log_destination
(string
)
PostgreSQL supports several methods
for logging server messages, including
stderr, csvlog and
syslog. On Windows,
eventlog is also supported. Set this
parameter to a list of desired log destinations separated by
commas. The default is to log to stderr
only.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
If csvlog is included in log_destination
,
log entries are output in “comma separated
value” (CSV) format, which is convenient for
loading logs into programs.
See Section 19.8.4 for details.
logging_collector must be enabled to generate
CSV-format log output.
When either stderr or
csvlog are included, the file
current_logfiles
is created to record the location
of the log file(s) currently in use by the logging collector and the
associated logging destination. This provides a convenient way to
find the logs currently in use by the instance. Here is an example of
this file's content:
stderr log/postgresql.log csvlog log/postgresql.csv
current_logfiles
is recreated when a new log file
is created as an effect of rotation, and
when log_destination
is reloaded. It is removed when
neither stderr
nor csvlog are included
in log_destination
, and when the logging collector is
disabled.
On most Unix systems, you will need to alter the configuration of
your system's syslog daemon in order
to make use of the syslog option for
log_destination
. PostgreSQL
can log to syslog facilities
LOCAL0
through LOCAL7
(see syslog_facility), but the default
syslog configuration on most platforms
will discard all such messages. You will need to add something like:
local0.* /var/log/postgresql
to the syslog daemon's configuration file to make it work.
On Windows, when you use the eventlog
option for log_destination
, you should
register an event source and its library with the operating
system so that the Windows Event Viewer can display event
log messages cleanly.
See Section 18.11 for details.
logging_collector
(boolean
)
This parameter enables the logging collector, which
is a background process that captures log messages
sent to stderr and redirects them into log files.
This approach is often more useful than
logging to syslog, since some types of messages
might not appear in syslog output. (One common
example is dynamic-linker failure messages; another is error messages
produced by scripts such as archive_command
.)
This parameter can only be set at server start.
It is possible to log to stderr without using the logging collector; the log messages will just go to wherever the server's stderr is directed. However, that method is only suitable for low log volumes, since it provides no convenient way to rotate log files. Also, on some platforms not using the logging collector can result in lost or garbled log output, because multiple processes writing concurrently to the same log file can overwrite each other's output.
The logging collector is designed to never lose messages. This means that in case of extremely high load, server processes could be blocked while trying to send additional log messages when the collector has fallen behind. In contrast, syslog prefers to drop messages if it cannot write them, which means it may fail to log some messages in such cases but it will not block the rest of the system.
log_directory
(string
)
When logging_collector
is enabled,
this parameter determines the directory in which log files will be created.
It can be specified as an absolute path, or relative to the
cluster data directory.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
The default is log
.
log_filename
(string
)
When logging_collector
is enabled,
this parameter sets the file names of the created log files. The value
is treated as a strftime
pattern,
so %
-escapes can be used to specify time-varying
file names. (Note that if there are
any time-zone-dependent %
-escapes, the computation
is done in the zone specified
by log_timezone.)
The supported %
-escapes are similar to those
listed in the Open Group's strftime
specification.
Note that the system's strftime
is not used
directly, so platform-specific (nonstandard) extensions do not work.
The default is postgresql-%Y-%m-%d_%H%M%S.log
.
If you specify a file name without escapes, you should plan to
use a log rotation utility to avoid eventually filling the
entire disk. In releases prior to 8.4, if
no %
escapes were
present, PostgreSQL would append
the epoch of the new log file's creation time, but this is no
longer the case.
If CSV-format output is enabled in log_destination
,
.csv
will be appended to the timestamped
log file name to create the file name for CSV-format output.
(If log_filename
ends in .log
, the suffix is
replaced instead.)
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
log_file_mode
(integer
)
On Unix systems this parameter sets the permissions for log files
when logging_collector
is enabled. (On Microsoft
Windows this parameter is ignored.)
The parameter value is expected to be a numeric mode
specified in the format accepted by the
chmod
and umask
system calls. (To use the customary octal format the number
must start with a 0
(zero).)
