Morning Stevo. This is easy to accomplish. Host A: originating host (192.168.1.1 for the sake of example) Host B: relay (192.168.1.2 for example) Host C: destination (192.168.1.3 same) A in this case would be your router. Have C listen on a port, I'm assuming UDP here, as most routers tend to be. 6000 is just an example, use whatever you want. C: source src { udp( ip(6000)); } It will probably be tidier to set up a dedicated port to gather the router logs, so create a new source on B. B: source src { udp( ip(6000)); } and create a new destination for the logs to go to, which as you probably guessed will be the ip and port of C. destination { udp("192.168.1.3" port(6000)); } then just set up a log line with whatever filters you want to use. It should work fine. There may be errors in syntax as I'm writing this in a rush before I run off to do some work. Hope not. mark On Thu, Aug 12, 2004 at 02:23:17PM -0700, Stevo wrote:
Hi Team,
I currently use Syslog-NG to receive all my router syslog messages. Is there a way I can forward these messages on to another syslog server as well??
Stevo