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Diagnostic Log Stream
One important technique to diagnose issues is to look at trace files. Kudu service as well as its application write traces to the /Logfiles folder (see File structure on Azure). The logstream endpoint (/logstream in the Kudu service) enables developers to view real time traces as they are being written.
The simplest way to get streaming logs is to use curl
, e.g.
curl -u {username} https://{sitename}.scm.azurewebsites.net/api/logstream
Notes:
- The
{username}
here is your Azure Publishing user (same as you use for git publishing). The command will prompt for your password. - On windows, you can get
curl
in various ways, e.g. by installing Git for Windows. Note that PowerShell has acurl
alias forInvoke-WebRequest
, but that is not the real curl command, and will not work.
The /logstream watches (FileSystemWatcher) all the log/txt files changes under /LogFiles and its sub folders.
To scope the live traces to certain providers/folders, you may additional specify the path.
-
/api/logstream/kudu/trace
=> kudu related traces intended for diagnostic kudu issues. -
/api/logstream/kudu/deployment
=> kudu deployment traces intended for application developers/operators. -
/api/logstream/application
=> application traces. -
/api/logstream/http
=> iis logs.
etc.
Most trace providers allow users to adjust the verbosity of the traces. Kudu trace provider uses Diagnostic's TraceLevel; Off=0 (default), Error=1, Warning=2, Info=3, Verbose=4.
Its trace level can be adjusted via settings.
-
set kudu trace_level to Verbose.
$ curl <kudu-service-url>/settings -X POST -H "Content-Type: Application/json" -d "{'trace_level':'4'}"
-
get kudu trace_level.
$ curl <kudu-service-url>/settings/trace_level
TBD: setting and getting application trace_level.
TBD.
As long as there exists active traces, the client request is kept alive. After 10 mins of idle without traces, the client connection is terminated to optimize server resources.
If you request /logstream from a Web browser (e.g. Chrome or IE), you may find that you initially get a blank page, even though your site is producing some trace.
The reason is that browsers do buffering of the response, until either the response is complete (which never happens in this case), or it gets a large amount of data.
For that reason, using a browser is not recommended, and using a simple tool like curl is preferable.
For .NET application,
System.Diagnostics.Trace.TraceInformation("Info statement");
System.Diagnostics.Trace.TraceError("Error statement");
System.Diagnostics.Trace.TraceWarning("Warning statement");
Codes above produce traces below in log file.
2013-10-04T22:17:06 PID[2432] Information Info statement
2013-10-04T22:17:07 PID[2432] Error Error statement
2013-10-04T22:17:07 PID[2432] Warning Warning statement
For NodeJS application, console.log("Hello World " + req.url);
produces below in log file.
Hello World /
Hello World /favicon.ico