The default permissions are 0600
, meaning only the
server owner can read or write the log files. The other commonly
useful setting is 0640
, allowing members of the owner's
group to read the files. Note however that to make use of such a
setting, you'll need to alter log_directory to
store the files somewhere outside the cluster data directory. In
any case, it's unwise to make the log files world-readable, since
they might contain sensitive data.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
log_rotation_age
(integer
)
When logging_collector
is enabled,
this parameter determines the maximum lifetime of an individual log file.
After this many minutes have elapsed, a new log file will
be created. Set to zero to disable time-based creation of
new log files.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
log_rotation_size
(integer
)
When logging_collector
is enabled,
this parameter determines the maximum size of an individual log file.
After this many kilobytes have been emitted into a log file,
a new log file will be created. Set to zero to disable size-based
creation of new log files.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
log_truncate_on_rotation
(boolean
)
When logging_collector
is enabled,
this parameter will cause PostgreSQL to truncate (overwrite),
rather than append to, any existing log file of the same name.
However, truncation will occur only when a new file is being opened
due to time-based rotation, not during server startup or size-based
rotation. When off, pre-existing files will be appended to in
all cases. For example, using this setting in combination with
a log_filename
like postgresql-%H.log
would result in generating twenty-four hourly log files and then
cyclically overwriting them.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
Example: To keep 7 days of logs, one log file per day named
server_log.Mon
, server_log.Tue
,
etc, and automatically overwrite last week's log with this week's log,
set log_filename
to server_log.%a
,
log_truncate_on_rotation
to on
, and
log_rotation_age
to 1440
.
Example: To keep 24 hours of logs, one log file per hour, but
also rotate sooner if the log file size exceeds 1GB, set
log_filename
to server_log.%H%M
,
log_truncate_on_rotation
to on
,
log_rotation_age
to 60
, and
log_rotation_size
to 1000000
.
Including %M
in log_filename
allows
any size-driven rotations that might occur to select a file name
different from the hour's initial file name.
syslog_facility
(enum
)
When logging to syslog is enabled, this parameter
determines the syslog
“facility” to be used. You can choose
from LOCAL0
, LOCAL1
,
LOCAL2
, LOCAL3
, LOCAL4
,
LOCAL5
, LOCAL6
, LOCAL7
;
the default is LOCAL0
. See also the
documentation of your system's
syslog daemon.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
syslog_ident
(string
)
When logging to syslog is enabled, this parameter
determines the program name used to identify
PostgreSQL messages in
syslog logs. The default is
postgres
.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
syslog_sequence_numbers
(boolean
)
When logging to syslog and this is on (the
default), then each message will be prefixed by an increasing
sequence number (such as [2]
). This circumvents
the “--- last message repeated N times ---” suppression
that many syslog implementations perform by default. In more modern
syslog implementations, repeated message suppression can be configured
(for example, $RepeatedMsgReduction
in rsyslog), so this might not be
necessary. Also, you could turn this off if you actually want to
suppress repeated messages.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
syslog_split_messages
(boolean
)
When logging to syslog is enabled, this parameter determines how messages are delivered to syslog. When on (the default), messages are split by lines, and long lines are split so that they will fit into 1024 bytes, which is a typical size limit for traditional syslog implementations. When off, PostgreSQL server log messages are delivered to the syslog service as is, and it is up to the syslog service to cope with the potentially bulky messages.
If syslog is ultimately logging to a text file, then the effect will be the same either way, and it is best to leave the setting on, since most syslog implementations either cannot handle large messages or would need to be specially configured to handle them. But if syslog is ultimately writing into some other medium, it might be necessary or more useful to keep messages logically together.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
event_source
(string
)
When logging to event log is enabled, this parameter
determines the program name used to identify
PostgreSQL messages in
the log. The default is PostgreSQL
.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
log_min_messages
(enum
)
Controls which message
levels are written to the server log.
Valid values are DEBUG5
, DEBUG4
,
DEBUG3
, DEBUG2
, DEBUG1
,
INFO
, NOTICE
, WARNING
,
ERROR
, LOG
, FATAL
, and
PANIC
. Each level includes all the levels that
follow it. The later the level, the fewer messages are sent
to the log. The default is WARNING
. Note that
LOG
has a different rank here than in
client_min_messages.
