debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/user/project/clusters/kubernetes_pod_logs.md
2020-04-22 19:07:51 +05:30

4.3 KiB

Kubernetes Logs

GitLab makes it easy to view the logs of running pods in connected Kubernetes clusters. By displaying the logs directly in GitLab, developers can avoid having to manage console tools or jump to a different interface.

NOTE: Kubernetes + GitLab Everything you need to build, test, deploy, and run your app at scale. Learn more.

Overview

Kubernetes logs can be viewed directly within GitLab.

Pod logs

Requirements

Deploying to a Kubernetes environment is required in order to be able to use Logs.

Usage

To access logs, you must have the right permissions.

You can access them in two ways.

From the project sidebar

Introduced in GitLab 12.5.

Go to {cloud-gear} Operations > Logs on the sidebar menu.

Sidebar menu

From Deploy Boards

Logs can be displayed by clicking on a specific pod from Deploy Boards:

  1. Go to {cloud-gear} Operations > Environments and find the environment which contains the desired pod, like production.
  2. On the Environments page, you should see the status of the environment's pods with Deploy Boards.
  3. When mousing over the list of pods, a tooltip will appear with the exact pod name and status. Deploy Boards pod list
  4. Click on the desired pod to bring up the logs view.

Logs view

The logs view lets you filter the logs by:

Loading more than 500 log lines is possible from GitLab 12.9 onwards.

Support for pods with multiple containers is coming in a future release.

Support for historical data is coming in a future release.

Filter by date

Introduced in GitLab 12.8.

When you enable Elastic Stack on your cluster, you can filter by date.

Click on Show last to see the available options.

Introduced in GitLab 12.7.

When you enable Elastic Stack on your cluster, you can search the content of your logs through a search bar.

The search is passed on to Elasticsearch using the simple_query_string Elasticsearch function, which supports the following operators:

Operator Description
| An OR operation.
- Negates a single token.
+ An AND operation.
" Wraps a number of tokens to signify a phrase for searching.
* (at the end of a term) A prefix query.
( and ) Precedence.
~N (after a word) Edit distance (fuzziness).
~N (after a phrase) Slop amount.