For detailed information about syslog-ng Premium Edition (syslog-ng PE) versions and releases, visit the Product Life Cycle table on the Product Support site for syslog-ng PE.
Buying a syslog-ng Premium Edition (syslog-ng PE) license permits you to perform the following:
Install one instance of the syslog-ng PE application in server mode to a single host. This host acts as the central log server of the network. You have to install the license file only on this host.
Install the syslog-ng PE application in relay or client mode on host computers within your organization (on any supported platform). You cannot redistribute the application to third parties. The total number of hosts permitted to run syslog-ng in relay or client mode is limited by the syslog-ng PE license. The client and relay hosts may use any operating system supported by syslog-ng PE. For details, see the Supported platforms in syslog-ng Premium Edition page.
The syslog-ng Premium Edition license determines the number of individual hosts (also called log source hosts) that can send log messages to syslog-ng PE.
License grants and legal restrictions are fully described in the Software Transaction, License and End User License Agreements. Note that the EULA and the syslog-ng Premium Edition Product Guide apply only to scenarios where the Licensee (the organization who has purchased the product) is the end user of the product. In any other scenario — for example, if you want to offer services provided by syslog-ng Premium Edition to your customers in an OEM or a Managed Service Provider (MSP) scenario — you have to negotiate the exact terms and conditions with One Identity.
A Log Source Host (LSH) is any host, server, or device (including virtual machines, active or passive networking devices, syslog-ng clients and relays, and so on) that is capable of sending log messages. Log Source Hosts are identified by their IP addresses, so virtual machines and vhosts are separately counted.
The syslog-ng Premium Edition application has three distinct modes of operation: Client, Relay, and Server.
In Client mode syslog-ng Premium Edition collects local logs generated by the host it is running on, and forwards them through a network connection to the central syslog-ng PE server, a relay, or another network destination. If you install the syslog-ng Premium Edition application in Client mode on a host, it counts as a Log Source Host, even if it does not send log messages to a syslog-ng Premium Edition server.
In Relay mode syslog-ng Premium Edition receives logs through the network from Log Source Hosts and forwards them to the central syslog-ng PE server, a relay, or another network destination. If you install the syslog-ng Premium Edition application in Relay mode on a host, it counts as a Log Source Host, even if it does not send log messages to a syslog-ng Premium Edition server.
Relays cannot store the received log messages in local files, except for the log messages of the relay host. Naturally, relays can use disk-based buffering for every message.
In Server mode syslog-ng Premium Edition acts as a central log-collecting server that receives messages through a network connection, and stores them locally, or forwards them to other destinations or external systems (for example, a SIEM or a database). Installing the syslog-ng Premium Edition application in Server mode requires a license file, this license file determines the number of Log Source Hosts that can send log messages to the syslog-ng Premium Edition server.
Note that the number of source hosts is important, not the number of hosts that directly sends messages to syslog-ng Premium Edition: every host that send messages to the server (directly or using a relay) counts as a Log Source Host.
Table 2.1. Modes of operation in syslog-ng PE
Client mode | Relay mode | Server mode | |
---|---|---|---|
Collect the local logs of the host | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Forward local logs over the network | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Store local messages in local files | ✔ | ✔ | ✔ |
Receive logs over the network | no | ✔ | ✔ |
Forward received logs over the network | no | ✔ | ✔ |
Store received logs in local files | no | no | ✔ |
Forward logs using special destinations (for example, databases) | no | no | ✔ |
Requires license file | no | no | ✔ |
Example 2.1. A simple example
Scenario:
You want to install syslog-ng PE in server mode on a log server.
45 servers with syslog-ng PE installed in client mode send logs to the syslog-ng PE log server.
45 networks devices without syslog-ng PE installed send logs to the syslog-ng PE log server.
License requirements: You need a syslog-ng Premium Edition license for at least 100 Log Source Host (LSH) as there are 90 LSHs (45+45=90) in this scenario.
Example 2.2. High Availability (HA) cluster
Scenario:
You want to install syslog-ng PE in server mode on two hosts that run as an active-passive high-availability cluster.
45 servers with syslog-ng PE installed in client mode send logs to the syslog-ng PE log server.
45 networks devices without syslog-ng PE installed send logs to the syslog-ng PE log server.
