mirror of
https://github.com/ceph/ceph
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640e080f22
Signed-off-by: Alfredo Deza <adeza@redhat.com>
107 lines
4.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
107 lines
4.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
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Use of the cluster log
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======================
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(Note: none of this applies to the local "dout" logging. This is about
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the cluster log that we send through the mon daemons)
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Severity
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--------
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Use ERR for situations where the cluster cannot do its job for some reason.
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For example: we tried to do a write, but it returned an error, or we tried
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to read something, but it's corrupt so we can't, or we scrubbed a PG but
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the data was inconsistent so we can't recover.
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Use WRN for incidents that the cluster can handle, but have some abnormal/negative
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aspect, such as a temporary degredation of service, or an unexpected internal
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value. For example, a metadata error that can be auto-fixed, or a slow operation.
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Use INFO for ordinary cluster operations that do not indicate a fault in
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Ceph. It is especially important that INFO level messages are clearly
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worded and do not cause confusion or alarm.
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Frequency
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---------
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It is important that messages of all severities are not excessively
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frequent. Consumers may be using a rotating log buffer that contains
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messages of all severities, so even DEBUG messages could interfere
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with proper display of the latest INFO messages if the DEBUG messages
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are too frequent.
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Remember that if you have a bad state (as opposed to event), that is
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what health checks are for -- do not spam the cluster log to indicate
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a continuing unhealthy state.
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Do not emit cluster log messages for events that scale with
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the number of clients or level of activity on the system, or for
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events that occur regularly in normal operation. For example, it
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would be inappropriate to emit a INFO message about every
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new client that connects (scales with #clients), or to emit and INFO
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message about every CephFS subtree migration (occurs regularly).
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Language and formatting
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-----------------------
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(Note: these guidelines matter much less for DEBUG-level messages than
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for INFO and above. Concentrate your efforts on making INFO/WRN/ERR
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messages as readable as possible.)
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Use the passive voice. For example, use "Object xyz could not be read", rather
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than "I could not read the object xyz".
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Print long/big identifiers, such as inode numbers, as hex, prefixed
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with an 0x so that the user can tell it is hex. We do this because
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the 0x makes it unambiguous (no equivalent for decimal), and because
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the hex form is more likely to fit on the screen.
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Print size quantities as a human readable MB/GB/etc, including the unit
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at the end of the number. Exception: if you are specifying an offset,
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where precision is essential to the meaning, then you can specify
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the value in bytes (but print it as hex).
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Make a good faith effort to fit your message on a single line. It does
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not have to be guaranteed, but it should at least usually be
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the case. That means, generally, no printing of lists unless there
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are only a few items in the list.
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Use nouns that are meaningful to the user, and defined in the
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documentation. Common acronyms are OK -- don't waste screen space
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typing "Rados Object Gateway" instead of RGW. Do not use internal
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class names like "MDCache" or "Objecter". It is okay to mention
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internal structures if they are the direct subject of the message,
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for example in a corruption, but use plain english.
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Example: instead of "Objecter requests" say "OSD client requests"
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Example: it is okay to mention internal structure in the context
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of "Corrupt session table" (but don't say "Corrupt SessionTable")
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Where possible, describe the consequence for system availability, rather
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than only describing the underlying state. For example, rather than
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saying "MDS myfs.0 is replaying", say that "myfs is degraded, waiting
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for myfs.0 to finish starting".
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While common acronyms are fine, don't randomly truncate words. It's not
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"dir ino", it's "directory inode".
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If you're logging something that "should never happen", i.e. a situation
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where it would be an assertion, but we're helpfully not crashing, then
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make that clear in the language -- this is probably not a situation
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that the user can remediate themselves.
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Avoid UNIX/programmer jargon. Instead of "errno", just say "error" (or
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preferably give something more descriptive than the number!)
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Do not mention cluster map epochs unless they are essential to
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the meaning of the message. For example, "OSDMap epoch 123 is corrupt"
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would be okay (the epoch is the point of the message), but saying "OSD
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123 is down in OSDMap epoch 456" would not be (the osdmap and epoch
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concepts are an implementation detail, the down-ness of the OSD
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is the real message). Feel free to send additional detail to
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the daemon's local log (via `dout`/`derr`).
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If you log a problem that may go away in the future, make sure you
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also log when it goes away. Whatever priority you logged the original
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message at, log the "going away" message at INFO.
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