Log system (FREE SELF)
GitLab has an advanced log system where everything is logged, so you can analyze your instance using various system log files. The log system is similar to audit events.
System log files are typically plain text in a standard log file format. This guide talks about how to read and use these system log files.
Read more about the log system and using the logs:
- Customize logging on Omnibus GitLab installations including adjusting log retention, log forwarding, switching logs from JSON to plain text logging, and more.
- How to parse and analyze JSON logs.
Log Levels
Each log message has an assigned log level that indicates its importance and verbosity. Each logger has an assigned minimum log level. A logger emits a log message only if its log level is equal to or above the minimum log level.
The following log levels are supported:
Level | Name |
---|---|
0 | DEBUG |
1 | INFO |
2 | WARN |
3 | ERROR |
4 | FATAL |
5 | UNKNOWN |
GitLab loggers emit all log messages because they are set to DEBUG
by default.
Override default log level
You can override the minimum log level for GitLab loggers using the GITLAB_LOG_LEVEL
environment variable.
Valid values are either a value of 0
to 5
, or the name of the log level.
Example:
GITLAB_LOG_LEVEL=info
For some services, other log levels are in place that are not affected by this setting. Some of these services have their own environment variables to override the log level. For example:
Service | Log level | Environment variable |
---|---|---|
GitLab API | INFO |
|
GitLab Cleanup | INFO |
DEBUG |
GitLab Doctor | INFO |
VERBOSE |
GitLab Export | INFO |
EXPORT_DEBUG |
GitLab Geo | INFO |
|
GitLab Import | INFO |
IMPORT_DEBUG |
GitLab QA Runtime | INFO |
QA_LOG_LEVEL |
Google APIs | INFO |
|
Rack Timeout | ERROR |
|
Sidekiq (server) | INFO |
|
Snowplow Tracker | FATAL |
|
gRPC Client (Gitaly) | WARN |
GRPC_LOG_LEVEL |
Log Rotation
The logs for a given service may be managed and rotated by:
logrotate
-
svlogd
(runit
's service logging daemon) -
logrotate
andsvlogd
- Or not at all
The following table includes information about what's responsible for managing and rotating logs for
the included services. Logs
managed by svlogd
are written to a file called current
. The logrotate
service built into GitLab
manages all logs
except those captured by runit
.
Log type | Managed by logrotate | Managed by svlogd/runit |
---|---|---|
Alertmanager logs | {dotted-circle} No | {check-circle} Yes |
crond logs | {dotted-circle} No | {check-circle} Yes |
Gitaly | {check-circle} Yes | {check-circle} Yes |
GitLab Exporter for Omnibus | {dotted-circle} No | {check-circle} Yes |
GitLab Pages logs | {check-circle} Yes | {check-circle} Yes |
GitLab Rails | {check-circle} Yes | {dotted-circle} No |
GitLab Shell logs | {check-circle} Yes | {dotted-circle} No |
Grafana logs | {dotted-circle} No | {check-circle} Yes |
LogRotate logs | {dotted-circle} No | {check-circle} Yes |
Mailroom | {check-circle} Yes | {check-circle} Yes |
NGINX | {check-circle} Yes | {check-circle} Yes |
PostgreSQL logs | {dotted-circle} No | {check-circle} Yes |
Praefect logs | {dotted-circle} Yes | {check-circle} Yes |
Prometheus logs | {dotted-circle} No | {check-circle} Yes |
Puma | {check-circle} Yes | {check-circle} Yes |
Redis logs | {dotted-circle} No | {check-circle} Yes |
Registry logs | {dotted-circle} No | {check-circle} Yes |
Workhorse logs | {check-circle} Yes | {check-circle} Yes |
production_json.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/production_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/production_json.log
It contains a structured log for Rails controller requests received from
GitLab, thanks to Lograge.
Requests from the API are logged to a separate file in api_json.log
.
