- Apr 26, 2003
- 2,239
- 6
- 81
I'm looking at splunk right now, however it seems almost TOO robust. Really all I want is a way to be notified if someone tries to access important accounts on the domain and fails. I realize that if anyone just mistypes the password you'll get an alert as well, but some alert is better than no alert, especially if you get a pile of them, then you know it might be a hack attempt.
An issue I am also running into is how to get the damn domain machines to log failures anyway, they just don't seem to want to. I have a small OU of computers that I am applying a test GP to, but they just don't seem to want to report anything but successes in the logs. Splunk relies on the logs in order to create its alerts, so suffice to say, Splunk has been an utter failure as of late. But mostly because I can't get the logging in WINDOWS to work. I'm sure it's just something I'm not doing right, or that I'm missing.
Another thing I don't understand is why HIGHER level policies override lower ones. If i understand this correctly, say i set the DEFAULT DOMAIN POLICY, the highest level policy, to NOT log... and then set an OU of machines a little farther in to log both successes and failures... the OU will still follow default?
Additionally, i believe our default domain policy is that all machines log successes and failures, yet, all i see are successes on EVERY machine i look at on the domain. What gives?
*facepalm*
An issue I am also running into is how to get the damn domain machines to log failures anyway, they just don't seem to want to. I have a small OU of computers that I am applying a test GP to, but they just don't seem to want to report anything but successes in the logs. Splunk relies on the logs in order to create its alerts, so suffice to say, Splunk has been an utter failure as of late. But mostly because I can't get the logging in WINDOWS to work. I'm sure it's just something I'm not doing right, or that I'm missing.
Another thing I don't understand is why HIGHER level policies override lower ones. If i understand this correctly, say i set the DEFAULT DOMAIN POLICY, the highest level policy, to NOT log... and then set an OU of machines a little farther in to log both successes and failures... the OU will still follow default?
Additionally, i believe our default domain policy is that all machines log successes and failures, yet, all i see are successes on EVERY machine i look at on the domain. What gives?
*facepalm*
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