<br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 11/15/07, <b class="gmail_sendername">Johnny Tan</b> <<a href="mailto:linuxweb@gmail.com">linuxweb@gmail.com</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0;margin-left:0.8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
I'm interested in doing centralized logging & analysis of logs from my<br>CentOS boxes.<br><br>I messed around with syslog-ng and it seems like it's a better syslog.<br>But I noticed most of the "usual suspects" of third-party repo
<br>maintainers (Dag, Axel, etc.) don't include it. Karanbir has an el4<br>version, but all my boxes are CentOS 5.<br><br>I was going to go ahead and roll my own RPM (or, rather, rebuild<br>Karanbir's el4 version), but it occurred to me to check what others were
<br>using in this space. Just sticking with plain old syslogd? Paying for<br>splunk? Is there something else I haven't heard about?<br><br>johnn</blockquote><div><br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div><div><br class="webkit-block-placeholder">
</div><div>hi ..johnn you can search for an RPM here <a href="ftp://ftp.silfreed.net/repo/rhel/5/i386/silfreednet/RPMS/">ftp://ftp.silfreed.net/repo/rhel/5/i386/silfreednet/RPMS/</a></div><div>it's for RHEL 5 but should work on centos5 too.. Or just do a search at
<a href="http://rpm.pbone.net">rpm.pbone.net</a></div></div><br clear="all"><br>-- <br><a href="mailto:shibucv@itmission.org">shibucv@itmission.org</a><br>True greatness is measured by how much freedom you give to others, not by how much you can coerce others to do what you want. --Larry Wall