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Monitoring and Logging System Information
239
• Sequence number —The message sequence number for this stack
component. Sequence numbers may be skipped because of filtering but
are always monotonically increasing on a per-stack member basis.
• Message — Contains the text of the log message.
What Factors Should Be Considered When Configuring Logging?
Dell recommends that network administrators deploy a syslog server in their
network and configure all switches to log messages to the syslog server.
When managing logs on a stack of switches, the RAM log and persistent log
files exist only on the top of stack platform. Other platforms in the stack
forward their messages to the top of stack log.
Default Log Settings
System logging is enabled, and messages are sent to the console (severity
level: warning and above), and RAM log (severity level: informational and
above). Switch auditing, CLI command logging, Web logging, and SNMP
logging are disabled. No messages are sent to the log file that is stored in flash,
and no remote log servers are defined.
Email alerting is disabled, and no recipient email address is configured.
Additionally, no mail server is defined. If you add a mail server, by default, no
authentication or security protocols are configured, and the switch uses TCP
port 25 for SMTP.
After you enable email alerting and configure the mail server and recipient
email address, log messages with a severity level of emergency and alert are
sent immediately with each log message in a separate mail. The email subject
is “Urgent Log Messages.” Log messages with a severity level of critical, error,
and warning are sent periodically in a single email. The email subject is “Non
Urgent Log Messages.” Messages with a severity level of notice and below are
not sent in an email.
Summary of Contents for PowerConnect 7024
Page 134: ...134 Setting Basic Network Information ...
Page 290: ...290 Managing General System Settings Figure 11 14 SNTP Servers Table ...
Page 348: ...348 Configuring SNMP ...
Page 430: ...430 Monitoring Switch Traffic ...
Page 444: ...444 Configuring iSCSI Optimization ...
Page 538: ...538 Configuring 802 1X and Port Based Security ...
Page 594: ...594 Configuring VLANs Figure 21 16 GVRP Port Parameters Table ...
Page 600: ...600 Configuring VLANs Figure 21 23 Double VLAN Port Parameter Table ...
Page 658: ...658 Configuring the Spanning Tree Protocol ...
Page 693: ...Configuring Port Based Traffic Control 693 Figure 24 3 Storm Control 5 Click Apply ...
Page 780: ...780 Configuring Connectivity Fault Management ...
Page 804: ...804 Snooping and Inspecting Traffic Figure 27 17 DAI Interface Configuration Summary ...
Page 818: ...818 Snooping and Inspecting Traffic ...
Page 836: ...836 Configuring Link Aggregation ...
Page 882: ...882 Configuring DHCP Server Settings ...
Page 916: ...916 Configuring L2 and L3 Relay Features Figure 33 3 DHCP Relay Interface Summary ...
Page 924: ...924 Configuring L2 and L3 Relay Features Figure 33 12 IP Helper Statistics ...
Page 930: ...930 Configuring L2 and L3 Relay Features ...
Page 1004: ...1004 Configuring OSPF and OSPFv3 ...
Page 1044: ...1044 Configuring VRRP ...
Page 1057: ...Configuring IPv6 Routing 1057 Figure 37 9 IPv6 Route Preferences ...
Page 1064: ...1064 Configuring IPv6 Routing ...
Page 1084: ...1084 Configuring DHCPv6 Server and Relay Settings ...
Page 1091: ...Configuring Differentiated Services 1091 Figure 39 5 DiffServ Class Criteria ...
Page 1114: ...1114 Configuring Differentiated Services ...
Page 1130: ...1130 Configuring Class of Service ...
Page 1136: ...1136 Configuring Auto VoIP ...
Page 1216: ...1216 Managing IPv4 and IPv6 Multicast ...