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Table of Contents

Overview

We are providing you with the steps to integrate your Palo Alto Firewall- Syslog with Seceon SIEM so One can have Comprehensive visibility and Proactive Threat Detection in your Environment. There will be a log transfer between your firewall to APE(Analytics and Policy Engine) via CCE (Collection and Control Engine ). In this document, we are guiding you through the steps for Log forwarding.


Need to forward traffic logs from the Palo Alto Networks firewall to a syslog server? For reporting, legal, or practical storage reasons, you may need to get these logs off the firewall onto a syslog server. Follow our step-by-step instructions for success. Forwarding logs to a syslog server involves four major steps:

  • Create a syslog server profile.
  • Create a log forwarding profile.
  • Use the log forwarding profile in your security policy.
  • Commit the changes.

Steps of Configuration:

Step 1. Create a syslog server profile

1. Go to Device > Server Profiles > Syslog

syslog_server_profile.png

  • Name: Enter a name for the syslog profile (up to31characters). The name is case-sensitive and must be unique.Use only letters, numbers, spaces, hyphens, and underscores.
  • Location: Enter location.
  • Name: Click Add and enter a name for the syslog server (up to 31characters). The name is case-sensitive andmust be unique. Use only letters, numbers, spaces, hyphens, and underscores.
  • Syslog Server: Enter the IP address of the syslog server. In our case, it will be the CCE ip address.
  • Transport: Select whether to transport the syslog messages over UDP, TCP, or SSL. In our case, it will be UDP
  • Port: Enter the port number 514 of the syslog server. 
  • Format: Specify the syslog format to use: BSD.
  • Facility: Select one of the Syslog standard values. Select the value that maps to how your Syslog server uses the facility field to manage messages. For details on the facility field, seeRFC 3164(BSD format) orRFC 5424(IETF format).

syslog_server_profile_2.png

Your syslog server profile will now be created, as shown in the example below:

syslog_server_profile_3.png

To facilitate the integration with external log parsing systems, the firewall allows you to customize the log format; it also allows you to add custom Key: Value attribute pairs.  Custom formats can be configured under

Device > Server Profiles > Syslog > Syslog Server Profile > Custom Log Format:

custom_log_format.pngImage Modified

Step 2. Create a log forwarding profile
Go to Objects > Log forwarding. Click Add.

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  • Name: Enter a profile name (up to 31 characters). This name appears in the list of log forwarding profiles when defining security policies. The name is case-sensitive and must be unique. Use only letters, numbers, spaces, hyphens, and underscores.
  • Syslog: Select the syslog server profile to specify additional destinations where the traffic log entries are sent.
  • Click 'OK' to confirm your configuration.

log_forwarding_profile_2.png

Your Log Forwarding Profile is now created, as shown in the following example:

log_forwarding_profile_3.pngImage Modified

Step 3. Use the log forwarding profile in your security policy

Go to Policies > Security

security_policy.png

Select the rule for which the log forwarding needs to be applied (Any Allow) in the following example:

security_policy_2.pngImage Modified

Next, go to the Actions tab, select Log Forwarding Profile from the dropdown, and click OK when you are happy with your configuration:

security_policy_rule.pngImage Modified

After clicking OK, you will notice the forwarding icon in the 'Options' column of your security rule:

security_rule_options.pngImage Modified

Step 4. Don't forget to commit your changes when you're finished.

Repeat the same steps for threat logs like we did for traffic here.

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