SysLog Forwarding for XenServer
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Isn't SysLog supposed to create a matching file path to what is getting pushed from my XS installation?
@scottalanmiller can you enlighten me with this? I've never worked with Syslog before.
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@DustinB3403 said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
Isn't SysLog supposed to create a matching file path to what is getting pushed from my XS installation?
@scottalanmiller can you enlighten me with this? I've never worked with Syslog before.
I honestly had nothing but trouble in doing anything with their logs.
But I'll be following along.
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For my XenServer (still 6.5), I actually started up the XenCenter app. Right click on the server -> properties -> click log destination on left -> click remote on right and enter the rsyslog server ip.
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@travisdh1 said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
For my XenServer (still 6.5), I actually started up the XenCenter app. Right click on the server -> properties -> click log destination on left -> click remote on right and enter the rsyslog server ip.
Which I've done that, but where on the syslog VM would I actually see the logs being created? What should I modify in the /var/lib/syslog.conf file on XenServer?
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@DustinB3403 said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
@travisdh1 said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
For my XenServer (still 6.5), I actually started up the XenCenter app. Right click on the server -> properties -> click log destination on left -> click remote on right and enter the rsyslog server ip.
Which I've done that, but where on the syslog VM would I actually see the logs being created? What should I modify in the /var/lib/syslog.conf file on XenServer?
When I did that, I forwarded them to a VM running Splunk, and it showed right up.
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@BRRABill said
When I did that, I forwarded them to a VM running Splunk, and it showed right up.
In fact, I've done so much, I forgot to re-enable that. Just did, and it showed right up again.
Just set the option in XC, and that was it. Immediately showed up in my Splunk install.
8/12/16 1:49:16.000 PM Aug 12 13:49:16 10.0.4.20 Aug 11 13:49:37 xenserver-test-reinstall xapi: [debug|xenserver-test-reinstall|33 dbflush [/var/lib/xcp/state.db]||sql] XML backend [/var/lib/xcp/state.db] -- Write buffer flushed. Time: 0.020193 host = 10.0.4.20 source = udp:514 sourcetype = linux_messages_syslog 8/12/16 1:49:14.000 PM Aug 12 13:49:14 10.0.4.20 Aug 11 13:49:35 xenserver-test-reinstall xcp-rrdd-xenpm: [debug|xenserver-test-reinstall|0 ||xcp-rrdd-xenpm] Found 4 states; with 2 CPUs this means 2 states per CPU host = 10.0.4.20 source = udp:514 sourcetype = linux_messages_syslog 8/12/16 1:49:14.000 PM Aug 12 13:49:14 10.0.4.20 Aug 11 13:49:35 xenserver-test-reinstall xcp-rrdd-xenpm: [debug|xenserver-test-reinstall|0 ||xcp-rrdd-xenpm] Process 3237 exited normally with code 0
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So now I need a VM with splunk as well?
Or can I use my CentOS Rsyslog Vm as well?
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@DustinB3403 said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
@travisdh1 said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
For my XenServer (still 6.5), I actually started up the XenCenter app. Right click on the server -> properties -> click log destination on left -> click remote on right and enter the rsyslog server ip.
Which I've done that, but where on the syslog VM would I actually see the logs being created? What should I modify in the /var/lib/syslog.conf file on XenServer?
By default, everything goes in /var/log/messages. If you want to find things for just one host name
sudo cat /var/log/messages | grep 'hostname'
I'm now understanding why @scottalanmiller likes binary logs instead of ascii. That messages file grows quickly.
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@travisdh1 That does show a lot of information, which is scrolling very quickly!
I guess it works
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So if that works, then I need to setup a easy way to view these messages..
Is splunk the go to solution for this?
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@DustinB3403 said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
So if that works, then I need to setup a easy way to view these messages..
Is splunk the go to solution for this?
I used Splunk because it is free and easy. (For me.)
I tried setting up a few other things, and gave up. (Like loggly.) I want to get back to other logging stuff some day, but it works for me.
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Splunk is free only for very small sizes. Once your logs grow or you have more than a few servers you normally overrun the free part.
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So what would be a good aggregation tool to be able to view the logs?
If Splunk stops at a tiny level..... I won't bother with it.
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@DustinB3403 said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
So what would be a good aggregation tool to be able to view the logs?
If Splunk stops at a tiny level..... I won't bother with it.
500MB per day.
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@BRRABill said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
@DustinB3403 said in SysLog Forwarding for XenServer:
So what would be a good aggregation tool to be able to view the logs?
If Splunk stops at a tiny level..... I won't bother with it.
500MB per day.
yeah that's worthless......
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@DustinB3403 said
yeah that's worthless......
You'll want to avoid logg.ly before someone recommends it, then. That is 200MB per day.
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So elk/logstash then?
Wasn't there a post around here by scott on how to set this up?
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Has anyone setup syslog with Elk (with Elasticsearch 2.3 or greater) and Kibana
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@DustinB3403 Maybe one of these?