Each line contains JSON that can be ingested by services like Elasticsearch and Splunk. Line breaks were added to examples for legibility:
{
"method":"GET",
"path":"/gitlab/gitlab-foss/issues/1234",
"format":"html",
"controller":"Projects::IssuesController",
"action":"show",
"status":200,
"time":"2017-08-08T20:15:54.821Z",
"params":[{"key":"param_key","value":"param_value"}],
"remote_ip":"18.245.0.1",
"user_id":1,
"username":"admin",
"queue_duration_s":0.0,
"gitaly_calls":16,
"gitaly_duration_s":0.16,
"redis_calls":115,
"redis_duration_s":0.13,
"redis_read_bytes":1507378,
"redis_write_bytes":2920,
"correlation_id":"O1SdybnnIq7",
"cpu_s":17.50,
"db_duration_s":0.08,
"view_duration_s":2.39,
"duration_s":20.54,
"pid": 81836,
"worker_id":"puma_0"
}
This example was a GET request for a specific issue. Each line also contains performance data, with times in seconds:
-
duration_s
: Total time to retrieve the request -
queue_duration_s
: Total time the request was queued inside GitLab Workhorse -
view_duration_s
: Total time inside the Rails views -
db_duration_s
: Total time to retrieve data from PostgreSQL -
cpu_s
: Total time spent on CPU -
gitaly_duration_s
: Total time by Gitaly calls -
gitaly_calls
: Total number of calls made to Gitaly -
redis_calls
: Total number of calls made to Redis -
redis_cross_slot_calls
: Total number of cross-slot calls made to Redis -
redis_allowed_cross_slot_calls
: Total number of allowed cross-slot calls made to Redis -
redis_duration_s
: Total time to retrieve data from Redis -
redis_read_bytes
: Total bytes read from Redis -
redis_write_bytes
: Total bytes written to Redis -
redis_<instance>_calls
: Total number of calls made to a Redis instance -
redis_<instance>_cross_slot_calls
: Total number of cross-slot calls made to a Redis instance -
redis_<instance>_allowed_cross_slot_calls
: Total number of allowed cross-slot calls made to a Redis instance -
redis_<instance>_duration_s
: Total time to retrieve data from a Redis instance -
redis_<instance>_read_bytes
: Total bytes read from a Redis instance -
redis_<instance>_write_bytes
: Total bytes written to a Redis instance -
pid
: The worker's Linux process ID (changes when workers restart) -
worker_id
: The worker's logical ID (does not change when workers restart)
User clone and fetch activity using HTTP transport appears in the log as action: git_upload_pack
.
In addition, the log contains the originating IP address,
(remote_ip
), the user's ID (user_id
), and username (username
).
Some endpoints (such as /search
) may make requests to Elasticsearch if using
advanced search. These
additionally log elasticsearch_calls
and elasticsearch_call_duration_s
,
which correspond to:
-
elasticsearch_calls
: Total number of calls to Elasticsearch -
elasticsearch_duration_s
: Total time taken by Elasticsearch calls -
elasticsearch_timed_out_count
: Total number of calls to Elasticsearch that timed out and therefore returned partial results
ActionCable connection and subscription events are also logged to this file and they follow the
previous format. The method
, path
, and format
fields are not applicable, and are always empty.
The ActionCable connection or channel class is used as the controller
.
{
"method":null,
"path":null,
"format":null,
"controller":"IssuesChannel",
"action":"subscribe",
"status":200,
"time":"2020-05-14T19:46:22.008Z",
"params":[{"key":"project_path","value":"gitlab/gitlab-foss"},{"key":"iid","value":"1"}],
"remote_ip":"127.0.0.1",
"user_id":1,
"username":"admin",
"ua":"Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:76.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/76.0",
"correlation_id":"jSOIEynHCUa",
"duration_s":0.32566
}
NOTE:
Starting with GitLab 12.5, if an error occurs, an
exception
field is included with class
, message
, and
backtrace
. Previous versions included an error
field instead of
exception.class
and exception.message
. For example:
{
"method": "GET",
"path": "/admin",
"format": "html",
"controller": "Admin::DashboardController",
"action": "index",
"status": 500,
"time": "2019-11-14T13:12:46.156Z",
"params": [],
"remote_ip": "127.0.0.1",
"user_id": 1,
"username": "root",
"ua": "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.14; rv:70.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/70.0",
"queue_duration": 274.35,
"correlation_id": "KjDVUhNvvV3",
"queue_duration_s":0.0,
"gitaly_calls":16,
"gitaly_duration_s":0.16,
"redis_calls":115,
"redis_duration_s":0.13,
"correlation_id":"O1SdybnnIq7",
"cpu_s":17.50,
"db_duration_s":0.08,
"view_duration_s":2.39,
"duration_s":20.54,
"pid": 81836,
"worker_id": "puma_0",
"exception.class": "NameError",
"exception.message": "undefined local variable or method `adsf' for #<Admin::DashboardController:0x00007ff3c9648588>",
"exception.backtrace": [
"app/controllers/admin/dashboard_controller.rb:11:in `index'",
"ee/app/controllers/ee/admin/dashboard_controller.rb:14:in `index'",
"ee/lib/gitlab/ip_address_state.rb:10:in `with'",
"ee/app/controllers/ee/application_controller.rb:43:in `set_current_ip_address'",
"lib/gitlab/session.rb:11:in `with_session'",
"app/controllers/application_controller.rb:450:in `set_session_storage'",
"app/controllers/application_controller.rb:444:in `set_locale'",
"ee/lib/gitlab/jira/middleware.rb:19:in `call'"
]
}
production.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/production.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/production.log
It contains information about all performed requests. You can see the URL and type of request, IP address, and what parts of code were involved to service this particular request. Also, you can see all SQL requests performed, and how much time each took. This task is more useful for GitLab contributors and developers. Use part of this log file when you're reporting bugs. For example:
Started GET "/gitlabhq/yaml_db/tree/master" for 168.111.56.1 at 2015-02-12 19:34:53 +0200
Processing by Projects::TreeController#show as HTML
Parameters: {"project_id"=>"gitlabhq/yaml_db", "id"=>"master"}
... [CUT OUT]
Namespaces"."created_at" DESC, "namespaces"."id" DESC LIMIT 1 [["id", 26]]
CACHE (0.0ms) SELECT "members".* FROM "members" WHERE "members"."source_type" = 'Project' AND "members"."type" IN ('ProjectMember') AND "members"."source_id" = $1 AND "members"."source_type" = $2 AND "members"."user_id" = 1 ORDER BY "members"."created_at" DESC, "members"."id" DESC LIMIT 1 [["source_id", 18], ["source_type", "Project"]]
CACHE (0.0ms) SELECT "members".* FROM "members" WHERE "members"."source_type" = 'Project' AND "members".
