Log - Cisco RV260 series Administration Manual

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Log

Step 2
Set Time Zone – Select your time zone relative to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Step 3
Set Date and Time – Select Auto or Manual.
a) For Manual – Enter the date and time.
Step 4
In the NTP Server section – Check Default or User Defined and enter a qualified NTP server name in the NTP Server
1 to 4 fields.
Step 5
Set Daylight Savings Time – Check to enable daylight savings time. You can choose the Daylight Saving Mode – By
Date or Recurring and enter the start dates (From) and end dates (To). You can also specify the Daylight Saving Offset
in minutes.
Step 6
Click Apply.
Log
One of the basic settings of a network device is its system log (Syslog), which is used to log the device data.
You can define the instances that should generate a log. Whenever such defined instance occurs, a log is
generated with the time and event and sent to a syslog server or sent in an email. Syslog can then be used to
analyze and troubleshoot a network and to increase the network security.
Configure Log Settings
To configure the log settings, follow these steps:
Step 1
Click System Configuration > Log.
Step 2
Under Log Setting, in the Log section, check Enable.
Step 3
In the Log Buffer field, enter the number of KB (Range 1 KB to 4096 KB, Default is 1024 KB).
Step 4
Severity- select the appropriate log severity level from the drop down list. They are listed from the highest to the lowest.
Emergency
Alert
Critical
Error
Warning
Notification
Information
Debugging
Step 5
Category - check All or any of the required event categories that you want logged on the device.
Kernel
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Level 0, which means that the system is unusable.
Level 1, which indicates that immediate action is needed.
Level 2, which indicates that the system is in critical condition.
Level 3, which indicates that there is an error in the device, such as a single port being
off-line.
Level 4, which indicates that a warning message is logged when the device is functioning
properly, but an operational problem has occurred.
Level 5, which indicates a normal but significant condition. A notification log is logged
when the device is functioning properly, but a system notice has occurred.
Level 6, which indicates a condition that is not a condition error, but requires special
handling.
Level 7, which indicates that the debugging messages contain information normally of
use only when debugging a program.
Logs involving kernel code.
System Configuration

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