Cisco Systems Servers Benutzerhandbuch

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Chapter 9      Working with Logging and Reports
Special Logging Attributes
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Cisco Secure ACS 3.0 for Windows 2000/NT Servers User Guide
78-13751-01, Version 3.0
charts or perform queries, such as determining how many hours a user was 
logged in to the network during a given period. For information about how to 
use a CSV file in a third-party application such as Microsoft Excel, please see 
the documentation supplied by the third-party vendor. You can access the 
CSV files either on the Cisco Secure ACS server hard drive or by 
downloading the CSV file from the HTML interface. For more information 
about downloading the CSV file from the HTML interface, see the 
.
ODBC-compliant database tables—ODBC logging enables you to 
configure Cisco Secure ACS to log directly in an ODBC-compliant relational 
database, where it is stored in tables, one table per log. After the data is 
exported to the relational database, you can use the data however you need. 
For more information about querying the data in your relational database, 
refer to the documentation supplied by the relational database vendor.
For information about the formats available for a specific log, see the 
.
Special Logging Attributes
Among the many attributes that Cisco Secure ACS can record in its CSV or 
ODBC logs, a few are of special importance. The following list explains the 
special logging attributes provided by Cisco Secure ACS.
User-defined attributes—These logging attributes appear in the Attributes 
list for any log configuration page. Cisco Secure ACS lists them using their 
default names: Real Name, Description, User Field 3, User Field 4, and User 
Field 5. If you change the name of a user-defined attribute, the default name 
still appears in the Attributes list rather than the new name.
The content of these attributes is determined by the values entered in the 
corresponding fields in the user account. For more information about 
user-defined attributes, see the 
ExtDB Info—If the user is authenticated with an external user database, this 
attribute contains a value returned by the database. In the case of a Windows 
NT/2000 user database, this attribute contains the name of the domain that 
authenticated the user.