Only superusers can change this setting.
log_min_error_statement
(enum
)
Controls which SQL statements that cause an error
condition are recorded in the server log. The current
SQL statement is included in the log entry for any message of
the specified
severity
or higher.
Valid values are DEBUG5
,
DEBUG4
, DEBUG3
,
DEBUG2
, DEBUG1
,
INFO
, NOTICE
,
WARNING
, ERROR
,
LOG
,
FATAL
, and PANIC
.
The default is ERROR
, which means statements
causing errors, log messages, fatal errors, or panics will be logged.
To effectively turn off logging of failing statements,
set this parameter to PANIC
.
Only superusers can change this setting.
log_min_duration_statement
(integer
)
Causes the duration of each completed statement to be logged
if the statement ran for at least the specified number of
milliseconds. Setting this to zero prints all statement durations.
Minus-one (the default) disables logging statement durations.
For example, if you set it to 250ms
then all SQL statements that run 250ms or longer will be
logged. Enabling this parameter can be helpful in tracking down
unoptimized queries in your applications.
Only superusers can change this setting.
For clients using extended query protocol, durations of the Parse, Bind, and Execute steps are logged independently.
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 PID or session ID using
log_line_prefix
so that you can link the statement message to the later
duration message using the process ID or session ID.
Table 19.1 explains the message severity levels used by PostgreSQL. If logging output is sent to syslog or Windows' eventlog, the severity levels are translated as shown in the table.
Table 19.1. Message Severity Levels
application_name
(string
)
The application_name
can be any string of less than
NAMEDATALEN
characters (64 characters in a standard build).
It is typically set by an application upon connection to the server.
The name will be displayed in the pg_stat_activity
view
and included in CSV log entries. It can also be included in regular
log entries via the log_line_prefix parameter.
Only printable ASCII characters may be used in the
application_name
value. Other characters will be
replaced with question marks (?
).
debug_print_parse
(boolean
)
debug_print_rewritten
(boolean
)
debug_print_plan
(boolean
)
These parameters enable various debugging output to be emitted.
When set, they print the resulting parse tree, the query rewriter
output, or the execution plan for each executed query.
These messages are emitted at LOG
message level, so by
default they will appear in the server log but will not be sent to the
client. You can change that by adjusting
client_min_messages and/or
log_min_messages.
These parameters are off by default.
debug_pretty_print
(boolean
)
When set, debug_pretty_print
indents the messages
produced by debug_print_parse
,
debug_print_rewritten
, or
debug_print_plan
. This results in more readable
but much longer output than the “compact” format used when
it is off. It is on by default.
log_checkpoints
(boolean
)
Causes checkpoints and restartpoints to be logged in the server log.
Some statistics are included in the log messages, including the number
of buffers written and the time spent writing them.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line. The default is off.
log_connections
(boolean
)
Causes each attempted connection to the server to be logged,
as well as successful completion of client authentication.
Only superusers can change this parameter at session start,
and it cannot be changed at all within a session.
The default is off
.
Some client programs, like psql, attempt to connect twice while determining if a password is required, so duplicate “connection received” messages do not necessarily indicate a problem.
log_disconnections
(boolean
)
Causes session terminations to be logged. The log output
provides information similar to log_connections
,
plus the duration of the session.
Only superusers can change this parameter at session start,
and it cannot be changed at all within a session.
The default is off
.
log_duration
(boolean
)
Causes the duration of every completed statement to be logged.
The default is off
.
Only superusers can change this setting.
For clients using extended query protocol, durations of the Parse, Bind, and Execute steps are logged independently.
The difference between setting this option and setting
log_min_duration_statement to zero is that
exceeding log_min_duration_statement
forces the text of
the query to be logged, but this option doesn't. Thus, if
log_duration
is on
and
log_min_duration_statement
has a positive value, all
durations are logged but the query text is included only for
statements exceeding the threshold. This behavior can be useful for
gathering statistics in high-load installations.
log_error_verbosity
(enum
)
Controls the amount of detail written in the server log for each
message that is logged. Valid values are TERSE
,
DEFAULT
, and VERBOSE
, each adding more
fields to displayed messages. TERSE
excludes
the logging of DETAIL
, HINT
,
QUERY
, and CONTEXT
error information.
