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Mastering Palo Alto Networks

You're reading from   Mastering Palo Alto Networks Deploy and manage industry-leading PAN-OS 10.x solutions to secure your users and infrastructure

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789956375
Length 514 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Tom Piens Aka 'Reaper' Tom Piens Aka 'Reaper'
Author Profile Icon Tom Piens Aka 'Reaper'
Tom Piens Aka 'Reaper'
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: First Steps and Basic Configuration
2. Chapter 1: Understanding the Core Technologies FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Setting Up a New Device 4. Section 2: Advanced Configuration and Putting the Features to Work
5. Chapter 3: Building Strong Policies 6. Chapter 4: Taking Control of Sessions 7. Chapter 5: Services and Operational Modes 8. Chapter 6: Identifying Users and Controlling Access 9. Chapter 7: Managing Firewalls through Panorama 10. Section 3: Maintenance and Troubleshooting
11. Chapter 8: Upgrading Firewalls and Panorama 12. Chapter 9: Logging and Reporting 13. Chapter 10: VPN and Advanced Protection 14. Chapter 11: Troubleshooting Common Session Issues 15. Chapter 12: A Deep Dive into Troubleshooting 16. Chapter 13: Supporting Tools 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

External logging

As well as native logging to Palo Alto Network products, you can also forward logs to syslog servers, email them out, send SNMP traps, or forward to an HTTP server.

To be able to forward logs, we will first need to create server profiles that we can later use when we set up forwarding.

For SNMP, we can create a new profile in Device | Server Profiles | SNMP Trap. Here, we can choose V2c or V3 SNMP compatibility and provide connectivity details of the SNMP server. If ENGINEID is left blank, as in the following screenshot, the firewall will insert its serial number:

Figure 9.7 – SNMP v3 server profile

For syslog, we can create a profile in Device | Server Profiles | Syslog. We have the option of forwarding over UDP, TCP, or SSL. If possible, select SSL as these logs should be considered highly sensitive, and forwarding them as plaintext can generally be considered a bad idea (it could lead to data leaks if intercepted in plaintext...

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