Monitoring | live event log – Cisco VPN 3002 User Manual
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VPN 3002 Hardware Client Reference
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Chapter 13 Monitoring
Monitoring | Live Event Log
Monitoring | Live Event Log
This screen shows events in the current event log and automatically updates the display every 5 seconds.
The events might take a few seconds to load when you first open the screen.
Note for Netscape
users:
The live event log requires Netscape version 4.5 or higher. It does not run on other versions of Netscape.
The screen always displays the most recent event at the bottom. Use the scroll bar to view earlier events.
To filter and display events by various criteria, see the
Monitoring | Filterable Event Log
section above.
Note
If you keep this Manager screen open, your administrative session does not time out. Each automatic
screen update resets the inactivity timer. See Session Idle Timeout on the Administration | Access
Rights | Access Settings screen.
Event Time
The time of the event: hour:minute:second.millisecond. The hour is based on
a 24-hour clock. For example, 14:37:06.680 identifies an event that occurred
at 2:37:06.680 PM.
Event Severity
The severity level of the event; for example: SEV=4 identifies an event of
severity level 4. See
under Configuration | System | Events for an
explanation of severity levels.
Event Class/Number
The class—or source—of the event, and the internal reference number
associated with the specific event within the event class. For example:
HTTP/47
indicates that an administrator logged in to the VPN 3002 using
HTTP to connect to the Manager.
under Configuration | System |
Events describes the event classes. The internal reference number assists
Cisco support personnel if they need to examine a log file.
Event Repeat
The number of times that this specific event has occurred since the VPN
3002 was last booted or reset. For example, RPT=17 indicates that this is the
seventeenth occurrence of this specific event.
Event IP address
The IP address of the client or host associated with this event. Only certain
events have this field. For tunnel-related events, this is typically the “outer”
or tunnel endpoint address. In the Event log format example above,
10.10.1.35 is the IP address of the host PC from which admin logged in using
the Manager.
Event String
The string, or message, that describes the specific event. Each event class
comprises many possible events, and the string gives a brief description.
Event strings usually do not exceed 80 characters. In the Event log format
example above, “New administrator login: admin” describes the event.