Rainer Gerhards

Rainer Gerhards (born March 11, 1967) is a German software engineer, network engineer, and protocol designer best known for his Computer data logging work including Rsyslog and Reliable Event Logging Protocol. He began developing Rsyslog in 2004, to forward log messages in an Internet Protocol Network from UNIX and Unix-like computer systems. In 1988, Gerhards founded the company RG Informationssysteme, which was later rebranded as Adiscon GmbH in 1997.[1]

Rainer Gerhards
Born (1967-03-11) March 11, 1967
EducationFernuniversität Hagen
OccupationSoftware Engineer
EmployerAdiscon GmbH
Known forrsyslog, syslog RFCs
TitleChief Software Architect

Life and career

Gerhards was born in Geilenkirchen, Germany. In 1983 he started professional computing on Univac 1100 mainframes. He was appointed as the head of data center of Dörries GmbH (member of Voith group) where he introduced a company-wide PC network and was among the first in Germany to utilize Windows in larger-scale environments.[2] In 1996, he started work on Computer data logging, and developing network and protocol software based on it.

Protocol Design

Gerhards focused on the IETF syslog standardization and authored four RFCs [3] on syslog. He wrote the base RFC 5424, which describes the syslog protocol architecture and stack. As a board member of Mitre's CEE effort, he worked on standardizing event expression formats and providing interoperability between different logging systems.

He used his software projects as testbeds for IETF standardization including rsyslog for the development of RFC 5424, RFC 5425,[4] and RFC 5426. He implemented RFC 3195, the syslog over RFC 3080 protocol. Later, Gerhards designed the Reliable Event Logging Protocol, and its predecessor Simple Event Transport Protocol (SETP).

Open Source Projects

In 2004, he started working on rsyslog project and later on other open source logging projects, including Project Lumberjack,[5] Adiscon LogAnalyzer, liblogging, and librelp on Linux system logging infrastructure. From 1988, he had started working on the open source projects during his early career. He wrote a library for portable graphics as well as a portable data exchange tool (cugcpio) and released it as public domain software.[6] This code was distributed on Diskette by the C User's Group.

Closed Source Projects

In 1996, Gerhards wrote the first syslog server for Windows,[7] that was launched by his company, Adiscon. In 1997 he wrote the first ever Windows Event Log to syslog forwarding tool [8] and invented this class of software. The tool EventReporter never made a prominent share in the market, but was a base for Gerhards and other developers to create similar tools. While developing this tool further, Gerhards designed a forwarding tool for Microsoft Internet Information Server log files, based on a paper[9] by him and Dr. Tina Bird.

gollark: Yep!
gollark: The point is that for one hashed input you always have the same output, so you can compare values without storing what they originally were.
gollark: Encryption means you can encrypt something with a key then decrypt it with that key (symmetric encryption, anyway), hashing means that you irreversibly convert it to a different value.
gollark: It's not encrypted, it's hashed.
gollark: Well, you probably would have to connect up to an external database somehow, yes.

References

  1. "About Adiscon". Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  2. Gerhards, Rainer (1992). "Geschichte einer Windows-Einführung", proc. of "PC im Maschinenbau". VDMA.
  3. "Rainer Gerhards Data". Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  4. "syslog-transport-tls-12+ implementation report". Retrieved 9 May 2013.
  5. "lumberjack". Retrieved 9 May 2013.
  6. "Using Header Files to Enhance Portability". Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  7. "Syslog Server for Windows Released". Retrieved 9 May 2013.
  8. "EvntSLog 1.0 Released". Retrieved 9 May 2013.
  9. "Remotely monitoring IIS Log Files" (PDF). Retrieved 9 May 2013.
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