(1.4ms) SELECT COUNT(*) FROM "merge_requests" WHERE "merge_requests"."target_project_id" = $1 AND ("merge_requests"."state" IN ('opened','reopened')) [["target_project_id", 18]]
Rendered layouts/nav/_project.html.haml (28.0ms)
Rendered layouts/_collapse_button.html.haml (0.2ms)
Rendered layouts/_flash.html.haml (0.1ms)
Rendered layouts/_page.html.haml (32.9ms)
Completed 200 OK in 166ms (Views: 117.4ms | ActiveRecord: 27.2ms)
In this example, the server processed an HTTP request with URL
/gitlabhq/yaml_db/tree/master
from IP 168.111.56.1
at 2015-02-12 19:34:53 +0200
.
The request was processed by Projects::TreeController
.
api_json.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/api_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/api_json.log
It helps you see requests made directly to the API. For example:
{
"time":"2018-10-29T12:49:42.123Z",
"severity":"INFO",
"duration":709.08,
"db":14.59,
"view":694.49,
"status":200,
"method":"GET",
"path":"/api/v4/projects",
"params":[{"key":"action","value":"git-upload-pack"},{"key":"changes","value":"_any"},{"key":"key_id","value":"secret"},{"key":"secret_token","value":"[FILTERED]"}],
"host":"localhost",
"remote_ip":"::1",
"ua":"Ruby",
"route":"/api/:version/projects",
"user_id":1,
"username":"root",
"queue_duration":100.31,
"gitaly_calls":30,
"gitaly_duration":5.36,
"pid": 81836,
"worker_id": "puma_0",
...
}
This entry shows an internal endpoint accessed to check whether an
associated SSH key can download the project in question by using a git fetch
or
git clone
. In this example, we see:
-
duration
: Total time in milliseconds to retrieve the request -
queue_duration
: Total time in milliseconds the request was queued inside GitLab Workhorse -
method
: The HTTP method used to make the request -
path
: The relative path of the query -
params
: Key-value pairs passed in a query string or HTTP body (sensitive parameters, such as passwords and tokens, are filtered out) -
ua
: The User-Agent of the requester
NOTE:
As of Grape Logging
v1.8.4,
the view_duration_s
is calculated by duration_s - db_duration_s
.
Therefore, view_duration_s
can be affected by multiple different factors, like read-write
process on Redis or external HTTP, not only the serialization process.
