Module ngx_stream_log_module (original) (raw)

The ngx_stream_log_module module (1.11.4) writes session logs in the specified format.

Example Configuration

log_format basic '$remote_addr [$time_local] ' '$protocol statusstatus statusbytes_sent $bytes_received ' '$session_time';

access_log /spool/logs/nginx-access.log basic buffer=32k;

Directives

Syntax: access_log path format [buffer=_size_] [gzip[=_level_]] [flush=_time_] [if=_condition_];access_log off;
Default: access_log off;
Context: stream, server

Sets the path, format, and configuration for a buffered log write. Several logs can be specified on the same configuration level. Logging to syslogcan be configured by specifying the “syslog:” prefix in the first parameter. The special value off cancels allaccess_log directives on the current level.

If either the buffer or gzipparameter is used, writes to log will be buffered.

The buffer size must not exceed the size of an atomic write to a disk file. For FreeBSD this size is unlimited.

When buffering is enabled, the data will be written to the file:

If the gzip parameter is used, then the buffered data will be compressed before writing to the file. The compression level can be set between 1 (fastest, less compression) and 9 (slowest, best compression). By default, the buffer size is equal to 64K bytes, and the compression level is set to 1. Since the data is compressed in atomic blocks, the log file can be decompressed or read by “zcat” at any time.

Example:

access_log /path/to/log.gz basic gzip flush=5m;

For gzip compression to work, nginx must be built with the zlib library.

The file path can contain variables, but such logs have some constraints:

The if parameter enables conditional logging. A session will not be logged if the _condition_ evaluates to “0” or an empty string.

| Syntax: | log_format name [escape=default|json|none]string ...; | | -------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------ | | Default: | — | | Context: | stream |

Specifies the log format, for example:

log_format proxy '$remote_addr [$time_local] ' '$protocol statusstatus statusbytes_sent $bytes_received ' '$session_time "$upstream_addr" ' '"$upstream_bytes_sent" "$upstream_bytes_received" "$upstream_connect_time"';

The escape parameter (1.11.8) allows settingjson or default characters escaping in variables, by default, default escaping is used. The none parameter (1.13.10) disables escaping.

For default escaping, characters “"”, “\”, and other characters with values less than 32 or above 126 are escaped as “\xXX”. If the variable value is not found, a hyphen (“-”) will be logged.

For json escaping, all characters not allowed in JSON stringswill be escaped: characters “"” and “\” are escaped as “\"” and “\\”, characters with values less than 32 are escaped as “\n”, “\r”, “\t”, “\b”, “\f”, or “\u00XX”.

Syntax: open_log_file_cache max=_N_[inactive=_time_] [min_uses=_N_] [valid=_time_];open_log_file_cache off;
Default: open_log_file_cache off;
Context: stream, server

Defines a cache that stores the file descriptors of frequently used logs whose names contain variables. The directive has the following parameters:

max

sets the maximum number of descriptors in a cache; if the cache becomes full the least recently used (LRU) descriptors are closed

inactive

sets the time after which the cached descriptor is closed if there were no access during this time; by default, 10 seconds

min_uses

sets the minimum number of file uses during the time defined by the inactive parameter to let the descriptor stay open in a cache; by default, 1

valid

sets the time after which it should be checked that the file still exists with the same name; by default, 60 seconds

off

disables caching

Usage example:

open_log_file_cache max=1000 inactive=20s valid=1m min_uses=2;