Choose your cart
Choose your cart
Receive up to $504 promo credit ($180 w/Welcome Unlimited, $360 w/ 5G Start, or $504 w/5G Do More, 5G Play More, 5G Get More or One Unlimited for iPhone plan (Welcome Unlimited and One Unlimited for iPhone plans can't be mixed w/other Unlimited plans; all lines on the account req'd on respective plans)) when you add a new smartphone line with your own 4G/5G smartphone on an eligible postpaid plan between 2/10/23 and 4/5/23. Promo credit applied over 36 months; promo credits end if eligibility requirements are no longer met.
$699.99 (128 GB only) device payment purchase or full retail purchase w/ new smartphone line on One Unlimited for iPhone (all lines on account req'd on plan), 5G Start, 5G Do More, 5G Play More or 5G Get More plan req'd. Less $699.99 promo credit applied over 36 mos.; promo credit ends if eligibility req’s are no longer met; 0% APR.
Trying to understand "Event-Type" and "Log Level" in Firewall Security Log. Example Event-Types such as "ulogd[883]" (which appear to use a universal log framework) and Log Level of "notice<173>" are not documented in the User Guide at https://www.verizon.com/about/sites/default/files/fios-quantum-router-user-guide-2018.pdf.
Thanks for any pointers.
Solved! Go to Correct Answer
Lots of advanced features are not documented in the User Manual for simplicity's sake.
G1100 logs are compiled from different sources and need to be put into context to make sense of. There's a log pattern for intermittent WAN disconnection, a pattern for PON issue, a pattern for GWR failure, a pattern for DDoS attacks...
ulogd is a logging daemon and is related to the iptables function. Different log levels are for different severities and are useful for alarm detection if you are operating a Syslog receiver. You can stream logs from G1100 in real time too and store them on your local server/computer.
Hello. Welcome to the Forums. You are largely talking to other customers here.
#1 You only need to use their NAT router if:
a) You have FIOS TV One (or maybe I got the wording wrong. Ex FIOS One TV).
b) Or if you need support from them.
#2 But please keep in mind: That info is only base upon what I heard/read as I do and never had FIOS before.
--
So assuming that you do not have FIOS TV, a possible fix/work around is to use your own NAT router and hardy never looking back at their NAT router.
Unknown the exact error but after I searched for "ulogd[883]" with Google, here is the result back:
https://forums.verizon.com/t5/Fios-Internet/Trouble-connecting-with-JetBlue-com/td-p/885270
[EDIT] I also tried to search for ulogd[883] and here is what I got back
https://forums.verizon.com/t5/Fios-Internet/Are-these-hack-attacks-to-my-Quantum-Router/td-p/837970
https://www.reddit.com/r/Fios/comments/awv5ns/quantum_gateway_router_firewall_dropping_packets/
https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/forums/t/610857/firewall-blocking-while-im-online/
https://forums.tomshardware.com/threads/repeated-incoming-connections-from-odd-sources.2352408/
Lots of advanced features are not documented in the User Manual for simplicity's sake.
G1100 logs are compiled from different sources and need to be put into context to make sense of. There's a log pattern for intermittent WAN disconnection, a pattern for PON issue, a pattern for GWR failure, a pattern for DDoS attacks...
ulogd is a logging daemon and is related to the iptables function. Different log levels are for different severities and are useful for alarm detection if you are operating a Syslog receiver. You can stream logs from G1100 in real time too and store them on your local server/computer.