40 Gathering system information and logs #
    When a virtualization host encounters a problem, it is often necessary to
    collect a detailed system report, which can be done with the help of the
    supportconfig tool. See
    Chapter 47, Gathering system information for support
    for more information about supportconfig.
  
    In certain cases, the information gathered by
    supportconfig is insufficient, and logs generated from a
    custom logging or debugging configuration may be required to determine the
    cause of a problem.
  
40.1 libvirt log controls #
      libvirt provides logging facilities for both the library and the
      daemon. The behavior of the logging facility is controlled by adjusting
      the log level, filter and output settings.
    
- Log level
- libvirtlog messages are classified into four priority levels: DEBUG, INFO, WARNING and ERROR. The DEBUG level is verbose and capable of generating gigabytes of information in a short time. The volume of log messages progressively decreases with the INFO, WARNING and ERROR log levels. ERROR is the default log level.
- Log filters
- Log filters provide a way to log only messages matching a specific component and log level. Log filters allow collecting the verbose DEBUG log messages of specific components, but only ERROR level log messages from the rest of the system. By default, no log filters are defined. 
- Log outputs
- Log outputs allow specifying where the filtered log messages are sent. Messages can be sent to a file, the standard error stream of the process, or journald. By default, filtered log messages are sent to journald. 
      See https://libvirt.org/logging.html for more
      details on libvirt's log controls.
    
      A default libvirt installation has the log level set to ERROR, no log
      filters defined, and log outputs set to journald. Log messages from the
      libvirt daemon can be viewed with the journalctl
      command:
    
# journalctl --unit libvirtd
      The default log facility settings are fine for normal operations and
      provide useful messages for applications and users of libvirt, but
      internal issues often require DEBUG level messages. As an example,
      consider a potential bug in the interaction between libvirt and the
      QEMU monitor. In this case, we only need to see the debug messages of
      the communication between libvirt and QEMU. The following example
      creates a log filter to select debug messages from the QEMU driver and
      send them to a file named /tmp/libvirtd.log
    
log_filters="1:qemu.qemu_monitor_json" log_outputs="1:file:/tmp/libvirtd.log"
      Log controls for the libvirt daemon can be found in
      /etc/libvirt/libvirtd.conf. The daemon must be
      restarted after making any changes to the configuration file.
    
# systemctl restart libvirtd.service