Este contenido no está disponible en el idioma seleccionado.
Chapter 10. Debezium logging
Debezium has extensive logging built into its connectors, and you can change the logging configuration to control which of these log statements appear in the logs and where those logs are sent. Debezium (as well as Kafka, Kafka Connect, and Zookeeper) use the Log4j logging framework for Java.
By default, the connectors produce a fair amount of useful information when they start up, but then produce very few logs when the connector is keeping up with the source databases. This is often sufficient when the connector is operating normally, but may not be enough when the connector is behaving unexpectedly. In such cases, you can change the logging level so that the connector generates much more verbose log messages describing what the connector is doing and what it is not doing.
10.1. Debezium logging concepts
Before configuring logging, you should understand what Log4J loggers, log levels, and appenders are.
Loggers
Each log message produced by the application is sent to a specific logger (for example, io.debezium.connector.mysql
). Loggers are arranged in hierarchies. For example, the io.debezium.connector.mysql
logger is the child of the io.debezium.connector
logger, which is the child of the io.debezium
logger. At the top of the hierarchy, the root logger defines the default logger configuration for all of the loggers beneath it.
Log levels
Every log message produced by the application also has a specific log level:
-
ERROR
- errors, exceptions, and other significant problems -
WARN
- potential problems and issues -
INFO
- status and general activity (usually low-volume) -
DEBUG
- more detailed activity that would be useful in diagnosing unexpected behavior -
TRACE
- very verbose and detailed activity (usually very high-volume)
Appenders
An appender is essentially a destination where log messages are written. Each appender controls the format of its log messages, giving you even more control over what the log messages look like.
To configure logging, you specify the desired level for each logger and the appender(s) where those log messages should be written. Since loggers are hierarchical, the configuration for the root logger serves as a default for all of the loggers below it, although you can override any child (or descendant) logger.
10.2. Default Debezium logging configuration
If you are running Debezium connectors in a Kafka Connect process, then Kafka Connect uses the Log4j configuration file (for example, /opt/kafka/config/connect-log4j.properties
) in the Kafka installation. By default, this file contains the following configuration:
connect-log4j.properties
log4j.rootLogger=INFO, stdout 1 log4j.appender.stdout=org.apache.log4j.ConsoleAppender 2 log4j.appender.stdout.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout 3 log4j.appender.stdout.layout.ConversionPattern=[%d] %p %m (%c)%n 4 ...
Property | Description |
---|---|
1 |
The root logger, which defines the default logger configuration. By default, loggers include |
2 |
Directs the |
3 |
Specifies that the |
4 |
The pattern that the |
Unless you configure other loggers, all of the loggers that Debezium uses inherit the rootLogger
configuration.
10.3. Configuring Debezium logging
By default, Debezium connectors write all INFO
, WARN
, and ERROR
messages to the console. You can change the default logging configuration by using one of the following methods:
There are other methods that you can use to configure Debezium logging with Log4j. For more information, search for tutorials about setting up and using appenders to send log messages to specific destinations.
10.3.1. Changing the Debezium logging level by configuring loggers
The default Debezium logging level provides sufficient information to show whether a connector is healthy or not. However, if a connector is not healthy, you can change its logging level to troubleshoot the issue.
In general, Debezium connectors send their log messages to loggers with names that match the fully-qualified name of the Java class that is generating the log message. Debezium uses packages to organize code with similar or related functions. This means that you can control all of the log messages for a specific class or for all of the classes within or under a specific package.
Procedure
-
Open the
log4j.properties
file. Configure a logger for the connector.
The following example configures loggers for the MySQL connector and for the database schema history implementation used by the connector, and sets them to log
DEBUG
level messages:
log4j.properties
... log4j.logger.io.debezium.connector.mysql=DEBUG, stdout 1 log4j.logger.io.debezium.relational.history=DEBUG, stdout 2 log4j.additivity.io.debezium.connector.mysql=false 3 log4j.additivity.io.debezium.storage.kafka.history=false ...
Table 10.2. Descriptions of log4j.properties settings Property Description 1
Configures the logger named
io.debezium.connector.mysql
to sendDEBUG
,INFO
,WARN
, andERROR
messages to thestdout
appender.2
Configures the logger named
io.debezium.relational.history
to sendDEBUG
,INFO
,WARN
, andERROR
messages to thestdout
appender.3
This pair of
log4j.additivity.io
entries disable additivity. If you use multiple appenders, setadditivity
values tofalse
to prevent duplicate log messages from being sent to the appenders of the parent loggers.If necessary, change the logging level for a specific subset of the classes within the connector.
Increasing the logging level for the entire connector increases the log verbosity, which can make it difficult to understand what is happening. In these cases, you can change the logging level just for the subset of classes that are related to the issue that you are troubleshooting.
-
Set the connector’s logging level to either
DEBUG
orTRACE
. Review the connector’s log messages.
Find the log messages that are related to the issue that you are troubleshooting. The end of each log message shows the name of the Java class that produced the message.
-
Set the connector’s logging level back to
INFO
. Configure a logger for each Java class that you identified.
