View Tunnel Information in Logs
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Next-Generation Firewall Docs
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- Cloud Management of NGFWs
- PAN-OS 10.0 (EoL)
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- PAN-OS 10.1
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- PAN-OS 11.1 & Later
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- Cloud Management and AIOps for NGFW
- PAN-OS 10.0 (EoL)
- PAN-OS 10.1
- PAN-OS 10.2
- PAN-OS 11.0
- PAN-OS 11.1
- PAN-OS 11.2
- PAN-OS 8.1 (EoL)
- PAN-OS 9.0 (EoL)
- PAN-OS 9.1 (EoL)
View Tunnel Information in Logs
You can view Tunnel Inspection logs themselves
or view tunnel inspection information in other types of logs.
GRE,
Non-Encrypted IPSec, and GTP-U Protocols
- When there is a TCI traffic rule match, GRE, IPSec, and GTP-U protocols are logged in the Tunnel Inspection log with the Tunnel log type, the matched protocol, and the configured Monitor name and Monitor tag (number).
- When there is no TCI rule match, all protocols are logged under Traffic logs.
VXLAN Protocol
- When there is a TCI traffic rule match, VXLAN protocol is logged in the Tunnel Inspection log with the Tunnel (VXLAN) log type, the configured Monitor name, and the Tunnel ID (VNI).In the Traffic log for the inner session, the Tunnel Inspected flag indicates a VNI session. The Parent Session is the session that was active when the inner session was created so the ID might not match the current Session ID.
- When there is no TCI rule match, VNI sessions are logged in Traffic logs with the UDP protocol, source port 0, and destination port 4789 (the default).
- View Tunnel inspection logs.
- Select MonitorLogsTunnel Inspection and view the log data to identify the tunnel Applications used in your traffic and any concerns, such as high counts for packets failing Strict Checking of headers.Click the Detailed Log View (View other logs for tunnel inspection information.
- Select MonitorLogs.Select Traffic, Threat, URL Filtering, WildFire Submissions, Data Filtering, or Unified.For a log entry, click the Detailed Log View (In the Flags window, see if the Tunnel Inspected flag is checked. A Tunnel Inspected flag indicates the firewall used a Tunnel Inspection policy rule to inspect the inside content or inner tunnel. Parent Session information refers to an outer tunnel (relative to an inner tunnel) or an inner tunnel (relative to inside content).On the Traffic, Threat, URL Filtering, WildFire Submissions, Data Filtering logs, only direct parent information appears in the Detailed Log View of the inner session log, no tunnel log information. If you configured two levels of tunnel inspection, you can select the parent session of this direct parent to view the second parent log. (You must monitor the Tunnel Inspection log as shown in the prior step to view tunnel log information.)If you are viewing the log for an inside session that is Tunnel Inspected, click the View Parent Session link in the General section to see the outside session information.