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Show various usage of filters including some useful examples. Signed-off-by: Peter Krempa <pkrempa@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Kashyap Chamarthy <kchamart@redhat.com>
197 lines
6.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
197 lines
6.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
==========
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Debug Logs
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==========
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.. contents::
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Turning on debug logs
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---------------------
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If you `report a bug <https://gitlab.com/libvirt/libvirt/-/issues/new>`__
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against libvirt, in most cases you will be asked to attach debug logs. These
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are bare text files which tracks transition between different states of
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libvirtd, what it has tried to achieve, etc. Because of client -- server schema
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used in libvirt, the logs can be either client or server too. Usually, it's
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server side that matters as nearly all interesting work takes place there.
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Moreover, libvirt catches stderr of all running domains. These can be useful as
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well.
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How to turn on debug logs for libvirt
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Persistent setting
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The daemon configuration files location is dependent on `connection
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URI <https://libvirt.org/uri.html>`__. For ``qemu:///system``:
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- open ``/etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf`` in your favourite editor
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- find & replace, or set these variables:
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::
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# LEGACY SETTINGS PRIOR LIBVIRT 4.4.0 SEE BELOW! #
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log_level = 1
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log_filters="1:qemu 3:remote 4:event 3:util.json 3:rpc"
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log_outputs="1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log"
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::
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# PREFERRED SETTINGS AFTER LIBVIRT 4.4.0 #
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log_filters="3:remote 4:event 3:util.json 3:rpc 1:*"
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log_outputs="1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log"
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- save and exit
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- restart libvirtd service
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::
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systemctl restart libvirtd.service
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In the config variables above, we have set logging level to 1 (debug level), set
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some filters (to filter out noise), e.g. from rpc only warnings (=level 3) and
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above will be reported. The logs are saved into
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``/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log``. Since libvirt **4.4.0** log filters support
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shell globbing, therefore the usage of ``log_level`` is considered deprecated in
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favour of pure usage of ``log_filters``.
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In case you want to get the client logs, you need to set this environment
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variable:
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::
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export LIBVIRT_LOG_OUTPUTS="1:file:/tmp/libvirt_client.log"
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However, when you are using the session mode ``qemu:///session`` or you run the
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``libvirtd`` as unprivileged user you will find configuration file under
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``$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/libvirt/libvirt.conf``.
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Runtime setting
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Debugging anomalies can be very painful, especially when trying to reproduce it
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after the daemon restarts, since the new session can make the anomaly
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"disappear". Therefore, it's possible to enable the debug logs during runtime
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using libvirt administration API. To use it conveniently, there's a virt-admin
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client provided by the libvirt-admin package. Use the package manager provided
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by your distribution to install this package. Once you have it installed, run
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the following as root to see the set of log filters currently being active:
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::
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# virt-admin daemon-log-filters
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Logging filters: 3:remote 4:util.json 4:rpc
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In order to change this set, run the same command as root, this time with your
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own set of filters:
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::
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## LEGACY APPROACH ENUMERATING ALL THE DESIRED MODULES ##
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# virt-admin daemon-log-filters "1:util 1:libvirt 1:storage 1:network 1:nodedev 1:qemu"
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::
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## CURRENT APPROACH USING SHELL GLOBBING ##
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# virt-admin daemon-log-filters "3:remote 4:util.json 4:rpc 1:*"
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Analogically, the same procedure can be performed with log outputs:
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::
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# virt-admin daemon-log-outputs
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Logging outputs: 3:syslog:libvirtd
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# virt-admin daemon-log-outputs "1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log"
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NOTE: It's always good practice to return the settings to the original state
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once you're finished debugging, just remember to save the original sets of
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filters and outputs and restore them at the end the same way as described above.
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Removing filters and outputs
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''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
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It's also possible to remove all the filters and produce an enormous log file,
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but it is not recommended since some of libvirt's modules can produce a large
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amount of noise. However, should you really want to do this, you can specify an
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empty set of filters:
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::
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# virt-admin daemon-log-filters ""
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Logging filters:
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The situation is a bit different with outputs, since libvirt always has to log
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somewhere and resetting the outputs to an empty set will restore the default
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setting which depends on the host configuration, *journald* in our case:
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::
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# virt-admin daemon-log-outputs
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Logging outputs: 1:file:/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log
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# virt-admin daemon-log-outputs ""
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Logging outputs: 2:journald
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What to attach?
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---------------
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Now you should go and reproduce the bug. Once you're finished, attach:
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- ``/var/log/libvirt/libvirtd.log`` or whatever path you set for the daemon
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logs.
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- If the problem is related to a domain named ``$dom`` attach:
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- ``/var/log/libvirt/qemu/$dom.log`` (Or substitute ``qemu`` with whatever
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hypervisor you are using.)
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- The XML configuration of the vm/domain obtained by ``virsh dumpxml $dom``
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- If the problem involves a crash of ``libvirtd`` or any other component, also
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attach the backtrace from the core dump if possible (e.g. using
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``coredumpctl``).
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- If you are asked for client logs, ``/tmp/libvirt_client.log``.
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- Ideally don't tear down the environment in case additional information is
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required.
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Example filter settings
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-----------------------
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Some filter setting suggestions for debugging more specific things. Unless it's
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explicitly stated, these work on libvirt 4.4.0 and later. Please note that some
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of the filters below may not log enough information for filing a proper libvirt
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bug. Usually it's better to log more than less.
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Targetted logging for debugging QEMU VMs
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Specifying only some sections allows for a targetted filter configuration which
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works on all versions and is sufficient for most cases.
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::
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1:libvirt 1:qemu 1:conf 1:security 3:event 3:json 3:file 3:object 1:util
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Less verbose logging for QEMU VMs
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Some subsystems are very noisy and usually not the culprit of the problems. They
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can be silenced individually for a less verbose log while still logging
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everything else. Usual suspects are the JSON code, udev, authentication and such.
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A permissive filter is good for development use cases.
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::
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3:remote 4:event 3:util.json 3:util.object 3:util.dbus 3:util.udev 3:node_device 3:rpc 3:access.accessmanager 3:util.netlink 1:*
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Minimalistic QEMU QMP monitor logging
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This filter logs only QMP traffic and skips most of libvirt's messages.
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::
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2:qemu.qemu_monitor 3:*
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