synapse/docs/structured_logging.md

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Structured Logging

A structured logging system can be useful when your logs are destined for a machine to parse and process. By maintaining its machine-readable characteristics, it enables more efficient searching and aggregations when consumed by software such as the "ELK stack".

Synapse's structured logging system is configured via the file that Synapse's log_config config option points to. The file must be YAML and contain structured: true. It must contain a list of "drains" (places where logs go to).

A structured logging configuration looks similar to the following:

structured: true

loggers:
    synapse:
        level: INFO
    synapse.storage.SQL:
        level: WARNING

drains:
    console:
        type: console
        location: stdout
    file:
        type: file_json
        location: homeserver.log

The above logging config will set Synapse as 'INFO' logging level by default, with the SQL layer at 'WARNING', and will have two logging drains (to the console and to a file, stored as JSON).

Drain Types

Drain types can be specified by the type key.

console

Outputs human-readable logs to the console.

Arguments:

  • location: Either stdout or stderr.

console_json

Outputs machine-readable JSON logs to the console.

Arguments:

  • location: Either stdout or stderr.

console_json_terse

Outputs machine-readable JSON logs to the console, separated by newlines. This format is not designed to be read and re-formatted into human-readable text, but is optimal for a logging aggregation system.

Arguments:

  • location: Either stdout or stderr.

file

Outputs human-readable logs to a file.

Arguments:

  • location: An absolute path to the file to log to.

file_json

Outputs machine-readable logs to a file.

Arguments:

  • location: An absolute path to the file to log to.

network_json_terse

Delivers machine-readable JSON logs to a log aggregator over TCP. This is compatible with LogStash's TCP input with the codec set to json_lines.

Arguments:

  • host: Hostname or IP address of the log aggregator.
  • port: Numerical port to contact on the host.