EventLog Analyzer collects event logs from distributed Windows hosts or syslogs from distributed Linux and UNIX hosts, Switches and Routers (Cisco). Event log reports are generated in real-time to display important system information across the network.
For event log collection, eventlog analyzer application does not require a separate agent to be installed on each machine from which logs are collected. Rather the agent that collects Windows event log and syslog messages is present as part of the EventLog Analyzer server itself. In this way, eventlog analyzer application performs event log collections task without introducing additional load on the hosts.
EventLog Analyzer collects events generated by Windows and UNIX machines without deploying an agent. Setting up EventLog Analyzer to collect and report on events from a server, is a simple process for both Windows and UNIX systems.
EventLog Analyzer collects logs generated by Cisco Switches and Routers. Setting up the Cisco Switches and Routers to send the syslogs to EventLog Analyzer is simple.
EventLog Analyzer lets you apply event filters on the collected event logs, before storing them in the database. With event filters, you can store only the necessary event logs in the database, making it easier to search for particular events, and optimizing the capacity of the database.
This critical log collection feature ensures that the logs are not lost even during the log collector process down time.
EventLog Analyzer lets you to configure Email alert notification to user(s), in case Log Collector process of EventLog Analyzer goes down. Email alert can be configured to multiple Email IDs.
EventLog Analyzer lets you create host groups to collect and report on specific hosts alone. This is useful when tracking event behavior and system performance for a select group of critical servers.
Create different users to access event logs and generate reports. While Admin users have access to all features, Guest users will only be able to generate reports and retrieve archived event logs.