application.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/application.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/application.log
It helps you discover events happening in your instance such as user creation and project deletion. For example:
October 06, 2014 11:56: User "Administrator" (admin@example.com) was created
October 06, 2014 11:56: Documentcloud created a new project "Documentcloud / Underscore"
October 06, 2014 11:56: Gitlab Org created a new project "Gitlab Org / Gitlab Ce"
October 07, 2014 11:25: User "Claudie Hodkiewicz" (nasir_stehr@olson.co.uk) was removed
October 07, 2014 11:25: Project "project133" was removed
application_json.log
Introduced in GitLab 12.7.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/application_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/application_json.log
It contains the JSON version of the logs in application.log
, like this example:
{
"severity":"INFO",
"time":"2020-01-14T13:35:15.466Z",
"correlation_id":"3823a1550b64417f9c9ed8ee0f48087e",
"message":"User \"Administrator\" (admin@example.com) was created"
}
{
"severity":"INFO",
"time":"2020-01-14T13:35:15.466Z",
"correlation_id":"78e3df10c9a18745243d524540bd5be4",
"message":"Project \"project133\" was removed"
}
integrations_json.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/integrations_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/integrations_json.log
It contains information about integration activities, such as Jira, Asana, and irker services. It uses JSON format, like this example:
{
"severity":"ERROR",
"time":"2018-09-06T14:56:20.439Z",
"service_class":"Integrations::Jira",
"project_id":8,
"project_path":"h5bp/html5-boilerplate",
"message":"Error sending message",
"client_url":"http://jira.gitlap.com:8080",
"error":"execution expired"
}
{
"severity":"INFO",
"time":"2018-09-06T17:15:16.365Z",
"service_class":"Integrations::Jira",
"project_id":3,
"project_path":"namespace2/project2",
"message":"Successfully posted",
"client_url":"http://jira.example.com"
}
kubernetes.log
(deprecated)
Deprecated in GitLab 14.5.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/kubernetes.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/kubernetes.log
It logs information related to certificate-based clusters, such as connectivity errors. Each line contains JSON that can be ingested by services like Elasticsearch and Splunk.
git_json.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/git_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/git_json.log
After GitLab version 12.2, this file was renamed from githost.log
to
git_json.log
and stored in JSON format.
GitLab has to interact with Git repositories, but in some rare cases something can go wrong. If this happens, you need to know exactly what happened. This log file contains all failed requests from GitLab to Git repositories. In the majority of cases this file is useful for developers only. For example:
{
"severity":"ERROR",
"time":"2019-07-19T22:16:12.528Z",
"correlation_id":"FeGxww5Hj64",
"message":"Command failed [1]: /usr/bin/git --git-dir=/Users/vsizov/gitlab-development-kit/gitlab/tmp/tests/gitlab-satellites/group184/gitlabhq/.git --work-tree=/Users/vsizov/gitlab-development-kit/gitlab/tmp/tests/gitlab-satellites/group184/gitlabhq merge --no-ff -mMerge branch 'feature_conflict' into 'feature' source/feature_conflict\n\nerror: failed to push some refs to '/Users/vsizov/gitlab-development-kit/repositories/gitlabhq/gitlab_git.git'"
}
audit_json.log
(FREE)
NOTE: GitLab Free tracks a small number of different audit events. GitLab Premium tracks many more.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/audit_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/audit_json.log
Changes to group or project settings and memberships (target_details
)
are logged to this file. For example:
{
"severity":"INFO",
"time":"2018-10-17T17:38:22.523Z",
"author_id":3,
"entity_id":2,
"entity_type":"Project",
"change":"visibility",
"from":"Private",
"to":"Public",
"author_name":"John Doe4",
"target_id":2,
"target_type":"Project",
"target_details":"namespace2/project2"
}
Sidekiq logs
NOTE:
In Omnibus GitLab 12.10
or earlier, the Sidekiq log is at /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/sidekiq.log
.
For Omnibus GitLab installations, some Sidekiq logs are in /var/log/gitlab/sidekiq/current
and as follows.
sidekiq.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/sidekiq/current
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/sidekiq.log
GitLab uses background jobs for processing tasks which can take a long time. All information about processing these jobs are written down to this file. For example:
2014-06-10T07:55:20Z 2037 TID-tm504 ERROR: /opt/bitnami/apps/discourse/htdocs/vendor/bundle/ruby/1.9.1/gems/redis-3.0.7/lib/redis/client.rb:228:in `read'
2014-06-10T18:18:26Z 14299 TID-55uqo INFO: Booting Sidekiq 3.0.0 with redis options {:url=>"redis://localhost:6379/0", :namespace=>"sidekiq"}
Instead of the previous format, you can opt to generate JSON logs for Sidekiq. For example:
{
"severity":"INFO",
"time":"2018-04-03T22:57:22.071Z",
"queue":"cronjob:update_all_mirrors",
"args":[],
"class":"UpdateAllMirrorsWorker",
"retry":false,
"queue_namespace":"cronjob",
"jid":"06aeaa3b0aadacf9981f368e",
"created_at":"2018-04-03T22:57:21.930Z",
"enqueued_at":"2018-04-03T22:57:21.931Z",
"pid":10077,
"worker_id":"sidekiq_0",
"message":"UpdateAllMirrorsWorker JID-06aeaa3b0aadacf9981f368e: done: 0.139 sec",
"job_status":"done",
"duration":0.139,
"completed_at":"2018-04-03T22:57:22.071Z",
"db_duration":0.05,
"db_duration_s":0.0005,
"gitaly_duration":0,
"gitaly_calls":0
}
For Omnibus GitLab installations, add the configuration option:
sidekiq['log_format'] = 'json'
For installations from source, edit the gitlab.yml
and set the Sidekiq
log_format
configuration option:
## Sidekiq
sidekiq:
log_format: json
sidekiq_client.log
Introduced in GitLab 12.9.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/sidekiq_client.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/sidekiq_client.log
This file contains logging information about jobs before Sidekiq starts processing them, such as before being enqueued.
