The benefit of a mailing list is of course that you can find out if your issue 
is actually a bug before submitting a ticket and having it closed immediately. 
"Hit and run" reporting rarely gets your bug fixed I've found.

Maybe I'm an old "fuddy duddy", but signing up for a mailing list seems to be 
the same as signing up for a forum or any other account. The issue of course is 
it's ongoing and users may not want that. I also prefer mailing lists to 
forums, but that's a different discussion.

--
James Pulver
CLASSE Computer Group
Cornell University

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Michel Käser
Sent: Friday, September 20, 2013 6:20 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ossec-list] Feature Suggestions/Requests


Hi all



Saving time by not telling you how amazing OSSEC is, I'd like to get

straight to the point and suggest some features/improvements for OSSEC.



It might be that some of those were already discussed earlier, some of

them might already be implemented (and I just don't know about them) or

whatever - please excuse those cases.



Suggestions

-----------



1. Daily/weekly/monthly reports



Beside the live alerts, it'd be great to have a configuration option for

mentioned reports.



Example: Allow to send a weekly report/summary of alerts with level X or

higher to address xy.



Well-knowing that most alerts with a level X should be managed

right-away, it'd still be great to have this option. Either for

reflection, just as a summary or people that don't need the live alerts

can still get a summary of what happened within the given time frame

(e.g. your boss want's that or so..)



2. Log file name/location for decoder



I'm not very sure if this is really needed. I however have some very

generic log files that don't contain any app/system name etc. - just the

plain information.



Having a lot of these logs may/can lead to decoder problems (e.g. the

decoder has to be very generic too and it will become hard to write ones

that still extract the right information.



Example: In decoder definition, allow

<log_file>/var/log/auth.log</log_file> so the decoder only is activated

if the message is from given log file.



3. Per distro configuration



OS is already supported and per distro can easily be done using

profiles. Still, I'd like that



4. A public issue tracker



As "jrossi" mentioned on IRC (if I interpreted right) he's thinking

about how to grow the OSSEC (developer) community. Well - personally I

guess a public issue tracker could help.



Mailing lists are awesome, I love them. But...I think a lot of people

are still not very familiar with those. I might be totally wrong (I'm

mainly doing stuff in web development/frontend etc. which is a different

world..somehow more "up-to-date" and focusing on new technologies

(letting open if that's good or not), but still...I think a real

issue/feature tracker could help.



There's a lot of great software out there, so this could be archived

relatively easily.



Main points why:

  - mailing lists may deterrent people

  - mailing lists require more initial work (signing up) where a real

issue tracker just allows you to post (or at least register the "usual"

way) - which I think will lead to more submissions

  - people don't know if a mailing list is the right place for feature

requests/bug reports etc. (some here..I asked on IRC)

  - and actually I'd like to mention an example (I know this is idiotic

and most time you cannot say that things that work for project X do the

same for project Y, but..). I'm somehow active within the ISPConfig

project (it's an open source control panel à la cPanel). It has a forum,

a website, an IRC channel etc. My personal experience is, that the issue

tracker is used very active. Not only by people how are active anyway,

but also by people how just report one bug or something like that. Now -

ask yourself. If you find a little bug in a program/system you're using

(and you could live with it (e.g. if it's not getting fixed)) - would

you prefer subscribing to the mailing list and writing a long mail there

or just posting a little ticket at a public issue tracker.... you see.



I'm totally open for critic and comments and will not become angry if

nothing of these will become reality (of course not) - however, I wanted

to suggest them.



Thanks,

Michel
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