For example, consider a scenario in which you are unsure why the MySQL connector is skipping some events when it is processing the binlog. Rather than turn on
DEBUG
orTRACE
logging for the entire connector, you can keep the connector’s logging level atINFO
and then configureDEBUG
orTRACE
on just the class that is reading the binlog:log4j.properties
... log4j.logger.io.debezium.connector.mysql=INFO, stdout log4j.logger.io.debezium.connector.mysql.BinlogReader=DEBUG, stdout log4j.logger.io.debezium.relational.history=INFO, stdout log4j.additivity.io.debezium.connector.mysql=false log4j.additivity.io.debezium.storage.kafka.history=false log4j.additivity.io.debezium.connector.mysql.BinlogReader=false ...
-
Set the connector’s logging level to either
10.3.2. Dynamically changing the Debezium logging level with the Kafka Connect API
You can use the Kafka Connect REST API to set logging levels for a connector dynamically at runtime. Unlike log level changes that you set in log4j.properties
, changes that you make via the API take effect immediately, and do not require you to restart the worker.
The log level setting that you specify in the API applies only to the worker at the endpoint that receives the request. The log levels of other workers in the cluster remain unchanged.
The specified level is not persisted after the worker restarts. To make persistent changes to the logging level, set the log level in log4j.properties
by configuring loggers or adding mapped diagnostic contexts.
Procedure
Set the log level by sending a PUT request to the
admin/loggers
endpoint that specifies the following information:- The package for which you want to change the log level.
The log level that you want to set.
curl -s -X PUT -H "Content-Type:application/json" http://localhost:8083/admin/loggers/io.debezium.connector.<connector_package> -d '{"level": "<log_level>"}'
For example, to log debug information for a Debezium MySQL connector, send the following request to Kafka Connect:
curl -s -X PUT -H "Content-Type:application/json" http://localhost:8083/admin/loggers/io.debezium.connector.mysql -d '{"level": "DEBUG"}'
10.3.3. Changing the Debezium logging levely by adding mapped diagnostic contexts
Most Debezium connectors (and the Kafka Connect workers) use multiple threads to perform different activities. This can make it difficult to look at a log file and find only those log messages for a particular logical activity. To make the log messages easier to find, Debezium provides several mapped diagnostic contexts (MDC) that provide additional information for each thread.
Debezium provides the following MDC properties:
dbz.connectorType
-
A short alias for the type of connector. For example,
MySql
,Mongo
,Postgres
, and so on. All threads associated with the same type of connector use the same value, so you can use this to find all log messages produced by a given type of connector. dbz.connectorName
-
The name of the connector or database server as defined in the connector’s configuration. For example
products
,serverA
, and so on. All threads associated with a specific connector instance use the same value, so you can find all of the log messages produced by a specific connector instance. dbz.connectorContext
-
A short name for an activity running as a separate thread running within the connector’s task. For example,
main
,binlog
,snapshot
, and so on. In some cases, when a connector assigns threads to specific resources (such as a table or collection), the name of that resource could be used instead. Each thread associated with a connector would use a distinct value, so you can find all of the log messages associated with this particular activity.
To enable MDC for a connector, you configure an appender in the log4j.properties
file.
Procedure
-
Open the
log4j.properties
file. Configure an appender to use any of the supported Debezium MDC properties.
In the following example, the
stdout
appender is configured to use these MDC properties:log4j.properties
... log4j.appender.stdout.layout.ConversionPattern=%d{ISO8601} %-5p %X{dbz.connectorType}|%X{dbz.connectorName}|%X{dbz.connectorContext} %m [%c]%n ...
The configuration in the preceding example produces log messages similar to the ones in the following output:
... 2017-02-07 20:49:37,692 INFO MySQL|dbserver1|snapshot Starting snapshot for jdbc:mysql://mysql:3306/?useInformationSchema=true&nullCatalogMeansCurrent=false&useSSL=false&useUnicode=true&characterEncoding=UTF-8&characterSetResults=UTF-8&zeroDateTimeBehavior=convertToNull with user 'debezium' [io.debezium.connector.mysql.SnapshotReader] 2017-02-07 20:49:37,696 INFO MySQL|dbserver1|snapshot Snapshot is using user 'debezium' with these MySQL grants: [io.debezium.connector.mysql.SnapshotReader] 2017-02-07 20:49:37,697 INFO MySQL|dbserver1|snapshot GRANT SELECT, RELOAD, SHOW DATABASES, REPLICATION SLAVE, REPLICATION CLIENT ON *.* TO 'debezium'@'%' [io.debezium.connector.mysql.SnapshotReader] ...
Each line in the log includes the connector type (for example,
MySQL
), the name of the connector (for example,dbserver1
), and the activity of the thread (for example,snapshot
).
10.4. Debezium logging on OpenShift
If you are using Debezium on OpenShift, you can use the Kafka Connect loggers to configure the Debezium loggers and logging levels. For more information about configuring logging properties in a Kafka Connect schema, see {NameStreamsOpenShift}.