Logging
editLogging
editYou can use Elasticsearch’s application logs to monitor your cluster and diagnose issues. If you run Elasticsearch as a service, the default location of the logs varies based on your platform and installation method:
On Docker, log messages go to the console and are handled by the
configured Docker logging driver. To access logs, run docker logs
.
For Debian installations, Elasticsearch writes logs to /var/log/elasticsearch
.
For RPM installations, Elasticsearch writes logs to /var/log/elasticsearch
.
For macOS .tar.gz
installations, Elasticsearch writes logs to
$ES_HOME/logs
.
Files in $ES_HOME
risk deletion during an upgrade. In production, we strongly
recommend you set path.logs
to a location outside of $ES_HOME
.
See Path settings.
For Linux .tar.gz
installations, Elasticsearch writes logs to
$ES_HOME/logs
.
Files in $ES_HOME
risk deletion during an upgrade. In production, we strongly
recommend you set path.logs
to a location outside of $ES_HOME
.
See Path settings.
For Windows .zip
installations, Elasticsearch writes logs to
%ES_HOME%\logs
.
Files in %ES_HOME%
risk deletion during an upgrade. In production, we strongly
recommend you set path.logs
to a location outside of %ES_HOME%`
.
See Path settings.
If you run Elasticsearch from the command line, Elasticsearch prints logs to the standard output
(stdout
).
Logging configuration
editElastic strongly recommends using the Log4j 2 configuration that is shipped by default.
Elasticsearch uses Log4j 2 for
logging. Log4j 2 can be configured using the log4j2.properties
file. Elasticsearch exposes three properties, ${sys:es.logs.base_path}
,
${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}
, and ${sys:es.logs.node_name}
that can be
referenced in the configuration file to determine the location of the log
files. The property ${sys:es.logs.base_path}
will resolve to the log directory,
${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}
will resolve to the cluster name (used as the
prefix of log filenames in the default configuration), and
${sys:es.logs.node_name}
will resolve to the node name (if the node name is
explicitly set).
For example, if your log directory (path.logs
) is /var/log/elasticsearch
and
your cluster is named production
then ${sys:es.logs.base_path}
will resolve
to /var/log/elasticsearch
and
${sys:es.logs.base_path}${sys:file.separator}${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}.log
will resolve to /var/log/elasticsearch/production.log
.
######## Server JSON ############################ appender.rolling.type = RollingFile appender.rolling.name = rolling appender.rolling.fileName = ${sys:es.logs.base_path}${sys:file.separator}${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}_server.json appender.rolling.layout.type = ECSJsonLayout appender.rolling.layout.dataset = elasticsearch.server appender.rolling.filePattern = ${sys:es.logs.base_path}${sys:file.separator}${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}-%d{yyyy-MM-dd}-%i.json.gz appender.rolling.policies.type = Policies appender.rolling.policies.time.type = TimeBasedTriggeringPolicy appender.rolling.policies.time.interval = 1 appender.rolling.policies.time.modulate = true appender.rolling.policies.size.type = SizeBasedTriggeringPolicy appender.rolling.policies.size.size = 256MB appender.rolling.strategy.type = DefaultRolloverStrategy appender.rolling.strategy.fileIndex = nomax appender.rolling.strategy.action.type = Delete appender.rolling.strategy.action.basepath = ${sys:es.logs.base_path} appender.rolling.strategy.action.condition.type = IfFileName appender.rolling.strategy.action.condition.glob = ${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}-* appender.rolling.strategy.action.condition.nested_condition.type = IfAccumulatedFileSize appender.rolling.strategy.action.condition.nested_condition.exceeds = 2GB ################################################
Configure the |
|
Log to |
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Use JSON layout. |
|
|
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Roll logs to |
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Use a time-based roll policy |
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Roll logs on a daily basis |
|
Align rolls on the day boundary (as opposed to rolling every twenty-four hours) |
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Using a size-based roll policy |
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Roll logs after 256 MB |
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Use a delete action when rolling logs |
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Only delete logs matching a file pattern |
|
The pattern is to only delete the main logs |
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Only delete if we have accumulated too many compressed logs |
|
The size condition on the compressed logs is 2 GB |
######## Server - old style pattern ########### appender.rolling_old.type = RollingFile appender.rolling_old.name = rolling_old appender.rolling_old.fileName = ${sys:es.logs.base_path}${sys:file.separator}${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}_server.log appender.rolling_old.layout.type = PatternLayout appender.rolling_old.layout.pattern = [%d{ISO8601}][%-5p][%-25c{1.}] [%node_name]%marker %m%n appender.rolling_old.filePattern = ${sys:es.logs.base_path}${sys:file.separator}${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}-%d{yyyy-MM-dd}-%i.old_log.gz
The configuration for |
Log4j’s configuration parsing gets confused by any extraneous whitespace; if you copy and paste any Log4j settings on this page, or enter any Log4j configuration in general, be sure to trim any leading and trailing whitespace.
Note than you can replace .gz
by .zip
in appender.rolling.filePattern
to
compress the rolled logs using the zip format. If you remove the .gz
extension then logs will not be compressed as they are rolled.
If you want to retain log files for a specified period of time, you can use a rollover strategy with a delete action.
appender.rolling.strategy.type = DefaultRolloverStrategy appender.rolling.strategy.action.type = Delete appender.rolling.strategy.action.basepath = ${sys:es.logs.base_path} appender.rolling.strategy.action.condition.type = IfFileName appender.rolling.strategy.action.condition.glob = ${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}-* appender.rolling.strategy.action.condition.nested_condition.type = IfLastModified appender.rolling.strategy.action.condition.nested_condition.age = 7D
Configure the |
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Configure the |
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The base path to the Elasticsearch logs |
|
The condition to apply when handling rollovers |
|
Delete files from the base path matching the glob
|
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A nested condition to apply to files matching the glob |
|
Retain logs for seven days |
Multiple configuration files can be loaded (in which case they will get merged)
as long as they are named log4j2.properties
and have the Elasticsearch config
directory as an ancestor; this is useful for plugins that expose additional
loggers. The logger section contains the java packages and their corresponding
log level. The appender section contains the destinations for the logs.