This log file follows the same structure as
sidekiq.log
, so it is structured as JSON if
you've configured this for Sidekiq as mentioned above.
gitlab-shell.log
GitLab Shell is used by GitLab for executing Git commands and provide SSH access to Git repositories.
For GitLab versions 12.10 and up
Information containing git-{upload-pack,receive-pack}
requests is at
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-shell/gitlab-shell.log
. Information about hooks to
GitLab Shell from Gitaly is at /var/log/gitlab/gitaly/current
.
Example log entries for /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-shell/gitlab-shell.log
:
{
"duration_ms": 74.104,
"level": "info",
"method": "POST",
"msg": "Finished HTTP request",
"time": "2020-04-17T20:28:46Z",
"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/v4/internal/allowed"
}
{
"command": "git-upload-pack",
"git_protocol": "",
"gl_project_path": "root/example",
"gl_repository": "project-1",
"level": "info",
"msg": "executing git command",
"time": "2020-04-17T20:28:46Z",
"user_id": "user-1",
"username": "root"
}
Example log entries for /var/log/gitlab/gitaly/current
:
{
"method": "POST",
"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/v4/internal/allowed",
"duration": 0.058012959,
"gitaly_embedded": true,
"pid": 16636,
"level": "info",
"msg": "finished HTTP request",
"time": "2020-04-17T20:29:08+00:00"
}
{
"method": "POST",
"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/v4/internal/pre_receive",
"duration": 0.031022552,
"gitaly_embedded": true,
"pid": 16636,
"level": "info",
"msg": "finished HTTP request",
"time": "2020-04-17T20:29:08+00:00"
}
For GitLab versions 12.5 through 12.9
For GitLab 12.5 to 12.9, depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitaly/gitlab-shell.log
- Installation from source:
/home/git/gitaly/gitlab-shell.log
Example log entries:
{
"method": "POST",
"url": "http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/v4/internal/post_receive",
"duration": 0.031809164,
"gitaly_embedded": true,
"pid": 27056,
"level": "info",
"msg": "finished HTTP request",
"time": "2020-04-17T16:24:38+00:00"
}
For GitLab 12.5 and earlier
For GitLab 12.5 and earlier, the file is at /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-shell/gitlab-shell.log
.
Example log entries:
I, [2015-02-13T06:17:00.671315 #9291] INFO -- : Adding project root/example.git at </var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/root/dcdcdcdcd.git>.
I, [2015-02-13T06:17:00.679433 #9291] INFO -- : Moving existing hooks directory and symlinking global hooks directory for /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/root/example.git.
User clone/fetch activity using SSH transport appears in this log as
executing git command <gitaly-upload-pack...
.
Gitaly logs
This file is in /var/log/gitlab/gitaly/current
and is produced by runit.
runit
is packaged with Omnibus GitLab and a brief explanation of its purpose
is available in the Omnibus GitLab documentation.
Log files are rotated, renamed in
Unix timestamp format, and gzip
-compressed (like @1584057562.s
).
grpc.log
This file is at /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/grpc.log
for Omnibus GitLab
packages. Native gRPC logging used by Gitaly.
gitaly_hooks.log
This file is at /var/log/gitlab/gitaly/gitaly_hooks.log
and is
produced by gitaly-hooks
command. It also contains records about
failures received during processing of the responses from GitLab API.
Puma logs
puma_stdout.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/puma/puma_stdout.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/puma_stdout.log
puma_stderr.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/puma/puma_stderr.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/puma_stderr.log
repocheck.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/repocheck.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/repocheck.log
It logs information whenever a repository check is run on a project.
importer.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/importer.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/importer.log
This file logs the progress of project imports and migrations.
exporter.log
Introduced in GitLab 13.1.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/exporter.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/exporter.log
It logs the progress of the export process.
