than one
DKVM-IP1 switch devices to only one NFS share, you have to define a file name that is
unique for each device. When you change the NFS settings and press the button “Apply” ,
the NFS share will be mounted immediately. That means, the NFS share and the NFS
server must be filled with valid sources or you will get an error message.
SMTP Logging enabled
With this option, the DKVM-IP1 switch is able to send Emails to an address given by the
Email address text field in the Event Log Settings. These mails contain the same
description strings as the internal log file and the mail subject is filled with the event group
of the occurred log event. In order to use this log destination you have to specify a SMTP
server, that has to be reachable from the DKVM-IP1 switch device and that needs no
authentication at all (<serverip>:<port>).
SNMP Logging enabled
If this is activated, the DKVM-IP1 switch sends a SNMP trap to a specified destination IP
address, every time a log event occurs. If the receiver requires a community string, you
can set it in the appropriate text field. Most of the event traps only contain one descriptive
string with all information about the log event. Only authentication and host power events
have an own trap class that consists of several fields with detailed information about the
occurred event. To receive this SNMP traps, any SNMP trap listener may be used.