VERBOSE
output includes the SQLSTATE
error
code (see also Appendix A) and the source code file name, function name,
and line number that generated the error.
Only superusers can change this setting.
log_hostname
(boolean
)
By default, connection log messages only show the IP address of the
connecting host. Turning this parameter on causes logging of the
host name as well. Note that depending on your host name resolution
setup this might impose a non-negligible performance penalty.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
log_line_prefix
(string
)
This is a printf
-style string that is output at the
beginning of each log line.
%
characters begin “escape sequences”
that are replaced with status information as outlined below.
Unrecognized escapes are ignored. Other
characters are copied straight to the log line. Some escapes are
only recognized by session processes, and will be treated as empty by
background processes such as the main server process. Status
information may be aligned either left or right by specifying a
numeric literal after the % and before the option. A negative
value will cause the status information to be padded on the
right with spaces to give it a minimum width, whereas a positive
value will pad on the left. Padding can be useful to aid human
readability in log files.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line. The default is
'%m [%p] '
which logs a time stamp and the process ID.
Escape | Effect | Session only |
---|---|---|
%a | Application name | yes |
%u | User name | yes |
%d | Database name | yes |
%r | Remote host name or IP address, and remote port | yes |
%h | Remote host name or IP address | yes |
%p | Process ID | no |
%t | Time stamp without milliseconds | no |
%m | Time stamp with milliseconds | no |
%n | Time stamp with milliseconds (as a Unix epoch) | no |
%i | Command tag: type of session's current command | yes |
%e | SQLSTATE error code | no |
%c | Session ID: see below | no |
%l | Number of the log line for each session or process, starting at 1 | no |
%s | Process start time stamp | no |
%v | Virtual transaction ID (backendID/localXID) | no |
%x | Transaction ID (0 if none is assigned) | no |
%q | Produces no output, but tells non-session processes to stop at this point in the string; ignored by session processes | no |
%% | Literal % | no |
The %c
escape prints a quasi-unique session identifier,
consisting of two 4-byte hexadecimal numbers (without leading zeros)
separated by a dot. The numbers are the process start time and the
process ID, so %c
can also be used as a space saving way
of printing those items. For example, to generate the session
identifier from pg_stat_activity
, use this query:
SELECT to_hex(trunc(EXTRACT(EPOCH FROM backend_start))::integer) || '.' || to_hex(pid) FROM pg_stat_activity;
If you set a nonempty value for log_line_prefix
,
you should usually make its last character be a space, to provide
visual separation from the rest of the log line. A punctuation
character can be used too.
Syslog produces its own time stamp and process ID information, so you probably do not want to include those escapes if you are logging to syslog.
The %q
escape is useful when including information that is
only available in session (backend) context like user or database
name. For example:
log_line_prefix = '%m [%p] %q%u@%d/%a '
log_lock_waits
(boolean
)
Controls whether a log message is produced when a session waits
longer than deadlock_timeout to acquire a
lock. This is useful in determining if lock waits are causing
poor performance. The default is off
.
Only superusers can change this setting.
log_statement
(enum
)
Controls which SQL statements are logged. Valid values are
none
(off), ddl
, mod
, and
all
(all statements). ddl
logs all data definition
statements, such as CREATE
, ALTER
, and
DROP
statements. mod
logs all
ddl
statements, plus data-modifying statements
such as INSERT
,
UPDATE
, DELETE
, TRUNCATE
,
and COPY FROM
.
PREPARE
, EXECUTE
, and
EXPLAIN ANALYZE
statements are also logged if their
contained command is of an appropriate type. For clients using
extended query protocol, logging occurs when an Execute message
is received, and values of the Bind parameters are included
(with any embedded single-quote marks doubled).
The default is none
. Only superusers can change this
setting.
