Configuring systemd-journald and Fluentd
Because Fluentd reads from the journal, and the journal default settings are very low, journal entries can be lost because the journal cannot keep up with the logging rate from system services.
We recommend setting RateLimitIntervalSec=30s
and RateLimitBurst=10000
(or even higher if necessary) to prevent the journal from losing entries.
Configuring systemd-journald for OpenShift Logging
As you scale up your project, the default logging environment might need some adjustments.
For example, if you are missing logs, you might have to increase the rate limits for journald. You can adjust the number of messages to retain for a specified period of time to ensure that OpenShift Logging does not use excessive resources without dropping logs.
You can also determine if you want the logs compressed, how long to retain logs, how or if the logs are stored, and other settings.
Procedure
Create a Butane config file,
40-worker-custom-journald.bu
, that includes an/etc/systemd/journald.conf
file with the required settings.See “Creating machine configs with Butane” for information about Butane.
variant: openshift
version: 4.12.0
metadata:
name: 40-worker-custom-journald
labels:
machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role: "worker"
storage:
files:
- path: /etc/systemd/journald.conf
mode: 0644 (1)
overwrite: true
contents:
inline: |
Compress=yes (2)
ForwardToConsole=no (3)
ForwardToSyslog=no
MaxRetentionSec=1month (4)
RateLimitBurst=10000 (5)
RateLimitIntervalSec=30s
Storage=persistent (6)
SyncIntervalSec=1s (7)
SystemMaxUse=8G (8)
SystemKeepFree=20% (9)
SystemMaxFileSize=10M (10)
1 Set the permissions for the journal.conf
file. It is recommended to set0644
permissions.2 Specify whether you want logs compressed before they are written to the file system. Specify yes
to compress the message orno
to not compress. The default isyes
.3 Configure whether to forward log messages. Defaults to no
for each. Specify:ForwardToConsole
to forward logs to the system console.ForwardToKsmg
to forward logs to the kernel log buffer.ForwardToSyslog
to forward to a syslog daemon.ForwardToWall
to forward messages as wall messages to all logged-in users.
4 Specify the maximum time to store journal entries. Enter a number to specify seconds. Or include a unit: “year”, “month”, “week”, “day”, “h” or “m”. Enter 0
to disable. The default is1month
.5 Configure rate limiting. If more logs are received than what is specified in RateLimitBurst
during the time interval defined byRateLimitIntervalSec
, all further messages within the interval are dropped until the interval is over. It is recommended to setRateLimitIntervalSec=30s
andRateLimitBurst=10000
, which are the defaults.6 Specify how logs are stored. The default is persistent
:volatile
to store logs in memory in/var/log/journal/
.persistent
to store logs to disk in/var/log/journal/
. systemd creates the directory if it does not exist.auto
to store logs in/var/log/journal/
if the directory exists. If it does not exist, systemd temporarily stores logs in/run/systemd/journal
.none
to not store logs. systemd drops all logs.
7 Specify the timeout before synchronizing journal files to disk for ERR, WARNING, NOTICE, INFO, and DEBUG logs. systemd immediately syncs after receiving a CRIT, ALERT, or EMERG log. The default is 1s
.8 Specify the maximum size the journal can use. The default is 8G
.9 Specify how much disk space systemd must leave free. The default is 20%
.10 Specify the maximum size for individual journal files stored persistently in /var/log/journal
. The default is10M
.If you are removing the rate limit, you might see increased CPU utilization on the system logging daemons as it processes any messages that would have previously been throttled.
For more information on systemd settings, see https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/journald.conf.html. The default settings listed on that page might not apply to OKD.
Use Butane to generate a
MachineConfig
object file,40-worker-custom-journald.yaml
, containing the configuration to be delivered to the nodes:$ butane 40-worker-custom-journald.bu -o 40-worker-custom-journald.yaml
Apply the machine config. For example:
$ oc apply -f 40-worker-custom-journald.yaml
The controller detects the new
MachineConfig
object and generates a newrendered-worker-<hash>
version.Monitor the status of the rollout of the new rendered configuration to each node:
$ oc describe machineconfigpool/worker
Example output
Name: worker
Namespace:
Labels: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/mco-built-in=
Annotations: <none>
API Version: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1
Kind: MachineConfigPool
...
Conditions:
Message:
Reason: All nodes are updating to rendered-worker-913514517bcea7c93bd446f4830bc64e