▪️ Logging
Query logging can be enabled by setting query_log
directive in searchd section of the configuration file
searchd {
...
query_log = /var/log/query.log
...
}
Queries can also be sent to syslog by setting syslog
instead of a file path.
In this case all search queries will be sent to syslog daemon with LOG_INFO
priority, prefixed with [query]
instead of timestamp. Only plain
log format is supported for syslog.
Two query log formats are supported. Plain text format is still the default one. However, while it might be more convenient for manual monitoring and review, but hard to replay for benchmarks, it only logs search queries but not the other types of requests, does not always contain the complete search query data, etc.
The default text format is also harder (and sometimes impossible) to replay for benchmarking purposes. The sphinxql
format alleviates that. It aims to be complete and re-playable, even though at the cost of brevity and readability.
By default, searchd
logs all successfully executed search queries into a query log file. Here's an example:
[Fri Jun 29 21:17:58 2007] 0.004 sec 0.004 sec [all/0/rel 35254 (0,20)] [lj] test
[Fri Jun 29 21:20:34 2007] 0.024 sec 0.024 sec [all/0/rel 19886 (0,20) @channel_id] [lj] test
This log format is as follows:
[query-date] real-time wall-time [match-mode/filters-count/sort-mode total-matches (offset,limit) @groupby-attr] [index-name] query
- real-time is a time measured just from start to finish of the query
- wall-time like real-time but not including waiting for agents and merging result sets time
Match mode can take one of the following values:
- "all" for
SPH_MATCH_ALL
mode; - "any" for
SPH_MATCH_ANY
mode; - "phr" for
SPH_MATCH_PHRASE
mode; - "bool" for
SPH_MATCH_BOOLEAN
mode; - "ext" for
SPH_MATCH_EXTENDED
mode; - "ext2" for
SPH_MATCH_EXTENDED2
mode; - "scan" if the full scan mode was used, either by being specified with
SPH_MATCH_FULLSCAN
Sort mode can take one of the following values:
- "rel" for
SPH_SORT_RELEVANCE
mode; - "attr-" for
SPH_SORT_ATTR_DESC
mode; - "attr+" for
SPH_SORT_ATTR_ASC
mode; - "tsegs" for
SPH_SORT_TIME_SEGMENTS
mode; - "ext" for
SPH_SORT_EXTENDED
mode.
Note: the SPH* modes are specific to SphinxAPI legacy interface. SQL and HTTP interface will log in most cases ext2 for matching mode and ext and rel for sorting modes.
If Manticore was started with --iostats
(ot it was enabled via SET GLOBAL iostats=1
) the corresponding metrics will be included in the log. Then a query log entry might take the form of:
[Fri Jun 29 21:17:58 2021] 0.004 sec [all/0/rel 35254 (0,20)] [lj] [ios=6 kb=111.1 ms=0.5] test
where:
- ios - the number of file I/O operations carried out
- kb - amount of data in kilobytes read from the index files
- ioms - time spent on I/O operations
If Manticore was started with --cpustats
(ot it was enabled via SET GLOBAL cpustats=1
) metric cpums
will be included in the log. The query log will then look like this:
[Fri Jun 29 21:17:58 2021] 0.004 sec [all/0/rel 35254 (0,20)] [lj] [ios=6 kb=111.1 ms=0.5 cpums=0.3] test
where cpums
is time in milliseconds spent on CPU processing the query.
SQL format can be enabled by searchd directive query_log_format
:
searchd {
...
query_log = /var/log/query.log
query_log_format = sphinxql
...
}
In this format, the example from the previous section would look as follows. (Wrapped below for readability, but with just one query per line in the actual log.)
/* Fri Jun 29 21:17:58.609 2007 2011 conn 2 real 0.004 wall 0.004 found 35254 */
SELECT * FROM test WHERE MATCH('test') OPTION ranker=proximity;
/* Fri Jun 29 21:20:34 2007.555 conn 3 real 0.024 wall 0.024 found 19886 */
SELECT * FROM test WHERE MATCH('test') GROUP BY channel_id
OPTION ranker=proximity;
Note that all requests would be logged in this format, including those sent via SphinxAPI and SphinxSE, not just those sent via SQL. Also note, that this kind of logging works only with plain log files and will not work if you use 'syslog' service for logging.
The features of Manticore SQL log format compared to the default text one are as follows.
- All request types should be logged. (This is still work in progress.)
- Full statement data will be logged where possible.
- Errors and warnings are logged.
- The log should be automatically re-playable via SphinxQL.
- Additional performance counters (currently, per-agent distributed query times) are logged.
Use sphinxql:compact_in
to shorten your IN()
clauses in log if you have too many values in it.
Every request (including both SphinxAPI and SQL) request must result in exactly one log line. All request types, including INSERT
, CALL SNIPPETS
, etc will eventually get logged, though as of time of this writing, that is a work in progress). Every log line must be a valid Manticore SQL statement that reconstructs the full request, except if the logged request is too big and needs shortening for performance reasons. Additional messages, counters, etc can be logged in the comments section after the request.
By default all queries are logged. If it's desired to log only queries with execution times that exceed the specified
limit, the query_log_min_msec
directive can be used:
searchd {
...
query_log = /var/log/query.log
query_log_min_msec = 1000
...
}
The expected unit of measure is milliseconds, but time suffix expressions can be used as well, like
searchd {
...
query_log = /var/log/query.log
query_log_min_msec = 1s
...
}
By default the searchd and query log files are created with 600 permission, so only the user under which server runs and root users can read the log files. query_log_mode
allows settings a different permission. This can be handy to allow other users to be able to read the log files (for example monitoring solutions running on non-root users).
searchd {
...
query_log = /var/log/query.log
query_log_mode = 666
...
}
By default, Manticore search daemon will log all runtime events in a searchd.log
file in the directory the searchd was started from. Normally in Linux you can find the log in /var/log/manticore/searchd.log
.
The log file path/name can be overriden via setting log
in section searchd
of the configuration file.
searchd {
...
log = /custom/path/to/searchd.log
...
}
- Also you can use
syslog
as the file name. In this case the events will be sent to your server's syslog daemon. - In some cases you might want to use
/dev/stdout
as the file name. In this case in Linux Manticore will just output the events. It can be useful in Docker/Kubernetes environments.