On Thursday 16 February 2006 15:07, Nathan Vidican wrote:
I would advise against trying to log everything into SQL records, aside
from the performance hit on translating log/write outputs to SQL
inserts/queries then having the SQL server write to disk anyway, it just
complicates things
On Thursday 16 February 2006 15:30, Chuck Swiger wrote:
I'm not sure who the original poster was, but whoever is interested in this
topic might benefit by reading a thread from the firewall-wizards mailing
list:
snip
Cheers that was very useful- I've put it into our company Wiki so it can be
Until recently I had a server running syslog-ng set to archive all logs into
server/year/month/day/ directories. Now the server is running in amd64,
we've lost our hi-res scrolling display so I want to look at a better log
watching system.
I've read about logging to a database. I quite like
Ashley Moran wrote:
Until recently I had a server running syslog-ng set to archive all logs into
server/year/month/day/ directories. Now the server is running in amd64,
we've lost our hi-res scrolling display so I want to look at a better log
watching system.
I've read about logging to a
Ashley Moran [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[ ... ]
I'm not sure who the original poster was, but whoever is interested in this
topic might benefit by reading a thread from the firewall-wizards mailing list:
Original Message
Subject: [fw-wiz] parsing logs ultra-fast inline
Date: Wed,
Ashley Moran wrote:
Until recently I had a server running syslog-ng set to archive all logs into
server/year/month/day/ directories. Now the server is running in amd64,
we've lost our hi-res scrolling display so I want to look at a better log
watching system.
I've read about logging to
As for searching / analysis, I've seen php-syslog-ng
( http://www.vermeer.org/projects/php-syslog-ng ), which looks very basic,
and phpLogCon ( http://www.phplogcon.com/ ), which does not support PG
anyway. Is there anything better GUI-wise?
As for the log analysis, I remember attending a