When you build hardware its logical to try to sell it or push it for solutions
...does mean you have to like it or be involved if you don't need to or want
to
Scott ford
www.identityforge.com
from my IPAD
On Dec 5, 2014, at 11:25 AM, David Crayford dcrayf...@gmail.com wrote:
On
Not really sure that the format matters if you are going to have a self
described layout/format/etc. Sure. Basic legibility is good.. But having
XML json (or something similar) plus a general engine for massive
searches.. Not to get on a band wagon..but Hadoop would do the trick. ;-)
Rob
In
CAAJSdjib6t_m-9iKZOshxHvXBz0=683tfnt-hu4jxfj01wg...@mail.gmail.com,
on 12/05/2014
at 07:22 AM, John McKown john.archie.mck...@gmail.com said:
Hum, I was thinking more of the UNIX syslog daemon stuff.
Which is harder to parse than, e.g., SMF.
Wouldn't including both UTC local time in
-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU] On
Behalf Of Shmuel Metz (Seymour J.)
Sent: Saturday, December 06, 2014 3:49 PM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: thought: z/OS structured logging
In
CAAJSdjib6t_m-9iKZOshxHvXBz0=683tfnt-hu4jxfj01wg
In
caajsdjhqt77sx8xckcezrekvfbmgfo1vouxyd7w7zmn_prh...@mail.gmail.com,
on 12/04/2014
at 08:06 AM, John McKown john.archie.mck...@gmail.com said:
But I've been thinking about the z/OS syslog for some reason
lately. Given what it was originally designed for, review by a
human, it is a decent
On Thu, Dec 4, 2014 at 7:57 PM, Shmuel Metz (Seymour J.)
shmuel+ibm-m...@patriot.net wrote:
snip
And I will admit that my mind has been
corrupted by using Linux too much lately.
Isn't the Linux equivalent to, e.g., SMF, harder to parse?
Hum, I was thinking more of the UNIX syslog daemon
vendor pitch
You might want to take a look at IronStream from Syncsort:
(http://www.syncsort.com/en/Solutions/Mainframe-Solutions/Ironstream
It captures SYSLOG/OPERLOG messages in real time and sends them to a
Splunk server (http://www.splunk.com/) where you can search and report
based on
On Fri, Dec 5, 2014 at 7:25 AM, Art Celestini ibmm...@celestini.com wrote:
vendor pitch
You might want to take a look at IronStream from Syncsort:
(http://www.syncsort.com/en/Solutions/Mainframe-Solutions/Ironstream
It captures SYSLOG/OPERLOG messages in real time and sends them to a
Splunk
snip
I really like some of the new centralized logging systems like
http://logstash.net/. It can handle loads of different sources and sinks and
when you throw in the full power of elasticsearch searching for interesting
data is an order of magnitude more powerful then what we currently have on
On 5/12/2014 11:23 PM, Staller, Allan wrote:
snip
I really like some of the new centralized logging systems like
http://logstash.net/. It can handle loads of different sources and sinks and
when you throw in the full power of elasticsearch searching for interesting
data is an order of
By the way, ISTR the HP product was OPEN-VIEW. There were others players
besides CA and HP in the space as well.
All of the products were predicated on a single log of events (not processed
on z hardware), and were doing more than just logging/storing messages.
As the number of messages
David Crayford wrote:
begin extract
I know it's heresy on this list, but in the distributed world they
would just add another server and/or add more grunt to the network.
/end extract
The granularity of mainframes is of course greater, but additional
storage and CPEs are available. This
On 6/12/2014 12:08 AM, John Gilmore wrote:
David Crayford wrote:
begin extract
I know it's heresy on this list, but in the distributed world they
would just add another server and/or add more grunt to the network.
/end extract
The granularity of mainframes is of course greater, but additional
This is just my mind wandering around loose again. You kind indulgence is
appreciated.
But I've been thinking about the z/OS syslog for some reason lately. Given
what it was originally designed for, review by a human, it is a decent
design. But is it really as helpful as it could be in today's
Hi John,
While I am sure this not exactly what you are dreaming about we do run IBM's
z/Aware with does consume operlogs and provides an api that uses xml.
http://www-01.ibm.com/support/docview.wss?uid=isg24f9114255d7d1f3285257a6a0077c2ca
Doug
On Thu, 4 Dec 2014 08:06:33 -0600, John McKown
John McKown wrote:
This is just my mind wandering around loose again.
Catch it! Catch it! ;-)
( There is an old Afrikaans song 'Catch it!' which says how difficult is it to
catch chicken/pig/sheep/etc. ;-D )
But I've been thinking about the z/OS syslog for some reason lately. Given
what it
On Thu, Dec 4, 2014 at 8:44 AM, Elardus Engelbrecht
elardus.engelbre...@sita.co.za wrote:
snip
And I will admit that my mind has been corrupted by using Linux too much
lately. grin/
Please refresh my mind about how is Linux version of log(s) working?
Well, the normal UNIX syslogd data
While conceptually XML sounds nice, the problem would seem to be the
extreme volume of data involved, millions of messages daily for large
installations. Uncompressed XML is incredibly inefficient in storage
requirements, and compressing/uncompressing XML has processing costs.
From my viewpoint I
, 2014 9:16 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: thought: z/OS structured logging
On Thu, Dec 4, 2014 at 8:44 AM, Elardus Engelbrecht
elardus.engelbre...@sita.co.za wrote:
snip
And I will admit that my mind has been corrupted by using Linux too
much
lately. grin/
Please refresh
My €0.02
The idea of structured logging smells like WIndows Event Log which I
hate deeply.
JSON ans XML are the format which I like in similar manner like the above.
For human and script-powered review we have syslog. Of structured
logging we have SMF which can be exported to XML if someone
I really like some of the new centralized logging systems like
http://logstash.net/. It can handle loads of different sources and sinks
and when you throw in the full power of elasticsearch searching for
interesting data is an order of magnitude
more powerful then what we currently have on
On Fri, 5 Dec 2014 11:15:58 +0800, David Crayford dcrayf...@gmail.com wrote:
I really like some of the new centralized logging systems like
http://logstash.net/. It can handle loads of different sources and sinks
and when you throw in the full power of elasticsearch searching for
interesting data
On 5/12/2014 2:30 PM, Shane Ginnane wrote:
Yeah, but how do you get it there ?. Sysadmins want everything*now*. Not
tomorrow after syslog has been archived off.
Takes us back to the tail syslog thread last month. Surely the Netview (or
whatever) developers must be able to knock up code to push
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