Logging Time
client_min_messages
Parameter description: Specifies which level of messages will be sent to the client. Each level covers all the levels following it. The lower the level is, the fewer messages are sent.
This parameter is a USERSET parameter. Set it based on instructions provided in Table 1.
A same value for client_min_messages and log_min_messages does not indicate the same level.
Value range: enumerated values. Valid values are debug, debug5, debug4, debug3, debug2, debug1, info, log, notice, warning, error, fatal, and panic. For details about the parameter, see Table 1. If the configured level is higher than error, for example, fatal or panic, the system changes the level to error by default.
Default value: notice
log_min_messages
Parameter description: Specifies which level of messages will be written into the server log. Each level covers all the levels following it. The lower the level is, the fewer messages will be written into the log.
This parameter is a SUSET parameter. Set it based on instructions provided in Table 1.
A same value for client_min_messages and log_min_messages does not indicate the same level. For some log information, after this parameter is enabled, you also need to set logging_module to enable log printing for the corresponding module.
Value range: enumerated values. Valid values are debug, debug5, debug4, debug3, debug2, debug1, info, log, notice, warning, error, fatal, and panic. For details about the parameter, see Table 1.
Default value: warning
log_min_error_statement
Parameter description: Controls which SQL statements that cause an error condition are recorded in the server log.
This parameter is a SUSET parameter. Set it based on instructions provided in Table 1.
Value range: enumerated values. Valid values are debug, debug5, debug4, debug3, debug2, debug1, info, log, notice, warning, error, fatal, and panic. For details about the parameter, see Table 1.
- The default is error, indicating that statements causing errors, log messages, fatal errors, or panics will be logged.
- panic indicates that SQL statements that cause an error condition will not be logged.
Default value: error
log_min_duration_statement
Parameter description: Specifies the threshold for logging the duration of a completed statement. If a statement runs for a period greater than or equal to the specified value, its duration will be logged.
Setting this parameter can be helpful in tracking down unoptimized queries. For clients using extended query protocols, the time required for parsing, binding, and executing steps are logged independently.
This parameter is a SUSET parameter. Set it based on instructions provided in Table 1.
When using this option together with log_statement, the text of statements that are logged because of log_statement will not be repeated in the duration log message. If you are not using syslog, it is recommended that you log the process ID (PID) or session ID using log_line_prefix so that you can link the statement message to the later duration message.
Value range: an integer ranging from –1 to 2147483647. The unit is ms.
- If this parameter is set to 250, all SQL statements that run for 250 ms or longer will be logged.
- 0 indicates that the execution durations of all the statements are logged.
- –1 indicates that the duration logging is disabled.
Default value: 3s (that is, 3000 ms)
backtrace_min_messages
Parameter description: Prints the function's stack information to the server's log file if the information generated is greater than or equal to the level specified by this parameter.
This parameter is a SUSET parameter. Set it based on instructions provided in Table 1.
This parameter is used to locate problems on-site. Frequent stack printing will affect the system's overhead and stability. Therefore, set the value of this parameter to a rank other than fatal or panic during problem location.
Value range: enumerated values
Valid values include debug, debug5, debug4, debug3, debug2, debug1, info, log, notice, warning, error, fatal, and panic. For details about the parameter, see Table 1.
Default value: panic
Table 1 explains message severities used by GaussDB. If logging output is sent to syslog or eventlog, the severities are translated as shown in the table. (Note that the translation takes effect only in a Windows environment where GaussDB does not involve this parameter.)
Severity |
Description |
System Log |
Event Log |
---|---|---|---|
debug[1-5] |
Provides detailed debug information. |
DEBUG |
INFORMATION |
log |
Reports information of interest to administrators, for example, checkpoint activity. |
INFO |
INFORMATION |
info |
Provides information implicitly requested by users, for example, output from VACUUM VERBOSE. |
INFO |
INFORMATION |
notice |
Provides information that might be helpful to users, for example, truncation of long identifiers and index created as part of the primary key. |
NOTICE |
INFORMATION |
warning |
Provides warnings of likely problems, for example, COMMIT outside a transaction block. |
NOTICE |
WARNING |
error |
Reports an error that causes a command to terminate. |
WARNING |
ERROR |
fatal |
Reports the reason that causes a session to terminate. |
ERR |
ERROR |
panic |
Reports an error that caused all database sessions to terminate. |
CRIT |
ERROR |
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