Information
The rsyslog utility supports the ability to send logs it gathers to a remote log host running syslogd(8) or to receive messages from remote hosts, reducing administrative overhead.
Note: The double "at" sign ( @@ ) directs rsyslog to use TCP to send log messages to the server, which is a more reliable transport mechanism than the default UDP protocol
Storing log data on a remote host protects log integrity from local attacks. If an attacker gains root access on the local system, they could tamper with or remove log data that is stored on the local system
Solution
Edit the /etc/rsyslog.conf and /etc/rsyslog.d/*.conf files and add the following line (where loghost.example.com is the name of your central log host).
*.* @@loghost.example.com
Run the following command to reload the rsyslogd configuration:
# systemctl restart rsyslog