License requirements: You need a syslog-ng Premium Edition license for at least 100 Log Source Host (LSH) as there are 90 LSHs (45+45=90) in this scenario. You also need a High Availability (HA) license for the passive log server.
Example 2.3. Using alternative log servers with syslog-ng PE clients
Scenario:
You want to install syslog-ng PE in server mode on a log server.
45 servers with syslog-ng PE installed in client mode send logs to the syslog-ng PE log server.
45 networks devices without syslog-ng PE installed send logs to the syslog-ng PE log server.
100 servers with syslog-ng PE installed send log messages to a log server without syslog-ng PE installed.
License requirements: You need a syslog-ng Premium Edition license for at least 200 LSHs as there are 190 LSHs (45+45 that send logs to a syslog-ng PE log server, and another 100 that run syslog-ng PE, 45+45+100=190) in this scenario.
Example 2.4. Using syslog-ng PE relays
Scenario:
You want to install syslog-ng PE in server mode on a log server.
45 servers with syslog-ng PE installed in client mode send logs directly to the syslog-ng PE log server.
5 servers with syslog-ng PE installed in relay mode send logs to the syslog-ng PE log server.
Every syslog-ng PE relay receives logs from 9 networks devices without syslog-ng PE installed (a total of 45 devices).
100 servers with syslog-ng PE installed send log messages to a log server without syslog-ng PE installed.
License requirements: You need syslog-ng Premium Edition license for at least 200 LSH as there are 195 LSHs (45+5+(5*9)+100=195) in this scenario.
Example 2.5. Multiple facilities
You have two facilities (for example data centers or server farms). Facility 1 has 75 AIX servers and 20 Microsoft Windows hosts, Facility 2 has 5 HP-UX servers and 40 Debian servers. That is 140 hosts altogether.
|
NOTE:
If, for example, the 40 Debian servers at Facility 2 are each running 3 virtual hosts, then the total number of hosts at Facility 2 is 125, and the license sizes in the following examples should be calculated accordingly. |
Scenario: The log messages are collected to a single, central syslog-ng PE log server.
License requirements: You need a syslog-ng Premium Edition license for 150 LSH as there are 140 LSHs (75+20+5+40) in this scenario.
Scenario: Each facility has its own syslog-ng PE log server, and there is no central log server.
License requirements: You need two separate licenses: a license for at least 95 LSHs (75+20) at Facility 1, and a license for at least 45 LSHs (5+40) at Facility 2. You need a license for 100 LSHs at Facility 1, and a license for 50 LSHs at Facility 2.
Scenario: The log messages are collected to a single, central syslog-ng PE log server. Facility 1 and 2 each have a syslog-ng PE relay that forwards the log messages to the central syslog-ng PE log server.
License requirements: You need a syslog-ng Premium Edition license for 150 LSH as there are 142 LSHs (1+75+20+1+5+40) in this scenario (since the relays are also counted as an LSH).
Scenario: Each facility to has its own local syslog-ng PE log server, and there is also a central syslog-ng PE log server that collects every log message independently from the two local log servers.
License requirements: You need three separate licenses. A syslog-ng Premium Edition a license for at least 95 LSHs (75+20) at Facility 1, a license for at least 45 LSHs (5+40) at Facility 2, and also a license for at least 147 LSHs for the central syslog-ng Premium Edition log server (assuming that you want to collect the logs of the local log servers as well).
Starting with version 4 F1, the syslog-ng Premium Edition application is based on the syslog-ng Open Source Edition application, and includes elements that are licensed under the LGPL or GPL licenses. You can download the core of syslog-ng PE here. The components located under the /lib
directory are licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2.1 license, while the rest of the codebase is licensed under the GNU General Public License Version 2 license. External libraries and other dependencies used by syslog-ng PE have their own licenses, typically GPL, LGPL, MIT, or BSD.
Appendix C, Open source licenses includes the text of the licenses applicable to syslog-ng Premium Edition.
Multiple syslog-ng servers can be run in fail-over mode. The syslog-ng application does not include any internal support for this, as clustering support must be implemented on the operating system level. A tool that can be used to create UNIX clusters is Heartbeat (for details, see this page).
One Identity also has a log server appliance called syslog-ng Store Box that supports high-availability. For details, see the syslog-ng Store Box Product Page.
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