An alert is a priority notification of an event. Any event for which you specifically requested notification appears in the list of alerts, along with errors, warnings, or important informational messages.
Rapid Recovery Core ships with a default set of events that are prioritized as alerts. You can customize the events which appear as alerts by editing the default notification group (or by setting up a new notification group). In addition to these events appearing on the Alerts page, you can change the methods used to notify you by changing your notification options. For more information on changing the events that appear as alerts, or changing notification options, see the topic Understanding event notifications in Rapid Recovery.
Complete the following steps to view alerts specifically for the Rapid Recovery Core, or to view alerts associated with a specific machine.
If you want to view alerts for a specific protected machine, navigate to the Summary page of the specified machine, click the Events menu, and then click Alerts.
The list of alerts is immediately filtered based on the criteria you selected.
For more information, see the following related tasks:
The journal lists all logged events. This list is comprehensive, including both job- and non-job-related events. It includes specific events for which you requested notification. The journal also lists passive events and status events from the Core, the license portal, and so on.
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NOTE: If your environment is set to use repetition reduction, some repeated events may not be logged each time the event occurs. For more information about this feature, see About repetition reduction. |
Complete the following steps to view a journal of all events for the Rapid Recovery Core, or to view a journal of all events for a specific machine.
If you want to view a journal of all events for a specific protected machine, then navigate to the Summary page of the specified machine, click the Events menu, and then click Journal.
The list of events is immediately filtered based on the criteria you selected.
For more information, see the following related tasks:
The events recorded in the Core logs are visible from the Core Console, and fall into three categories: tasks, alerts, and a journal of all logged events.
Regardless of whether you are viewing events for the Core for a specified machine, the default view for events is the Tasks page. By clicking the drop-down menu to the right of the page title, you can select another view of events.
Perform the following steps to view events and navigate between tasks, important alerts, and a journal of all events.
You can view events that pertain to the Core by clicking (Events) from the icon bar.
If you first navigate to a protected or replicated machine, and then select Events from the menu at the top of the page, you can view events for the specified machine.
Regardless of whether you are viewing events for the Core for a specified machine, the default view for events is the Tasks page. Click on the drop-down menu to the right of the Tasks page title to select another view of events.
Option | Description |
---|---|
Task |
A task is a job that the Rapid Recovery Core must perform, such as transferring data in a regularly scheduled backup, or performing a restore from a recovery point. |
Alert |
An alert is a priority notification related to a task or event, such as an error, warning, or important informational message.\ |
Journal |
The journal shows a complete list of all logged events. This list is more comprehensive than the set included in alerts. |
For more information, see the following related tasks:
The Rapid Recovery Core tracks many events, and logs the information for diagnostic and operational purposes.
You can set up notification of specific events. Rapid Recovery lets you choose the method of notification, and the duration of time for which the system should retain a record of those events. With the repetition reduction feature, you can even adjust the frequency for notifying you about the same event.
Jobs and events tracked on the Core are saved by default for 30 days. To change the retention period for tracking events, see Configuring event retention.
You can be notified of events through different methods. The notification methods supported are listed in the following table:
Option type | Description | Default setting |
---|---|---|
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Notifies specified user by email, using SMTP configuration settings in the Core, and based on the email notification template. |
Off |
Windows Event Log |
Logs events using the Windows Event Log API. This log can be read using the Windows Event Viewer or custom applications. |
On |
syslogd |
Logs events intended to be read on a Linux logging server that also supports the syslog message protocol. |
Off |
Toast alert |
When this notification method is selected, messages appear briefly as a pop-up in the lower-right corner of the Rapid Recovery Core. |
On |
SNMP trap |
If you configure the Rapid Recovery Core as an SNMP agent, and this notification method is selected, events are sent to a logging server using the trap number designated in the Notification Options dialog box. |
On |
Notification groups let you specify the types of events for which you want to be notified, and set the notification method.
Rapid Recovery Core requires at least one notification group, and ships with a default group which is automatically applied. You can use the default settings, or you can edit them.
Optionally, you can add and configure additional notification groups. For example, you can use the default group as is, and you can set up another group that uses email notifications.
As another example, you can set up a custom notification group for one type of event (for example, Microsoft Exchange), and send all related notifications to an Exchange administrator.
For more information, see Configuring notification groups.
Email notifications are disabled by default. To sent notifications by email, you must set up an email server, and edit or add a notification group with the Notify by email option enabled. This setting requires you to enter the email address to which the notifications are sent. For more information, see Configuring an email server.
If using an Exchange server, you must set up relay on the server. Otherwise, despite successful email tests, no email notifications are sent. For more information, see your Exchange Server administrator.
The Core uses an email notification template. The template includes a subject line and specific content for the message body. A default email notification template is included. The template identifies the Core and the server host, the date and time of the event, the nature of the event, and error details if relevant. Optionally, you can modify the default template, or revert any customization to restore the default. For more information, see Configuring an email notification template.
You can reduce the number of events of the same type and scope that are logged and visible from the Core Console by using the repetition reduction feature. This feature is enabled by default. You can disable this feature, or you can control the span of time for which events are combined into a single occurrence in the event log. For more information, see About repetition reduction.
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