Support
Only the configuration options described in this documentation are supported for the logging subsystem.
Do not use any other configuration options, as they are unsupported. Configuration paradigms might change across OKD releases, and such cases can only be handled gracefully if all configuration possibilities are controlled. If you use configurations other than those described in this documentation, your changes will be overwritten, because Operators are designed to reconcile any differences.
If you must perform configurations not described in the OKD documentation, you must set your Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator to |
Logging is provided as an installable component, with a distinct release cycle from the core OKD. The Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform Life Cycle Policy outlines release compatibility. |
The logging subsystem for Red Hat OpenShift is an opinionated collector and normalizer of application, infrastructure, and audit logs. It is intended to be used for forwarding logs to various supported systems.
The logging subsystem for Red Hat OpenShift is not:
A high scale log collection system
Security Information and Event Monitoring (SIEM) compliant
Historical or long term log retention or storage
A guaranteed log sink
Secure storage - audit logs are not stored by default
Unsupported configurations
You must set the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator to the Unmanaged
state to modify the following components:
The
Elasticsearch
custom resource (CR)The Kibana deployment
The
fluent.conf
fileThe Fluentd daemon set
You must set the OpenShift Elasticsearch Operator to the Unmanaged
state to modify the Elasticsearch deployment files.
Explicitly unsupported cases include:
Configuring default log rotation. You cannot modify the default log rotation configuration.
Configuring the collected log location. You cannot change the location of the log collector output file, which by default is
/var/log/fluentd/fluentd.log
.Throttling log collection. You cannot throttle down the rate at which the logs are read in by the log collector.
Configuring the logging collector using environment variables. You cannot use environment variables to modify the log collector.
Configuring how the log collector normalizes logs. You cannot modify default log normalization.
Support policy for unmanaged Operators
The management state of an Operator determines whether an Operator is actively managing the resources for its related component in the cluster as designed. If an Operator is set to an unmanaged state, it does not respond to changes in configuration nor does it receive updates.
While this can be helpful in non-production clusters or during debugging, Operators in an unmanaged state are unsupported and the cluster administrator assumes full control of the individual component configurations and upgrades.
An Operator can be set to an unmanaged state using the following methods:
Individual Operator configuration
Individual Operators have a
managementState
parameter in their configuration. This can be accessed in different ways, depending on the Operator. For example, the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator accomplishes this by modifying a custom resource (CR) that it manages, while the Cluster Samples Operator uses a cluster-wide configuration resource.Changing the
managementState
parameter toUnmanaged
means that the Operator is not actively managing its resources and will take no action related to the related component. Some Operators might not support this management state as it might damage the cluster and require manual recovery.Changing individual Operators to the
Unmanaged
state renders that particular component and functionality unsupported. Reported issues must be reproduced inManaged
state for support to proceed.Cluster Version Operator (CVO) overrides
The
spec.overrides
parameter can be added to the CVO’s configuration to allow administrators to provide a list of overrides to the CVO’s behavior for a component. Setting thespec.overrides[].unmanaged
parameter totrue
for a component blocks cluster upgrades and alerts the administrator after a CVO override has been set:Disabling ownership via cluster version overrides prevents upgrades. Please remove overrides before continuing.
Setting a CVO override puts the entire cluster in an unsupported state. Reported issues must be reproduced after removing any overrides for support to proceed.
Collecting logging data for Red Hat Support
When opening a support case, it is helpful to provide debugging information about your cluster to Red Hat Support.
You can use the must-gather tool to collect diagnostic information for project-level resources, cluster-level resources, and each of the logging subsystem components.
For prompt support, supply diagnostic information for both OKD and the logging subsystem for Red Hat OpenShift.
Do not use the |
About the must-gather tool
The oc adm must-gather
CLI command collects the information from your cluster that is most likely needed for debugging issues.
For your logging subsystem, must-gather
collects the following information:
Project-level resources, including pods, configuration maps, service accounts, roles, role bindings, and events at the project level
Cluster-level resources, including nodes, roles, and role bindings at the cluster level
OpenShift Logging resources in the
openshift-logging
andopenshift-operators-redhat
namespaces, including health status for the log collector, the log store, and the log visualizer
When you run oc adm must-gather
, a new pod is created on the cluster. The data is collected on that pod and saved in a new directory that starts with must-gather.local
. This directory is created in the current working directory.
Collecting OpenShift Logging data
You can use the oc adm must-gather
CLI command to collect information about your logging subsystem.
Procedure
To collect logging subsystem information with must-gather
:
Navigate to the directory where you want to store the
must-gather
information.Run the
oc adm must-gather
command against the OpenShift Logging image:$ oc adm must-gather --image=quay.io/openshift/origin-cluster-logging-operator
The
must-gather
tool creates a new directory that starts withmust-gather.local
within the current directory. For example:must-gather.local.4157245944708210408
.Create a compressed file from the
must-gather
directory that was just created. For example, on a computer that uses a Linux operating system, run the following command:$ tar -cvaf must-gather.tar.gz must-gather.local.4157245944708210408
Attach the compressed file to your support case on the Red Hat Customer Portal.