Using Oracle Tables; Oracle Incident Table - Symantec 10521146 - Network Security 7120 Administration Manual

Administration guide
Hide thumbs Also See for 10521146 - Network Security 7120:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

326 SQL reference

Using Oracle tables

Using Oracle tables

Oracle incident table

Table B-1
Oracle Incident Table
Field Name
Type
class
varchar(33)
clusterID
integer
crtTime
integer
custID
varchar(41)
/usr/SNS/dbs/oracle-sqltable.statements
For the MySQL database, use the following:
/usr/SNS/dbs/mysql-sqltable.statements
2
Add a supported database driver manually into the appropriate location and
naming convention:
For the Oracle driver, use the following:
<sns root dir>/java/jdbcdriver-oracle-9i.jar
For the MySQL driver, use the following:
<sns root dir>/java/jdbcdriver-mm.mysql.2.0.14.jar
3
Restart Symantec Network Security.
4
Configure the SQL Export parameters.
See
"Exporting to SQL"
This section describes the structure of the incident and event tables that
Symantec Network Security uses to export data to an Oracle database.
To configure software or appliance nodes to export tables to Oracle, see also
"Exporting to SQL"
on page 257.
Oracle incident table
Oracle event table
The following table describes the structure of the table that Symantec Network
Security uses to export incident data to an Oracle database:
Description
Indicates the class of the best event.
Indicates the user-defined Network Security
cluster ID where the incident originated.
Indicates time when this incident was created.
Indicates the Customer ID of the best event.
on page 257.
Notes
Standard UNIX time format

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Network security

Table of Contents