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Rsyslog Refugee --- some basic questions
Hello: After spending several months trying to understand rsyslog interstellar configuration -- I am thinking of nxlog (enterprise) for a larger deployment in the coming months. Currently I am messing around with the community edition. while the documentation is nice --- some of example for basic things are a little short on info. Google searches has been a little frustrating as it focuses on Windows alerting which is not what we need. In our environment we have LTE based devices that connect to our VPN. Essentially these are weather stations for the agricultural industry. The devices are capable of sending itef / bsd style syslog messages to a central server. We are looking for a solution to centrally receive these logs and based on the message content reformat and re forward the messages to something like graylog. For now I am trying to standardize on a config that would allow me to receive bsd style syslog messages over UDP (plain text) and send the messages to a file. I am running nxlog on Linux -- Centos 7. nxlog-ce-2.10.2150 usage: nxlog [-h/help] [-c/conf conffile] [-f] [-s/stop] [-v/verify] [-h] print help [-f] run in foreground, do not daemonize [-c conffile] specify an alternate config file [-r] reload configuration of a running instance [-s] send stop signal to a running nxlog [-v] verify configuration file syntax CentOS Linux release 7.6.1810 (Core) Requirement: 1) All of the weather stations are in the 10.200.0.0/16 subnets. 2) Dump messages from each weather station into a single file --- in the example below (which doesnt work) I was trying to push the messages into agmon-log 3) If the message contains the words "SENSORFAIL" send only those messages to another file ag-sensor-fail.log 4) add a carriage return / lf after each message so the log is formatted nicely. Nice to have - Be able to place the messages from each sensor into an individual file based on some patter of their IP address for example 10.200.16.25 could be agmon-16-25.log - richer content editing controls --- if the weather station is unable to get a wind reading it sends "NO WINDINFO" or "BAD WINDINFO" message. i would like to kick off a python process if this message is received --- while logging the message to a file. - If the message contains the words "TEMPDATA=/regexpattern/" would love to log the data to a MARIADB database. Not sure how to look for the regex pattern and if backtick or goup matches apply Can someone please post some snippets or places to look. Brand new to nxlog. The manual is great but needs better more complete examples. Not sure that nxlog is a fit for this and I would like some help to understand if this is the case. Im really trying to wrap my head around inputs and routes so that I can direct messages from specific host / based on content to a distinct location. Also trying to determine how vibrant the nxlog community is along with support. Made the mistake of investing in rsyslog --- didnt work out. ######################################## # Global directives # ######################################## User nxlog Group nxlog LogFile /var/log/nxlog/nxlog.log LogLevel INFO ######################################## # Modules # ######################################## <Extension _syslog> Module xm_syslog </Extension> <Input in1> Module im_udp Port 514 Exec parse_syslog_bsd(); </Input> <Input in2> Module im_tcp Port 514 </Input> <Input in5> Module im_udp Host 10.200.0.0/16; Port 514 Exec parse_syslog_bsd(); </Input> <Output fileout1> Module om_file File "/var/log/logmsg.txt" Exec if $Message =~ /error/ $SeverityValue = syslog_severity_value("error"); Exec to_syslog_bsd(); </Output> <Output fileout2> Module om_file File "/var/log/logmsg2.txt" </Output> <Output fileout5> Module om_file File "/var/log/agmon-log.txt" Exec to_syslog_bsd(); </Output> ######################################## # Routes # ######################################## <Route 1> Path in1 => fileout1 </Route> <Route tcproute> Path in2 => fileout2 </Route> <Route 5> Path in5 => fileout5 </Route>

mrmatthew created
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