Configure logging

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The logging section of the journalbeat.yml config file contains options for configuring the logging output. The logging system can write logs to the syslog or rotate log files. If logging is not explicitly configured the file output is used.

logging.level: info
logging.to_files: true
logging.files:
  path: /var/log/journalbeat
  name: journalbeat
  keepfiles: 7
  permissions: 0644

In addition to setting logging options in the config file, you can modify the logging output configuration from the command line. See Command reference.

When Journalbeat is running on a Linux system with systemd, it uses by default the -e command line option, that makes it write all the logging output to stderr so it can be captured by journald. Other outputs are disabled. See Journalbeat and systemd to know more and learn how to change this.

Configuration options

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You can specify the following options in the logging section of the journalbeat.yml config file:

logging.to_stderr

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When true, writes all logging output to standard error output. This is equivalent to using the -e command line option.

logging.to_syslog

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When true, writes all logging output to the syslog.

This option is not supported on Windows.

logging.to_eventlog

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When true, writes all logging output to the Windows Event Log.

logging.to_files

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When true, writes all logging output to files. The log files are automatically rotated when the log file size limit is reached.

Journalbeat only creates a log file if there is logging output. For example, if you set the log level to error and there are no errors, there will be no log file in the directory specified for logs.

logging.level

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Minimum log level. One of debug, info, warning, or error. The default log level is info.

debug
Logs debug messages, including a detailed printout of all events flushed. Also logs informational messages, warnings, errors, and critical errors. When the log level is debug, you can specify a list of selectors to display debug messages for specific components. If no selectors are specified, the * selector is used to display debug messages for all components.
info
Logs informational messages, including the number of events that are published. Also logs any warnings, errors, or critical errors.
warning
Logs warnings, errors, and critical errors.
error
Logs errors and critical errors.

logging.selectors

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The list of debugging-only selector tags used by different Journalbeat components. Use * to enable debug output for all components. For example add publish to display all the debug messages related to event publishing. When starting journalbeat, selectors can be overwritten using the -d command line option (-d also sets the debug log level).

logging.metrics.enabled

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If enabled, Journalbeat periodically logs its internal metrics that have changed in the last period. For each metric that changed, the delta from the value at the beginning of the period is logged. Also, the total values for all non-zero internal metrics are logged on shutdown. The default is true.

Here is an example log line:

2017-12-17T19:17:42.667-0500    INFO    [metrics]       log/log.go:110  Non-zero metrics in the last 30s: beat.info.uptime.ms=30004 beat.memstats.gc_next=5046416

Note that we currently offer no backwards compatible guarantees for the internal metrics and for this reason they are also not documented.

logging.metrics.period

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The period after which to log the internal metrics. The default is 30s.

logging.files.path

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The directory that log files are written to. The default is the logs path. See the Directory layout section for details.

logging.files.name

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The name of the file that logs are written to. The default is journalbeat.

logging.files.rotateeverybytes

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The maximum size of a log file. If the limit is reached, a new log file is generated. The default size limit is 10485760 (10 MB).

logging.files.keepfiles

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The number of most recent rotated log files to keep on disk. Older files are deleted during log rotation. The default value is 7. The keepfiles options has to be in the range of 2 to 1024 files.

logging.files.permissions

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The permissions mask to apply when rotating log files. The default value is 0600. The permissions option must be a valid Unix-style file permissions mask expressed in octal notation. In Go, numbers in octal notation must start with 0.

Examples:

  • 0644: give read and write access to the file owner, and read access to all others.
  • 0600: give read and write access to the file owner, and no access to all others.
  • 0664: give read and write access to the file owner and members of the group associated with the file, as well as read access to all other users.

logging.files.interval

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Enable log file rotation on time intervals in addition to size-based rotation. Intervals must be at least 1s. Values of 1m, 1h, 24h, 7*24h, 30*24h, and 365*24h are boundary-aligned with minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, and years as reported by the local system clock. All other intervals are calculated from the unix epoch. Defaults to disabled.

logging.files.rotateonstartup

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If the log file already exists on startup, immediately rotate it and start writing to a new file instead of appending to the existing one. Defaults to true.

logging.json

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When true, logs messages in JSON format. The default is false.

logging.files.redirect_stderr [preview] This functionality is in technical preview and may be changed or removed in a future release. Elastic will work to fix any issues, but features in technical preview are not subject to the support SLA of official GA features.

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When true, diagnostic messages printed to Journalbeat’s standard error output will also be logged to the log file. This can be helpful in situations were Journalbeat terminates unexpectedly because an error has been detected by Go’s runtime but diagnostic information is not present in the log file. This feature is only available when logging to files (logging.to_files is true). Disabled by default.

Logging format

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The logging format is generally the same for each logging output. The one exception is with the syslog output where the timestamp is not included in the message because syslog adds its own timestamp.

Each log message consists of the following parts:

  • Timestamp in ISO8601 format
  • Level
  • Logger name contained in brackets (Optional)
  • File name and line number of the caller
  • Message
  • Structured data encoded in JSON (Optional)

Below are some samples:

2017-12-17T18:54:16.241-0500 INFO logp/core_test.go:13 unnamed global logger

2017-12-17T18:54:16.242-0500 INFO [example] logp/core_test.go:16 some message

2017-12-17T18:54:16.242-0500 INFO [example] logp/core_test.go:19 some message {"x": 1}