Component Logging

Istio components are built with a flexible logging framework which provides a number of features and controls to help operate these components and facilitate diagnostics. You control these logging features by passing command-line options when starting the components.

Logging scopes

Logging messages output by a component are categorized by scopes. A scope represents a set of related log messages which you can control as a whole. Different components have different scopes, depending on the features the component provides. All components have the default scope, which is used for non-categorized log messages.

As an example, as of this writing, istioctl has 24 scopes, representing different functional areas within the command:

  • ads, adsc, analysis, attributes, authn, authorization, cache, cli, default, grpcAdapter, installer, mcp, model, patch, processing, resource, secretfetcher, source, spiffe, tpath, translator, util, validation, validationController

Pilot-Agent, Pilot-Discovery, Mixer, and the Istio Operator have their own scopes which you can discover by looking at their reference documentation.

Each scope has a unique output level which is one of:

  1. none
  2. error
  3. warning
  4. info
  5. debug

where none produces no output for the scope, and debug produces the maximum amount of output. The default level for all scopes is info which is intended to provide the right amount of logging information for operating Istio in normal conditions.

To control the output level, you use the --log_output_level command-line option. For example:

  1. $ istioctl analyze --log_output_level attributes:debug,cli:warn

In addition to controlling the output level from the command-line, you can also control the output level of a running component by using its ControlZ interface.

Controlling output

Log messages are normally sent to a component’s standard output stream. The --log_target option lets you direct the output to any number of different locations. You give the option a comma-separated list of file system paths, along with the special values stdout and stderr to indicate the standard output and standard error streams respectively.

Log messages are normally output in a human-friendly format. The --log_as_json option can be used to force the output into JSON, which can be easier for tools to process.

Log rotation

Istio control plane components can automatically manage log rotation, which make it simple to break up large logs into smaller log files. The --log_rotate option lets you specify the base file name to use for rotation. Derived names will be used for individual log files.

The --log_rotate_max_age option lets you specify the maximum number of days before file rotation takes place, while the --log_rotate_max_size option let you specify the maximum size in megabytes before file rotation takes place. Finally, the --log_rotate_max_backups option lets you control the maximum number of rotated files to keep, older files will be automatically deleted.

Component debugging

The --log_caller and --log_stacktrace_level options let you control whether log information includes programmer-level information. This is useful when trying to track down bugs in a component but is not normally used in day-to-day operation.

See also

Istiod Introspection

Describes how to use ControlZ to get insight into a running istiod component.