You can install or upgrade VMware Aria Operations for Logs agents on Windows machines or Linux machines, including machines with third-party log management systems.

Agents collect logs and forward them to the VMware Aria Operations for Logs server. During installation, you can specify parameters for the server, port, and protocol settings or keep the default settings. For the installation instructions, navigate to Log Sources > Agents and click LI Agent.

You can upgrade agents using the same methods you use for installation, or you can use auto-upgrade. Auto-upgrade propagates upgrades to agents when you deploy a new version of VMware Aria Operations for Logs. See Automatic Update for vRealize Log Insight Agents for more information. Upgrade is not available for Linux binary packages.

Hardware Support

To install and run a VMware Aria Operations for Logs agent, your hardware must support the minimum parameters required for hosts or machines that support x86 and x86_64 architecture and MMX, SSE, SSE2, and SSE3 instruction sets.

Platform Support

Operating System Processor Architecture
Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, and Windows 10 x86_64, x86_32
Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2, x86_64, x86_32
Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2016, and Windows Server 2019 x86_64
RHEL 5, RHEL 6, RHEL 7, RHEL 7, and RHEL 9 x86_64, x86_32
SuSE Enterprise Linux (SLES) 11 SP3 and SLES 12 SP1 x86_64
Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, and Ubuntu 18.04 x86_64
VMware Photon, version 1 revision 2, version 2, version 3, and version 4 x86_64

Linux Notes

If you implement a default installation of the VMware Aria Operations for Logs Linux Agent for a user without root privileges, the default configuration might create problems with the data collection. The agent does not log a warning that the subscription to the channel is unsuccessful, and files in the collection do not have read permissions. The message Inaccessible log file ... will try later is repeatedly added to the log. You can comment out the default configuration that is causing the problem or change the user permissions.

If you use an rpm or DEB package to install Linux agents, the init.d script named liagentd is installed as part of the package installation. The bin package adds the script, but does not register it. You can register the script manually.

You can verify that the installation was successful by running the (/sbin/) service liagentd status command.