-
"Signed syslog Messages", John Kelsey, 4-Oct-07. ( bytes)
- This document describes a mechanism to add origin authentication,
message integrity, replay resistance, message sequencing, and
detection of missing messages to the transmitted syslog messages.
This specification is intended to be used in conjunction with the
work defined in RFC xxxx, "The syslog Protocol".
-
"The syslog Protocol", Rainer Gerhards, 6-Sep-07. ( bytes)
- This document describes the syslog protocol, which is used to convey
event notification messages. This protocol utilizes a layered
architecture, which allows the use of any number of transport
protocols for transmission of syslog messages. It also provides a
message format that allows vendor-specific extensions to be provided
in a structured way.
This document has been written with the original design goals for
traditional syslog in mind. The reason for a new layered
specification has arisen because standardization efforts for reliable
and secure syslog extensions suffer from the lack of a standards-
track and transport independent RFC. Without this document, each
other standard needs to define its own syslog packet format and
transport mechanism, which over time will introduce subtle
compatibility issues. This document tries to provide a foundation
that syslog extensions can build on. This layered architecture
approach also provides a solid basis that allows code to be written
once for each syslog feature rather than once for each transport.
This document obsoletes RFC3164.
-
"Transmission of syslog messages over UDP", Anton Okmianski, 5-Sep-07. ( bytes)
- This document describes the transport for syslog messages over UDP/
IPv4 or UDP/IPv6. The syslog protocol layered architecture provides
for support of any number of transport mappings. However, for
interoperability purposes, syslog protocol implementers are required
to support this transport mapping.
-
"TLS Transport Mapping for Syslog", Miao Fuyou, Ma Yuzhi, Joseph Salowey, 18-Jun-08. ( bytes)
- This document describes the use of Transport Layer Security (TLS) to
provide a secure connection for the transport of syslog messages.
This document describes the security threats to syslog and how TLS
can be used to counter such threats.
-
"Textual Conventions for Syslog Management", Glenn Mansfield, 22-May-08. ( bytes)
- This MIB module defines textual conventions to represent
Facility and Severity information commonly used in syslog messages.
The intent is that these textual conventions will be imported and
used in MIB modules that would otherwise define their own
representations.
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