This is archived documentation for InfluxData product versions that are no longer maintained. For newer documentation, see the latest InfluxData documentation.
InfluxDB writes log output, by default, to stderr
.
Depending on your use case, this log information can be written to another location.
Running InfluxDB directly
If you run InfluxDB directly, using influxd
, all logs will be written to stderr
.
You may redirect this log output as you would any output to stderr
like so:
influxd 2>$HOME/my_log_file
Launched as a service
sysvinit
If InfluxDB was installed using a pre-built package, and then launched
as a service, stderr
is redirected to
/var/log/influxdb/influxd.log
, and all log data will be written to
that file. You can override this location by setting the variable
STDERR
in the file /etc/default/influxdb
.
Note: On macOS the logs, by default, are stored in the file
/usr/local/var/log/influxdb.log
For example, if /etc/default/influxdb
contains:
STDERR=/dev/null
all log data will be discarded. You can similarly direct output to
stdout
by setting STDOUT
in the same file. Output to stdout
is
sent to /dev/null
by default when InfluxDB is launched as a service.
InfluxDB must be restarted to pick up any changes to /etc/default/influxdb
.
systemd
Starting with version 1.0, InfluxDB on systemd systems will no longer
write files to /var/log/influxdb
by default, and will now use the
system configured default for logging (usually journald). On most
systems, the logs will be directed to the systemd journal and can be
accessed with the command:
sudo journalctl -u influxdb.service
Please consult the systemd journald documentation for configuring journald.
Using logrotate
You can use logrotate to rotate the log files generated by InfluxDB on systems where logs are written to flat files.
If using the package install on a sysvinit system, the config file for logrotate is installed in /etc/logrotate.d
.
You can view the file here.