SMTP Events In addition to deferral details launched last week, the activity log now includes detailed SMTP information for delivered messages, too. Each log entry includes a timestamp and the response message we received from the mail server where we tried to deliver the message. These logs help you confirm when a receiving server accepted a message for delivery. They’re also useful for …
Send your first email Configure your DNS and start sending transactional email using Mailchimp Transactional Email (formerly known as Mandrill). Start sending with SMTP Set up sending with SMTP and modify your messages with custom headers.
Set up multiple archives for long-term storage If you want to store your logs for longer periods of time, set up Log Archives to send your logs to a storage-optimized system, such as Amazon S3, Azure Storage, or Google Cloud Storage. When you want to use Datadog to analyze those logs, use Log Rehydration ™ to capture those logs back in Datadog.
For information on sending logs to another location (such as a datastore or remote syslog server), see Configuring syslog on ESXi. For other products and versions, see Location of log files for Broadcom products. For using collecting ESXi diagnostic information using vm-support, see “vm-support” command in ESXi to collect diagnostic information. For information on ESXi shell login and …
Use Storage Analytics to log details about Azure Storage requests. See what requests are logged, how logs are stored, how to enable Storage logging, and more.
View Logs You can view the different log types on the firewall in a tabular format. The firewall locally stores all log files and automatically generates Configuration and System logs by default. To learn more about the security rules that trigger the creation of entries for the other types of logs, see Log Types and Severity Levels.
Sometimes the best way to troubleshoot and operating system, application, or service is to consult the log file(s) that app or service generates as it goes about its business.
I check service status with systemctl status service-name. By default, I see few rows only, so I add -n50 to see more. Sometimes, I want to see full log, from start. It could have 1000s of rows. Now, I check it with -n10000 but that doesn’t look like neat solution. Is there an option to check full systemd service log similar to less command?
Key Takeaways Centralized and automated log management enhances security, streamlines compliance, and provides valuable insights into system activity and user behavior. Adopting best practices — such as consistent log formats, tiered retention policies, and secure, cost-optimized storage — improves the efficiency and effectiveness of log management while meeting compliance mandates …
A complete 2025 guide to Mailchimp Transactional (Mandrill): API vs SMTP, setup, webhooks, deliverability, and best practices to send secure, reliable transactional emails.