Extreme Networks ExtremeWare XOS Guide Manual page 138

Concepts guide
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Status Monitoring and Statistics
Component Unreg: * - Component/Subcomponent is not currently registered
Severity Values: C - Critical,
Debug Severity : S - Debug-Summary,
+ - Debug Severities, but log debug-mode not enabled
If Match parameters present:
Parameter Flags: S - Source,
I - Ingress,
Parameter Types: Port - Physical Port list,
MAC
VID
L4
Nbr
Proc - Process Name
Strict Match
: Y - every match parameter entered must be present in the event
N - match parameters need not be present in the event
The
show log configuration filter
applied and whether it will be included or excluded. The above output shows the three filter items, one
including events from the STP.InBPDU component, one excluding the event STP.CreatPortMsgFail, and
the next including the remaining events from the STP component. The severity value is shown as "*",
indicating that the component's default severity threshold controls which messages are passed. The
heading is empty for this filter because no match is configured for this filter. Matches are
Parameter(s)
described in
"Matching Expressions"
Each time a filter item is added to or deleted from a given filter, the specified events are compared
against the current configuration of the filter to try to logically simplify the configuration. Existing items
will be replaced by logically simpler items if the new item enables rewriting the filter. If the new item is
already included or excluded from the currently configured filter, the new item is not added to the filter.
Matching Expressions
You can configure the switch so messages reaching the target match a specified match expression. The
message text is compared with the configured match expression to determine whether to pass the
message on. To require that messages match a match expression, use the following command:
configure log target [console | memory-buffer | nvram | primary-msm | backup-msm |
session | syslog [all | <ipaddress> | <ipPort> {vr <vr_name>} [local0 ... local7]]]
match [any |<match-expression>]
The messages reaching the target will match the
formatted text string that makes up the message is compared with the match expression and is passed
to the target if it matches. This command does not affect the filter in place for the target, so the match
expression is compared only with the messages that have already passed the target's filter. For more
information on controlling the format of the messages, see
Simple Regular Expressions. A simple regular expression is a string of single characters including the dot
character (.), which are optionally combined with quantifiers and constraints. A dot matches any single
character, while other characters match only themselves (case is significant). Quantifiers include the star
character (*) that matches zero or more occurrences of the immediately preceding token. Constraints
include the caret character (^) that matches at the beginning of a message and the currency character ($)
that matches at the end of a message. Bracket expressions are not supported. There are a number of
sources available on the Internet and in various language references describing the operation of regular
expressions.
Table 21
shows some examples of regular expressions.
ExtremeWare XOS 11.1 Concepts Guide
E - Error,
V - Debug-Verbose,
D - Destination, (as applicable)
E - Egress,
- MAC address,
IP - IP Address/netmask,
- Virtual LAN ID (tag),
- Layer-4 Port #,
Num
- Neighbor, Rtr
- Routerid, EAPS - EAPS Domain
command shows each filter item, in the order that it will be
next.
match-expression
W - Warning,
N - Notice,
D - Debug-Data
B - BGP
Slot - Physical Slot #
Mask - Netmask
VLAN - Virtual LAN name
- Number,
Str
- String
, a simple regular expression. The
"Formatting Event Messages" on page
I - Info
140.
138

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