Applying A Privilege Level To A Terminal Line; Configuring Logging; Audit And Security Logs - Dell S4048–ON Configuration Manual

S-series 10gbe switches
Hide thumbs Also See for S4048–ON:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Applying a Privilege Level to a Terminal Line

To set a privilege level for a terminal line, use the following command.
Configure a privilege level for a user.
CONFIGURATION mode
username username privilege level
NOTE: When you assign a privilege level between 2 and 15, access to the system begins at EXEC mode, but the prompt
is hostname#, rather than hostname>.

Configuring Logging

The Dell Networking OS tracks changes in the system using event and error messages.
By default, Dell Networking OS logs these messages on:
the internal buffer
console and terminal lines
any configured syslog servers
To disable logging, use the following commands.
Disable all logging except on the console.
CONFIGURATION mode
no logging on
Disable logging to the logging buffer.
CONFIGURATION mode
no logging buffer
Disable logging to terminal lines.
CONFIGURATION mode
no logging monitor
Disable console logging.
CONFIGURATION mode
no logging console

Audit and Security Logs

This section describes how to configure, display, and clear audit and security logs.
The following is the configuration task list for audit and security logs:
Enabling Audit and Security Logs
Displaying Audit and Security Logs
Clearing Audit Logs
Enabling Audit and Security Logs
You enable audit and security logs to monitor configuration changes or determine if these changes affect the operation of the
system in the network. You log audit and security events to a system log server, using the logging extended command in
CONFIGURATION mode.
This command is available with or without RBAC enabled. For information about RBAC, see
Role-Based Access
Control.
Management
61

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents