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ASA 5520 and Syslog help

JG1978
Level 1
Level 1

Hello,

 

I am looking for advice in regards to logging our edge firewall connections.

 

We are running an ASA 5520 and Kiwi Syslog 9.5 on a windows server.

 

I have been running kiwi syslog server 9.5 for a few months and it keeps crashing. I opened a ticket with them and they stated the firewall was sending too many logs (they said kiwi has a 2 million/hour message limit). I believe the amount of logs the firewall was sending is around 2.5-3 million/hour.

 

I am logging level 6-informational. It is my understanding this is the level I would need to see connections build/torn down for internet traffic.

I am really at a loss on what to do about this, is 2 million messages per hour really that high? I have already parsed down the logging as much as possible...

 

I am looking for any advice, suggestions or ideas...... How are other (bigger!!?) companies dealing with this.....thanks in advance!

1 Accepted Solution

Accepted Solutions

Marvin Rhoads
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

I never recommend logging level 6 on an ASA unless you are actively troubleshooting or require it for legal or compliance purposes. Are you going to scan through 50 million messages per day to extract something useful?

If you really need all those messages then they should go to a SIEM or something like Splunk or ELK that is designed to handle that volume of raw data and allow you to do some munging and visualization. You could dump it all into a Unix server like Philip suggests but then you'd have to manage and search through the files manually.

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3 Replies 3

Philip D'Ath
VIP Alumni
VIP Alumni
What not use Ubuntu and the syslog server included with it? Free. Never ran into issues with performance.

Marvin Rhoads
Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame

I never recommend logging level 6 on an ASA unless you are actively troubleshooting or require it for legal or compliance purposes. Are you going to scan through 50 million messages per day to extract something useful?

If you really need all those messages then they should go to a SIEM or something like Splunk or ELK that is designed to handle that volume of raw data and allow you to do some munging and visualization. You could dump it all into a Unix server like Philip suggests but then you'd have to manage and search through the files manually.

HI Marvin,

 

This is a legal compliance issue, we must keep records of internet connections for 1 year. I have considered trying to find just the syslog message ID's that pertain to connections and ignorning everything else.


The other option I am exploring is a SIEM that can handle higher traffic.

 

Either way I appreciate the input!

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