HP P9000 Command View Advanced Edition Suite Software 7.4.0-00 Administrator Guide (web) (TB581-96325, December 2012)

Table Of Contents
Although you can specify this value, we do not recommend that you specify it.
The table below shows the correspondence between the severity levels of audit events, the values
indicating severity that are specified in the syslog.conf file, and the types of event log data.
Table 43 Correspondence between the severity levels of audit events, the severity levels in syslog.conf,
and the types of event log data
Type of event log dataSeverity in syslog.confSeverity of audit events
Error
emerg
0
alert
1
crit
2
err
3
Warning
warning
4
Information
notice
5
info
6
debug
7
The following shows an example of the auditlog.conf file:
# Specify an integer for Facility. (specifiable range: 1-23)
Log.Facility 1
# Specify the event category.
# You can specify any of the following:
# StartStop, Failure, LinkStatus, ExternalService,
# Authentication, AccessControl, ContentAccess,
# ConfigurationAccess, Maintenance, or AnomalyEvent.
Log.Event.Category Authentication,ConfigurationAccess
# Specify an integer for Severity. (specifiable range: 0-7)
Log.Level 6
In the example above, the audit events related to Authentication or ConfigurationAccess
are output. For Windows, Log.Level 6 outputs audit log data corresponding to the Error, Warning,
and Information levels. For Linux, Log.Facility 1 outputs the audit log data to the syslog file
that is defined as the user facility in the syslog.conf file.
Referencing alerts
From Device Manager, information regarding the errors that have occurred in storage systems to be
managed (alerts) is displayed in the GUI or CLI. The alerts are also output to log files. In addition, for
storage system alerts, you can specify that the contents of received alerts are automatically sent to
users by email.
By checking alerts, you can confirm where errors occurred, and the actions to take for those errors.
Setting up logs and alerts134