Statements that contain simple syntax errors are not logged
even by the log_statement
= all
setting,
because the log message is emitted only after basic parsing has
been done to determine the statement type. In the case of extended
query protocol, this setting likewise does not log statements that
fail before the Execute phase (i.e., during parse analysis or
planning). Set log_min_error_statement
to
ERROR
(or lower) to log such statements.
log_replication_commands
(boolean
)
Causes each replication command to be logged in the server log.
See Section 53.4 for more information about
replication command. The default value is off
.
Only superusers can change this setting.
log_temp_files
(integer
)
Controls logging of temporary file names and sizes. Temporary files can be created for sorts, hashes, and temporary query results. A log entry is made for each temporary file when it is deleted. A value of zero logs all temporary file information, while positive values log only files whose size is greater than or equal to the specified number of kilobytes. The default setting is -1, which disables such logging. Only superusers can change this setting.
log_timezone
(string
)
Sets the time zone used for timestamps written in the server log.
Unlike TimeZone, this value is cluster-wide,
so that all sessions will report timestamps consistently.
The built-in default is GMT
, but that is typically
overridden in postgresql.conf
; initdb
will install a setting there corresponding to its system environment.
See Section 8.5.3 for more information.
This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf
file or on the server command line.
Including csvlog
in the log_destination
list
provides a convenient way to import log files into a database table.
This option emits log lines in comma-separated-values
(CSV) format,
with these columns:
time stamp with milliseconds,
user name,
database name,
process ID,
client host:port number,
session ID,
per-session line number,
command tag,
session start time,
virtual transaction ID,
regular transaction ID,
error severity,
SQLSTATE code,
error message,
error message detail,
hint,
internal query that led to the error (if any),
character count of the error position therein,
error context,
user query that led to the error (if any and enabled by
log_min_error_statement
),
character count of the error position therein,
location of the error in the PostgreSQL source code
(if log_error_verbosity
is set to verbose
),
and application name.
Here is a sample table definition for storing CSV-format log output:
CREATE TABLE postgres_log ( log_time timestamp(3) with time zone, user_name text, database_name text, process_id integer, connection_from text, session_id text, session_line_num bigint, command_tag text, session_start_time timestamp with time zone, virtual_transaction_id text, transaction_id bigint, error_severity text, sql_state_code text, message text, detail text, hint text, internal_query text, internal_query_pos integer, context text, query text, query_pos integer, location text, application_name text, PRIMARY KEY (session_id, session_line_num) );
To import a log file into this table, use the COPY FROM
command:
COPY postgres_log FROM '/full/path/to/logfile.csv' WITH csv;
There are a few things you need to do to simplify importing CSV log files:
Set log_filename
and
log_rotation_age
to provide a consistent,
predictable naming scheme for your log files. This lets you
predict what the file name will be and know when an individual log
file is complete and therefore ready to be imported.
Set log_rotation_size
to 0 to disable
size-based log rotation, as it makes the log file name difficult
to predict.
Set log_truncate_on_rotation
to on
so
that old log data isn't mixed with the new in the same file.
The table definition above includes a primary key specification.
This is useful to protect against accidentally importing the same
information twice. The COPY
command commits all of the
data it imports at one time, so any error will cause the entire
import to fail. If you import a partial log file and later import
the file again when it is complete, the primary key violation will
cause the import to fail. Wait until the log is complete and
closed before importing. This procedure will also protect against
accidentally importing a partial line that hasn't been completely
written, which would also cause COPY
to fail.
These settings control how process titles of server processes are modified. Process titles are typically viewed using programs like ps or, on Windows, Process Explorer. See Section 28.1 for details.
cluster_name
(string
)
Sets the cluster name that appears in the process title for all
server processes in this cluster. The name can be any string of less
than NAMEDATALEN
characters (64 characters in a standard
build). Only printable ASCII characters may be used in the
cluster_name
value. Other characters will be
replaced with question marks (?
). No name is shown
if this parameter is set to the empty string ''
(which is
the default). This parameter can only be set at server start.
update_process_title
(boolean
)
Enables updating of the process title every time a new SQL command
is received by the server.
This setting defaults to on
on most platforms, but it
defaults to off
on Windows due to that platform's larger
overhead for updating the process title.
Only superusers can change this setting.