features_json.log
Introduced in GitLab 13.7.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/features_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/features_json.log
The modification events from Feature flags in development of GitLab are recorded in this file. For example:
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:30:59.860Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"enable","extra.thing":"true"}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:31:29.108Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"enable","extra.thing":"true"}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:31:29.129Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"disable","extra.thing":"false"}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:31:29.177Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"enable","extra.thing":"Project:1"}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:31:29.183Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"disable","extra.thing":"Project:1"}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:31:29.188Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"enable_percentage_of_time","extra.percentage":"50"}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:31:29.193Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"disable_percentage_of_time"}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:31:29.198Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"enable_percentage_of_actors","extra.percentage":"50"}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:31:29.203Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"disable_percentage_of_actors"}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-11-24T02:31:29.329Z","correlation_id":null,"key":"cd_auto_rollback","action":"remove"}
ci_resource_groups_json.log
Introduced in GitLab 15.9.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/ci_resource_group_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/ci_resource_group_json.log
It contains information about resource group acquisition. For example:
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2023-02-10T23:02:06.095Z","correlation_id":"01GRYS10C2DZQ9J1G12ZVAD4YD","resource_group_id":1,"processable_id":288,"message":"attempted to assign resource to processable","success":true}
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2023-02-10T23:02:08.945Z","correlation_id":"01GRYS138MYEG32C0QEWMC4BDM","resource_group_id":1,"processable_id":288,"message":"attempted to release resource from processable","success":true}
The examples show the resource_group_id
, processable_id
, message
, and success
fields for each entry.
auth.log
Introduced in GitLab 12.0.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/auth.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/auth.log
This log records:
- Requests over the Rate Limit on raw endpoints.
- Protected paths abusive requests.
- In GitLab versions 12.3 and later, user ID and username, if available.
graphql_json.log
Introduced in GitLab 12.0.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/graphql_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/graphql_json.log
GraphQL queries are recorded in the file. For example:
{"query_string":"query IntrospectionQuery{__schema {queryType { name },mutationType { name }}}...(etc)","variables":{"a":1,"b":2},"complexity":181,"depth":1,"duration_s":7}
migrations.log
Introduced in GitLab 12.3.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/migrations.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/migrations.log
This file logs the progress of database migrations.
mail_room_json.log
(default)
Introduced in GitLab 12.6.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/mailroom/current
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/mail_room_json.log
This structured log file records internal activity in the mail_room
gem.
Its name and path are configurable, so the name and path may not match the above.
Reconfigure logs
Reconfigure log files are in /var/log/gitlab/reconfigure
for Omnibus GitLab
packages. Installations from source don't have reconfigure logs. A reconfigure log
is populated whenever gitlab-ctl reconfigure
is run manually or as part of an upgrade.
Reconfigure logs files are named according to the UNIX timestamp of when the reconfigure
was initiated, such as 1509705644.log
sidekiq_exporter.log
and web_exporter.log
If Prometheus metrics and the Sidekiq Exporter are both enabled, Sidekiq
starts a Web server and listen to the defined port (default:
8082
). By default, Sidekiq Exporter access logs are disabled but can
be enabled based on your installation method:
- Omnibus GitLab: Use the
sidekiq['exporter_log_enabled'] = true
option in/etc/gitlab/gitlab.rb
- Installations from source: Use the
sidekiq_exporter.log_enabled
option ingitlab.yml
When enabled, depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/sidekiq_exporter.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/sidekiq_exporter.log
If Prometheus metrics and the Web Exporter are both enabled, Puma
starts a Web server and listen to the defined port (default: 8083
), and access logs
are generated in a location based on your installation method:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/web_exporter.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/web_exporter.log
database_load_balancing.log
(PREMIUM SELF)
Introduced in GitLab 12.3.
Contains details of GitLab Database Load Balancing. Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/database_load_balancing.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/database_load_balancing.log
zoekt.log
(PREMIUM SELF)
Introduced in GitLab 15.9.
This file logs information related to the Exact code search feature which is powered by Zoekt.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/zoekt.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/zoekt.log
elasticsearch.log
(PREMIUM SELF)
Introduced in GitLab 12.6.
This file logs information related to the Elasticsearch Integration, including errors during indexing or searching Elasticsearch. Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/elasticsearch.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/elasticsearch.log
Each line contains JSON that can be ingested by services like Elasticsearch and Splunk. Line breaks have been added to the following example line for clarity:
{
"severity":"DEBUG",
"time":"2019-10-17T06:23:13.227Z",
"correlation_id":null,
"message":"redacted_search_result",
"class_name":"Milestone",
"id":2,
"ability":"read_milestone",
"current_user_id":2,
"query":"project"
}
exceptions_json.log
Introduced in GitLab 12.6.
