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A Survey on Distributed Denial of Service Attack Detection
Published in Amit Kumar Tyagi, Ajith Abraham, A. Kaklauskas, N. Sreenath, Gillala Rekha, Shaveta Malik, Security and Privacy-Preserving Techniques in Wireless Robotics, 2022
Syslog stands for System Logging Protocol. Syslog is a standard protocol used to send system logs or event messages to a server, called a Syslog server. Collecting various device logs from a different machine to a central location for monitoring and review process is the primary aim of Syslog. The protocol is enabled on most network equipment such as routers, switches, firewalls. Besides, Syslog is available in some printers, scanners, and Unix, and Linux-based systems. In windows, Syslog is not installed by default; instead windows uses its own windows event logs.
Cybersecurity Incident Response in the Enterprise
Published in Mohiuddin Ahmed, Nour Moustafa, Abu Barkat, Paul Haskell-Dowland, Next-Generation Enterprise Security and Governance, 2022
Nickson M. Karie, Leslie F. Sikos
Syslog:51 Syslog refers to System Logging Protocol. It is a standard protocol used to collect various device logs or event messages from several different machines and send them to a central location Syslog server. The Syslog server then sends diagnostic and monitoring data that can be analyzed for system monitoring, network maintenance, and review.
Migration of industrial process control systems to service-oriented architectures
Published in International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing, 2018
Oscar Carlsson, Jerker Delsing, Fredrik Arrigucci, Armando W Colombo, Thomas Bangemann, Philippe Nappey
The service bus was implemented on two Raspberry Pi devices running the Linux operating system and featuring 512 MB of RAM and 700-MHz ARM CPUs. As illustrated in Figure 15, the main software components of the Service Bus are a pivot data format, a set of connectors acting as external interfaces (DPWS, REST, CoAP, and Modbus), an event module, a time synchronisation (PTP) module, a logging (syslog) module and the AESOP logic, which reproduces the application logic from the existing PLC.