Logging (2.6)
Once you have Sakai installed, configured and started, you can monitor Sakai by watching the logs. The log level for the standard Sakai source code and the demo is set to show info and warnings only. Watch for the WARN:
messages. There are going to be some "normal" ones at startup, and some will likely slip by at runtime, but any warning is potentially something you might want to check out.
Logging levels can be specified in sakai.properties
. This augments and overrides the levels set in the default config file. Example:
log.config.count=3 log.config.1 = ALL.org.sakaiproject.log.impl log.config.2 = OFF.org.sakaiproject log.config.3 = DEBUG.org.sakaiproject.db.impl
This uses the established (if awkward) method of having a name.count
followed by name.1
, name.2
etc. to form an array of strings for the value "name". In this case, the name is "log.config". The values are of the form LEVEL.logger
, and the possible levels are: OFF TRACE DEBUG INFO WARN ERROR FATAL ALL
.
Sakai uses log4j for logging. See the official log4j documentation for more information about how to configure it if you have questions, but a few notes are collected here below.
To change the logging for Sakai in the source modify kernel/kernel-common/src/main/config/log4j.properties
the following property:
log4j.logger.org.sakaiproject=INFO
To turn on debug logging for all of Sakai, change the value from INFO to DEBUG. In order to enable debug logging for a single Sakai components, add a line such as in the following example, which will leave most of Sakai at INFO, but generate DEBUG level messages for the SQL service:
log4j.logger.org.sakaiproject=INFO log4j.logger.org.sakaiproject.component.framework.sql.BasicSqlService=DEBUG
The logging controls are part of the LogConfigurationManager, implemented as a component in the Kernel. It can be disabled, if that's desired, with an entry in sakai.properties
:
enabled@org.sakaiproject.log.api.LogConfigurationManager = false
For Mac and *nix systems, the most important log is found in Tomcat's logs/catalina.out
. It can be instructive to watch this log as Tomcat is starting up, by using a startup command like the following:
bin/startup.sh; tail -f logs/catalina.out
Tomcat on Windows tends to be a little more puzzling about its logs, and it includes more of them, but its default behavior is to open catalina.out
in a new window as soon as you start Tomcat. If you need more information about the logs in Windows, we'll refer you to the official Tomcat documentation.
The SMTP server logs from Sakai will be written to the $CATALINA_HOME/sakai/logs directory.