Extensive information on how to customize logging and all the supported
appenders can be found on the
Log4j
documentation.
Configuring logging levels
editEach Java package in the Elasticsearch source code has a related logger. For
example, the org.elasticsearch.discovery
package has
logger.org.elasticsearch.discovery
for logs related to the
discovery process.
To get more or less verbose logs, use the cluster
update settings API to change the related logger’s log level. Each logger
accepts Log4j 2’s built-in log levels, from least to most verbose: OFF
,
FATAL
, ERROR
, WARN
, INFO
, DEBUG
, and TRACE
. The default log level is
INFO
. Messages logged at higher verbosity levels (DEBUG
and TRACE
) are
only intended for expert use.
response = client.cluster.put_settings( body: { persistent: { "logger.org.elasticsearch.discovery": 'DEBUG' } } ) puts response
PUT /_cluster/settings { "persistent": { "logger.org.elasticsearch.discovery": "DEBUG" } }
To reset a logger’s verbosity to its default level, set the logger setting to
null
:
PUT /_cluster/settings { "persistent": { "logger.org.elasticsearch.discovery": null } }
Other ways to change log levels include:
-
elasticsearch.yml
:logger.org.elasticsearch.discovery: DEBUG
This is most appropriate when debugging a problem on a single node.
-
log4j2.properties
:logger.discovery.name = org.elasticsearch.discovery logger.discovery.level = debug
This is most appropriate when you already need to change your Log4j 2 configuration for other reasons. For example, you may want to send logs for a particular logger to another file. However, these use cases are rare.
Deprecation logging
editElasticsearch also writes deprecation logs to the log directory. These logs record a message when you use deprecated Elasticsearch functionality. You can use the deprecation logs to update your application before upgrading Elasticsearch to a new major version.
By default, Elasticsearch rolls and compresses deprecation logs at 1GB. The default configuration preserves a maximum of five log files: four rolled logs and an active log.
Elasticsearch emits deprecation log messages at the CRITICAL
level. Those messages
are indicating that a used deprecation feature will be removed in a next major
version. Deprecation log messages at the WARN
level indicates that a less
critical feature was used, it won’t be removed in next major version, but might
be removed in the future.
To stop writing deprecation log messages, set logger.deprecation.level
to OFF
in log4j2.properties
:
logger.deprecation.level = OFF
Alternatively, you can change the logging level dynamically:
response = client.cluster.put_settings( body: { persistent: { "logger.org.elasticsearch.deprecation": 'OFF' } } ) puts response
PUT /_cluster/settings { "persistent": { "logger.org.elasticsearch.deprecation": "OFF" } }
Refer to Configuring logging levels.
You can identify what is triggering deprecated functionality if X-Opaque-Id
was used as an HTTP header.
The user ID is included in the X-Opaque-ID
field in deprecation JSON logs.
{ "type": "deprecation", "timestamp": "2019-08-30T12:07:07,126+02:00", "level": "WARN", "component": "o.e.d.r.a.a.i.RestCreateIndexAction", "cluster.name": "distribution_run", "node.name": "node-0", "message": "[types removal] Using include_type_name in create index requests is deprecated. The parameter will be removed in the next major version.", "x-opaque-id": "MY_USER_ID", "cluster.uuid": "Aq-c-PAeQiK3tfBYtig9Bw", "node.id": "D7fUYfnfTLa2D7y-xw6tZg" }
Deprecation logs can be indexed into .logs-deprecation.elasticsearch-default
data stream
cluster.deprecation_indexing.enabled
setting is set to true.
Deprecation logs throttling
editDeprecation logs are deduplicated based on a deprecated feature key
and x-opaque-id so that if a feature is repeatedly used, it will not overload the deprecation logs.
This applies to both indexed deprecation logs and logs emitted to log files.
You can disable the use of x-opaque-id
in throttling by changing
cluster.deprecation_indexing.x_opaque_id_used.enabled
to false,
refer to this class javadoc for more details.
JSON log format
editTo make parsing Elasticsearch logs easier, logs are now printed in a JSON format.
This is configured by a Log4J layout property appender.rolling.layout.type = ECSJsonLayout
.
This layout requires a dataset
attribute to be set which is used to distinguish
logs streams when parsing.
appender.rolling.layout.type = ECSJsonLayout appender.rolling.layout.dataset = elasticsearch.server
Each line contains a single JSON document with the properties configured in ECSJsonLayout
.
See this class javadoc for more details.
However if a JSON document contains an exception, it will be printed over multiple lines.
The first line will contain regular properties and subsequent lines will contain the
stacktrace formatted as a JSON array.
You can still use your own custom layout. To do that replace the line
appender.rolling.layout.type
with a different layout. See sample below:
appender.rolling.type = RollingFile appender.rolling.name = rolling appender.rolling.fileName = ${sys:es.logs.base_path}${sys:file.separator}${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}_server.log appender.rolling.layout.type = PatternLayout appender.rolling.layout.pattern = [%d{ISO8601}][%-5p][%-25c{1.}] [%node_name]%marker %.-10000m%n appender.rolling.filePattern = ${sys:es.logs.base_path}${sys:file.separator}${sys:es.logs.cluster_name}-%d{yyyy-MM-dd}-%i.log.gz