This file logs the information about exceptions being tracked by
Gitlab::ErrorTracking
, which provides a standard and consistent way of
processing rescued exceptions.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/exceptions_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/exceptions_json.log
Each line contains JSON that can be ingested by Elasticsearch. For example:
{
"severity": "ERROR",
"time": "2019-12-17T11:49:29.485Z",
"correlation_id": "AbDVUrrTvM1",
"extra.project_id": 55,
"extra.relation_key": "milestones",
"extra.relation_index": 1,
"exception.class": "NoMethodError",
"exception.message": "undefined method `strong_memoize' for #<Gitlab::ImportExport::RelationFactory:0x00007fb5d917c4b0>",
"exception.backtrace": [
"lib/gitlab/import_export/relation_factory.rb:329:in `unique_relation?'",
"lib/gitlab/import_export/relation_factory.rb:345:in `find_or_create_object!'"
]
}
service_measurement.log
Introduced in GitLab 13.0.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/service_measurement.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/service_measurement.log
It contains only a single structured log with measurements for each service execution.
It contains measurements such as the number of SQL calls, execution_time
, gc_stats
, and memory usage
.
For example:
{ "severity":"INFO", "time":"2020-04-22T16:04:50.691Z","correlation_id":"04f1366e-57a1-45b8-88c1-b00b23dc3616","class":"Projects::ImportExport::ExportService","current_user":"John Doe","project_full_path":"group1/test-export","file_path":"/path/to/archive","gc_stats":{"count":{"before":127,"after":127,"diff":0},"heap_allocated_pages":{"before":10369,"after":10369,"diff":0},"heap_sorted_length":{"before":10369,"after":10369,"diff":0},"heap_allocatable_pages":{"before":0,"after":0,"diff":0},"heap_available_slots":{"before":4226409,"after":4226409,"diff":0},"heap_live_slots":{"before":2542709,"after":2641420,"diff":98711},"heap_free_slots":{"before":1683700,"after":1584989,"diff":-98711},"heap_final_slots":{"before":0,"after":0,"diff":0},"heap_marked_slots":{"before":2542704,"after":2542704,"diff":0},"heap_eden_pages":{"before":10369,"after":10369,"diff":0},"heap_tomb_pages":{"before":0,"after":0,"diff":0},"total_allocated_pages":{"before":10369,"after":10369,"diff":0},"total_freed_pages":{"before":0,"after":0,"diff":0},"total_allocated_objects":{"before":24896308,"after":24995019,"diff":98711},"total_freed_objects":{"before":22353599,"after":22353599,"diff":0},"malloc_increase_bytes":{"before":140032,"after":6650240,"diff":6510208},"malloc_increase_bytes_limit":{"before":25804104,"after":25804104,"diff":0},"minor_gc_count":{"before":94,"after":94,"diff":0},"major_gc_count":{"before":33,"after":33,"diff":0},"remembered_wb_unprotected_objects":{"before":34284,"after":34284,"diff":0},"remembered_wb_unprotected_objects_limit":{"before":68568,"after":68568,"diff":0},"old_objects":{"before":2404725,"after":2404725,"diff":0},"old_objects_limit":{"before":4809450,"after":4809450,"diff":0},"oldmalloc_increase_bytes":{"before":140032,"after":6650240,"diff":6510208},"oldmalloc_increase_bytes_limit":{"before":68537556,"after":68537556,"diff":0}},"time_to_finish":0.12298400001600385,"number_of_sql_calls":70,"memory_usage":"0.0 MiB","label":"process_48616"}
geo.log
(PREMIUM SELF)
Geo stores structured log messages in a geo.log
file. For Omnibus GitLab
installations, this file is at /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/geo.log
.
This file contains information about when Geo attempts to sync repositories and files. Each line in the file contains a separate JSON entry that can be ingested into (for example, Elasticsearch or Splunk).
For example:
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2017-08-06T05:40:16.104Z","message":"Repository update","project_id":1,"source":"repository","resync_repository":true,"resync_wiki":true,"class":"Gitlab::Geo::LogCursor::Daemon","cursor_delay_s":0.038}
This message shows that Geo detected that a repository update was needed for project 1
.
update_mirror_service_json.log
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/update_mirror_service_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/update_mirror_service_json.log
This file contains information about LFS errors that occurred during project mirroring. While we work to move other project mirroring errors into this log, the general log can be used.
{
"severity":"ERROR",
"time":"2020-07-28T23:29:29.473Z",
"correlation_id":"5HgIkCJsO53",
"user_id":"x",
"project_id":"x",
"import_url":"https://mirror-source/group/project.git",
"error_message":"The LFS objects download list couldn't be imported. Error: Unauthorized"
}
Registry logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, Container Registry logs are in /var/log/gitlab/registry/current
.
