PMG2006-T20A User’s Guide
117
C
HAPTER
17
Log
17.1 Overview
The web configurator allows you to choose which categories of events and/or alerts to have the
PMG2006-T20A log and then display the logs or have the PMG2006-T20A send them to an administrator
(as e-mail) or to a syslog server.
17.1.1 What You Can Do in this Chapter
• Use the
System Log
screen to see the system logs (
• Use the
Security Log
screen to see the security-related logs for the categories that you select (
).
17.1.2 What You Need To Know
The following terms and concepts may help as you read this chapter.
Alerts and Logs
An alert is a type of log that warrants more serious attention. They include system errors, attacks (access
control) and attempted access to blocked web sites. Some categories such as
System Errors
consist of
both logs and alerts. You may differentiate them by their color in the
View Log
screen. Alerts display in
red and logs display in black.
Syslog Overview
The syslog protocol allows devices to send event notification messages across an IP network to syslog
servers that collect the event messages. A syslog-enabled device can generate a syslog message and
send it to a syslog server.
Syslog is defined in RFC 3164. The RFC defines the packet format, content and system log related
information of syslog messages. Each syslog message has a facility and severity level. The syslog facility
identifies a file in the syslog server. Refer to the documentation of your syslog program for details. The
following table describes the syslog severity levels.
Table 62 Syslog Severity Levels
CODE
SEVERITY
0
Emergency: The system is unusable.
1
Alert: Action must be taken immediately.
2
Critical: The system condition is critical.
3
Error: There is an error condition on the system.
4
Warning: There is a warning condition on the system.