Thursday, July 26, 2012

A cappella log management

A curious thought hit me the other day in church; hopefully I can articulate it well enough to be understood – even by me. For those that aren’t familiar there is often full congregational signing as part of the worship service. As you might expect this includes musicians playing various instruments, several folks up on the stage signing as part of the choir, and in the olden days a hymnal in your hands that has the words. I’m going to murder terms but to translate it in my head you have the technical musicians translating symbols on a page of music into sounds on their instruments, the next layer up are the signers who combine the lyrics with the symbols to know how to sing the words, and then you have a presentation layer where the rest of the congregation is able to see the words and take their singing cues from the music and choir. More often than not these days those words are presented on a projector screen without the musical score which works for me since I can’t read that bit anyway. At any rate there is a cumulative layering effect that allows folks like me who aren’t musically inclined or trained to participate. (Is there a musical OSI equivalent?)

The difference a couple weeks ago was the music was done a cappella and only a small number of the choir was singing. While I could see the words on the projector I was much slower to catch on to the “tune.” I and many others didn’t sing as loudly that day (this is a good thing in my case).

So what’s the link you ask? Going through the process of leaving my job to pursue another I have been somewhat introspective in thinking of what I could have done differently to try to explain the need for log management and where that fits into larger discussions of security strategy, incident detection, incident investigation, monitoring, etc. By and large I think the message wasn’t understood the higher you go up the management chain. And while I’m somewhat saddened and disappointed by that fact I’m not going to beat myself up over it. I tried several times and several different ways to communicate the need and why certain paths were better than others not only for immediate needs but also for where that positioned us 6 months, a year, several years down the road.

If you are reading this blog you, like me, can at least at a conceptual level look at something like an incident detection use case and probably see all or at least a lot of what must go into what is required for the alert to be tripped from a log collection perspective, what needs to happen once it goes off, how that use case fits into the larger picture, etc - much like my wife can look at a sheet of music and hear the music in her head. The challenge I pose to us all is - are we communicating our message a cappella in that our audience is perhaps just seeing “the words.” Something to think about the next time you do a presentation perhaps.