- Table of Contents
-
- 07-System
- 01-High availability group
- 02-VRRP
- 03-Track
- 04-BFD
- 05-NQA
- 06-Basic log settings
- 07-Email server
- 08-Session log settings
- 09-NAT log settings
- 10-AFT log settings
- 11-Sandbox log settings
- 12-Threat log settings
- 13-Application audit log settings
- 14-NetShare log settings
- 15-URL filtering log settings
- 16-Attack defense log settings
- 17-Reputation log settings
- 18-Bandwidth alarm logs
- 19-Configuration log settings
- 20-Security policy log
- 21-Terminal identification logging
- 22-Heartbeat log settings
- 23-WAF log settings
- 24-IP access logs
- 25-MAC access log
- 26-Load balancing logging
- 27-Bandwidth management logs
- 28-Context rate limit logging
- 29-Zero trust logs
- 30-Report settings
- 31-Session settings
- 32-Signature upgrade
- 33-Software upgrade
- 34-License management
- 35-IRF
- 36-IRF advanced settings
- 37-Contexts
- 38-Administrators
- 39-Date and time
- 40-MAC address learning through a Layer 3 device
- 41-SNMP
- 42-Configuration management
- 43-Reboot
- 44-About
- 45-Ping
- 46-Tracert
- 47-Packet capture
- 48-Webpage Diagnosis
- 49-Diagnostic Info
- 50-Packet trace
- 51-Load balancing test
- 52-IPsec diagnosis
- 53-Fast Internet Access
- Related Documents
-
Title | Size | Download |
---|---|---|
10-AFT log settings | 13.27 KB |
AFT log settings
Introduction
AFT session log settings
For security auditing, you can configure AFT logging to record AFT session information. AFT sessions refer to the sessions whose source and destination addresses have been translated by AFT.
AFT session logs can be output only in flow logs. AFT can log the creation and deletion events of AFT sessions.
Port block log settings
If a port block size is specified for a dynamic translation policy in PAT mode, AFT generates a port block log when an AFT session is created or deleted.
Port block logs can be output in system logs or fast logs. By default, port block logs are output in system logs.