It's a tool name so use backticks to format it in monospace. Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Erik Skultety <eskultet@redhat.com>
8.8 KiB
Debug Logs
Turning on debug logs
If you report a bug against libvirt, in most cases you will be asked to attach debug logs. These are bare text files which tracks transition between different states of libvirtd, what it has tried to achieve, etc. Because of client -- server schema used in libvirt, the logs can be either client or server too. Usually, it's server side that matters as nearly all interesting work takes place there. Moreover, libvirt catches stderr of all running domains. These can be useful as well.
Logging settings in libvirt
Log levels
Libvirt log messages are classified into 4 priority levels; the higher the priority level, the less is the volume of produced messages.
The log level setting is controlled by the log_filters
and log_outputs
settings explained in the Log outputs and Log
filters sections respectively.
1: DEBUG
2: INFO
3: WARNING
4: ERROR
For debugging it's necessary to capture the DEBUG
level
entries as the name implies.
Log outputs
Log outputs describe where the log messages are being recorded. The outputs are described by a space-separated list of tuples in the following format:
level:output
level
refers to the minimum priority level of entries
recorded in the output.
output
is one of the following:
file:FILENAME
Logging messages are appended to FILENAME.
journald
Logging goes to the
journald
logging daemon.stderr
Logging goes to the standard error output stream of the libvirt daemon.
syslog:name
Logging goes to syslogd.
name
is used to identify the entries.
The default output on systems running journald
is
3:journald
. Note that journald
can throttle
the amount of logs per process so in order to capture debug logs of a
libvirt daemon should go to a file instead (in addition to theoriginal
logging daemon), e.g.:
"1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log 3:journald"
Log filters
Log filters, as the name suggest, help filtering out messages which
are irrelevant to the cause. The log filters is a space-separated list
of tuples list of tuples using the level:identifier
format.
Each filter defined this way will then limit messages coming from a
module matching the identifier
pattern (accepts globs too)
to the given level
."
As identifier
is based on internal naming of modules,
preferred way of configuring your filters is to start with the Example filter settings.
The rule of thumb here is to have more logs rather than less and miss something important.
Libvirt daemons logging configuration
Persistent setting
The daemon configuration files location is dependent on connection URI. For
qemu:///system
:
- open
/etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
in your favourite editor - find & replace, or set these variables:
log_filters="3:remote 4:event 3:util.json 3:rpc 1:*"
log_outputs="1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log"
- save and exit
- restart libvirtd service
systemctl restart libvirtd.service
Note: Libvirt prior to the libvirt-4.4.0
release didn't support globbing patterns and thus requires more
configuration. See Legacy
(pre-4.4.0) libvirt daemon logging configuration.
However, when you are using the session mode
qemu:///session
or you run the libvirtd
as
unprivileged user you will find configuration file under
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/libvirt/libvirtd.conf
.
Runtime setting
Debugging anomalies can be very painful, especially when trying to
reproduce it after the daemon restarts, since the new session can make
the anomaly "disappear". Therefore, it's possible to enable the debug
logs during runtime using libvirt administration API. To use it
conveniently, there's the virt-admin
client provided by the
libvirt-admin
package. Use the package manager provided by
your distribution to install this package. Once you have it installed,
run the following as root to see the set of log filters currently being
active:
# virt-admin daemon-log-filters
Logging filters: 3:remote 4:util.json 4:rpc
In order to change this set, run the same command as root, this time with your own set of filters:
# virt-admin daemon-log-filters "3:remote 4:util.json 4:rpc 1:*"
Analogically, the same procedure can be performed with log outputs:
# virt-admin daemon-log-outputs
Logging outputs: 3:syslog:libvirtd
# virt-admin daemon-log-outputs "1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log"
NOTE: It's always good practice to return the settings to the original state once you're finished debugging, just remember to save the original sets of filters and outputs and restore them at the end the same way as described above.
Removing filters and outputs
It's also possible to remove all the filters and produce an enormous log file, but it is not recommended since some of libvirt's modules can produce a large amount of noise. However, should you really want to do this, you can specify an empty set of filters:
# virt-admin daemon-log-filters ""
Logging filters:
The situation is a bit different with outputs, since libvirt always has to log somewhere and resetting the outputs to an empty set will restore the default setting which depends on the host configuration, journald in our case:
# virt-admin daemon-log-outputs
Logging outputs: 1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log
# virt-admin daemon-log-outputs ""
Logging outputs: 2:journald
Legacy (pre-4.4.0) libvirt daemon logging configuration
Old libvirt versions didn't support globbing (e.g. 1:*
)
to configure logging, thus it's required to explicitly set logging level
to 1 (debug level) with the log_level
setting and then
filter out the noise with a tailored log log_filters
string.
# LEGACY SETTINGS PRIOR LIBVIRT 4.4.0
log_level = 1
log_filters="1:qemu 3:remote 4:event 3:util.json 3:rpc"
log_outputs="1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log"
Or using virt-admin
:
## LEGACY APPROACH ENUMERATING ALL THE DESIRED MODULES ##
# virt-admin daemon-log-filters "1:util 1:libvirt 1:storage 1:network 1:nodedev 1:qemu"
Client library logging
By default the client library doesn't produce any logs and usually usually it's not very interesting on its own anyway.
In case you want to get the client logs, logging is controlled via
the LIBVIRT_LOG_OUTPUTS
and
LIBVIRT_LOG_FILTERS
environment variables. Generally when
client logs are needed make sure you don't filter them:
export LIBVIRT_LOG_OUTPUTS="1:file:/tmp/libvirt_client.log"
What to attach?
Now you should go and reproduce the bug. Once you're finished, attach:
/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log
or whatever path you set for the daemon logs.- If the problem is related to a domain named
$dom
attach:/var/log/libvirt/qemu/$dom.log
(Or substituteqemu
with whatever hypervisor you are using.)- The XML configuration of the vm/domain obtained by
virsh dumpxml $dom
- If the problem involves a crash of
libvirtd
or any other component, also attach the backtrace from the core dump if possible (e.g. usingcoredumpctl
). - If you are asked for client logs,
/tmp/libvirt_client.log
. - Ideally don't tear down the environment in case additional information is required.
Example filter settings
Some filter setting suggestions for debugging more specific things. Unless it's explicitly stated, these work on libvirt 4.4.0 and later. Please note that some of the filters below may not log enough information for filing a proper libvirt bug. Usually it's better to log more than less.
Targeted logging for debugging QEMU VMs
Specifying only some sections allows for a targeted filter configuration which works on all versions and is sufficient for most cases.
1:libvirt 1:qemu 1:conf 1:security 3:event 3:json 3:file 3:object 1:util
Less verbose logging for QEMU VMs
Some subsystems are very noisy and usually not the culprit of the problems. They can be silenced individually for a less verbose log while still logging everything else. Usual suspects are the JSON code, RPC, authentication and such. A permissive filter is good for development use cases.
3:remote 4:event 3:util.json 3:util.object 3:util.dbus 3:util.netlink 3:node_device 3:rpc 3:access 1:*
Minimalistic QEMU QMP monitor logging
This filter logs only QMP traffic and skips most of libvirt's messages.
2:qemu.qemu_monitor 3:*