NGINX logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, NGINX logs are in:
-
/var/log/gitlab/nginx/gitlab_access.log
: A log of requests made to GitLab -
/var/log/gitlab/nginx/gitlab_error.log
: A log of NGINX errors for GitLab -
/var/log/gitlab/nginx/gitlab_pages_access.log
: A log of requests made to Pages static sites -
/var/log/gitlab/nginx/gitlab_pages_error.log
: A log of NGINX errors for Pages static sites -
/var/log/gitlab/nginx/gitlab_registry_access.log
: A log of requests made to the Container Registry -
/var/log/gitlab/nginx/gitlab_registry_error.log
: A log of NGINX errors for the Container Registry -
/var/log/gitlab/nginx/gitlab_mattermost_access.log
: A log of requests made to Mattermost -
/var/log/gitlab/nginx/gitlab_mattermost_error.log
: A log of NGINX errors for Mattermost
Below is the default GitLab NGINX access log format:
$remote_addr - $remote_user [$time_local] "$request" $status $body_bytes_sent "$http_referer" "$http_user_agent"
Pages logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, Pages logs are in /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-pages/current
.
For example:
{
"level": "info",
"msg": "GitLab Pages Daemon",
"revision": "52b2899",
"time": "2020-04-22T17:53:12Z",
"version": "1.17.0"
}
{
"level": "info",
"msg": "URL: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages",
"time": "2020-04-22T17:53:12Z"
}
{
"gid": 998,
"in-place": false,
"level": "info",
"msg": "running the daemon as unprivileged user",
"time": "2020-04-22T17:53:12Z",
"uid": 998
}
Mattermost logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, Mattermost logs are in these locations:
/var/log/gitlab/mattermost/mattermost.log
/var/log/gitlab/mattermost/current
Workhorse logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, Workhorse logs are in /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-workhorse/current
.
PostgreSQL logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, PostgreSQL logs are in /var/log/gitlab/postgresql/current
.
Prometheus logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, Prometheus logs are in /var/log/gitlab/prometheus/current
.
Redis logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, Redis logs are in /var/log/gitlab/redis/current
.
Alertmanager logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, Alertmanager logs are in /var/log/gitlab/alertmanager/current
.
crond logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, crond logs are in /var/log/gitlab/crond/
.
Grafana logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, Grafana logs are in /var/log/gitlab/grafana/current
.
LogRotate logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, logrotate
logs are in /var/log/gitlab/logrotate/current
.
GitLab Monitor logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, GitLab Monitor logs are in /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-monitor/
.
GitLab Exporter
For Omnibus GitLab installations, GitLab Exporter logs are in /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-exporter/current
.
GitLab agent server
For Omnibus GitLab installations, GitLab agent server logs are
in /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-kas/current
.
Praefect logs
For Omnibus GitLab installations, Praefect logs are in /var/log/gitlab/praefect/
.
GitLab also tracks Prometheus metrics for Praefect.
Backup log
Introduced in GitLab 14.1.
For Omnibus installations, the backup log is located at /var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/backup_json.log
.
This log is populated when a GitLab backup is created. You can use this log to understand how the backup process performed.
Performance bar stats
Introduced in GitLab 13.7.
Depending on your installation method, this file is located at:
- Omnibus GitLab:
/var/log/gitlab/gitlab-rails/performance_bar_json.log
- Installations from source:
/home/git/gitlab/log/performance_bar_json.log
Performance bar statistics (currently only duration of SQL queries) are recorded in that file. For example:
{"severity":"INFO","time":"2020-12-04T09:29:44.592Z","correlation_id":"33680b1490ccd35981b03639c406a697","filename":"app/models/ci/pipeline.rb","method_path":"app/models/ci/pipeline.rb:each_with_object","request_id":"rYHomD0VJS4","duration_ms":26.889,"count":2,"query_type": "active-record"}
These statistics are logged on .com only, disabled on self-deployments.
Gathering logs
When troubleshooting issues that aren't localized to one of the previously listed components, it's helpful to simultaneously gather multiple logs and statistics from a GitLab instance.
NOTE: GitLab Support often asks for one of these, and maintains the required tools.
Briefly tail the main logs
If the bug or error is readily reproducible, save the main GitLab logs to a file while reproducing the problem a few times:
sudo gitlab-ctl tail | tee /tmp/<case-ID-and-keywords>.log
Conclude the log gathering with Control + C.
GitLabSOS
If performance degradations or cascading errors occur that can't readily be attributed to one of the previously listed GitLab components, GitLabSOS can provide a broader perspective of the GitLab instance. For more details and instructions to run it, read the GitLabSOS documentation.
Fast-stats
Fast-stats is a tool for creating and comparing performance statistics from GitLab logs. For more details and instructions to run it, read the documentation for fast-stats.
Find relevant log entries with a correlation ID
Most requests have a log ID that can be used to find relevant log entries.