Administration

Table Of Contents
Generating View Event Log Messages in Syslog Format Using the I
Option
You can use the vdmadmin command with the -I option to record View event messages in Syslog format in
event log files. Many third-party analytics products require flat-file Syslog data as input for their analytics
operations.
Syntax
vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -disable
vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -enable -localOnly
vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -enable -path path
vdmadmin -I -eventSyslog -enable -path path
-user DomainName\username -password password
Usage Notes
You can use the command to generate View event log messages in Syslog format. In a Syslog file, View
event log messages are formatted in key-value pairs, which makes the logging data accessible to analytics
software.
You can also use the vdmadmin command with the -I option to list the available reports and views and to
display the contents of a specified report. See “Listing and Displaying Reports of View Operation Using the
-I Option,” on page 220.
Options
You can disable or enable the eventSyslog option. You can direct the Syslog output to the local system
only or to another location. Direct UDP connection to a Syslog server is supported with View 5.2 or later.
See "Configure Event Logging for Syslog Servers" in the View Installation document.
Table 138. Options for Generating View Event Log Messages in Syslog Format
Option Description
-disable Disables Syslog logging.
-e|-enable Enables Syslog logging.
-eventSyslog Specifies that View events are generated in Syslog format.
-localOnly Stores the Syslog output on the local system only. When
you use the -localOnly option, the default destination of
the Syslog output is %PROGRAMDATA
%\VMware\VDM\events\.
-password password
Specifies the password for the user that authorizes access to
the specified destination path for the Syslog output.
-path Determines the destination UNC path for the Syslog
output.
-u|-user DomainName\username
Specifies the domain and username that can access the
destination path for the Syslog output.
Chapter 13 Using the vdmadmin Command
VMware, Inc. 221