diff --git a/docs/reference/how-to/search-speed.asciidoc b/docs/reference/how-to/search-speed.asciidoc index 0ef55d7808873..67ad5706ebe50 100644 --- a/docs/reference/how-to/search-speed.asciidoc +++ b/docs/reference/how-to/search-speed.asciidoc @@ -567,3 +567,9 @@ also possible to update the client-side logic in order to route queries to the relevant indices based on filters. However `constant_keyword` makes it transparently and allows to decouple search requests from the index topology in exchange of very little overhead. + +[discrete] +=== Default search timeout + +By default, search requests do not time out. To set a best-effort duration +limit, see setting <>. diff --git a/docs/reference/index-modules/slowlog.asciidoc b/docs/reference/index-modules/slowlog.asciidoc index c29296b59ad4a..fbaa8410aad5c 100644 --- a/docs/reference/index-modules/slowlog.asciidoc +++ b/docs/reference/index-modules/slowlog.asciidoc @@ -1,15 +1,68 @@ [[index-modules-slowlog]] == Slow Log +Slow logs are an industry practice to record database searching and indexing +events with execution durations above specified thresholds. These logs are +helpful for look-back analyses such as investigating +<>. + +Slow logs report task duration on the shard-level for searches and index-level +for indexing, but may not encompass the full task execution time noticed +client-side. For example, slow logs would not surface HTTP network delays or +<>. + +Slow log events are emitted into <> under the +`fileset.name` of `slowlog` for threshold qualifying searching and indexing +events. These logs can be viewed respectively for searches and indexing either + +* if <> is enabled, from +{kibana-ref}/xpack-monitoring.html[Stack Monitoring] under `logger` set to +`index.search.slowlog` and `index.indexing.slowlog`. + +* from local {es} service logs directory, under dedicated files suffixing +`_index_search_slowlog.json` and `_index_indexing_slowlog.json`. + +[discrete] +[[enable-slow-log]] +=== Enable + +Slow logs are <> meaning they can be +updated either for all indices under the <> upon node restart or without restart per index per +index via <>. By default +thresholds are disabled (set to `-1`). + +Slow log thresholds can be enabled for the four logging levels: `trace`, `debug`, +`info`, and `warn`. You can mimic setting log level thresholds by disabling +more verbose levels. + +To see all live, overrode slow log settings, run +<>: + +[source,console] +-------------------------------------------------- +GET _all/_settings?expand_wildcards=all&filter_path=*.settings.index.*.slowlog +-------------------------------------------------- + +If a call was initiated with an `X-Opaque-ID` header, then the ID is included +in Search Slow logs in the **elasticsearch.slowlog.id** field. See +<> for details and best practices. + +Enable the respective `index.search.slowlog.include.user` or +`index.indexing.slowlog.include.user` settings to append `user.*` and +`auth.type` fields into slow log for information about the user who triggered +the request. + [discrete] [[search-slow-log]] -=== Search Slow Log +==== Searching -Shard level slow search log allows to log slow search (query and fetch -phases) into a dedicated log file. +Search slow logs emit per shard. They can be enabled for both the shard's +link:https://www.elastic.co/blog/understanding-query-then-fetch-vs-dfs-query-then-fetch[query +or fetch search phases]. -Thresholds can be set for both the query phase of the execution, and -fetch phase, here is a sample: +Here is a sample to set all available options across all indices via the +<>: [source,yaml] -------------------------------------------------- @@ -22,10 +75,12 @@ index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.warn: 1s index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.info: 800ms index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.debug: 500ms index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.trace: 200ms + +index.search.slowlog.include.user: true -------------------------------------------------- -All of the above settings are _dynamic_ and can be set for each index using the -<> API. For example: +Listing the same available options as dynamically modified via +<>: [source,console] -------------------------------------------------- @@ -38,47 +93,24 @@ PUT /my-index-000001/_settings "index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.warn": "1s", "index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.info": "800ms", "index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.debug": "500ms", - "index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.trace": "200ms" -} --------------------------------------------------- -// TEST[setup:my_index] - -By default thresholds are disabled (set to `-1`). - -The logging is done on the shard level scope, meaning the execution of a -search request within a specific shard. It does not encompass the whole -search request, which can be broadcast to several shards in order to -execute. Some of the benefits of shard level logging is the association -of the actual execution on the specific machine, compared with request -level. - - -The search slow log file is configured in the `log4j2.properties` file. - -[discrete] -==== Identifying search slow log origin - -It is often useful to identify what triggered a slow running query. -To include information about the user that triggered a slow search, -use the `index.search.slowlog.include.user` setting. - -[source,console] --------------------------------------------------- -PUT /my-index-000001/_settings -{ + "index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.trace": "200ms", "index.search.slowlog.include.user": true } -------------------------------------------------- // TEST[setup:my_index] -This will result in user information being included in the slow log. +Here is an example emitted search slow log: [source,js] --------------------------- { - "@timestamp": "2024-02-21T12:42:37.255Z", - "log.level": "WARN", + "@timestamp": "2024-12-21T12:42:37.255Z", "auth.type": "REALM", + "ecs.version": "1.2.0", + "elasticsearch.cluster.name": "distribution_run", + "elasticsearch.cluster.uuid": "Ui23kfF1SHKJwu_hI1iPPQ", + "elasticsearch.node.id": "JK-jn-XpQ3OsDUsq5ZtfGg", + "elasticsearch.node.name": "node-0", "elasticsearch.slowlog.id": "tomcat-123", "elasticsearch.slowlog.message": "[index6][0]", "elasticsearch.slowlog.search_type": "QUERY_THEN_FETCH", @@ -88,34 +120,27 @@ This will result in user information being included in the slow log. "elasticsearch.slowlog.took_millis": 0, "elasticsearch.slowlog.total_hits": "1 hits", "elasticsearch.slowlog.total_shards": 1, - "user.name": "elastic", - "user.realm": "reserved", - "ecs.version": "1.2.0", - "service.name": "ES_ECS", "event.dataset": "elasticsearch.index_search_slowlog", - "process.thread.name": "elasticsearch[runTask-0][search][T#5]", + "fileset.name" : "slowlog", + "log.level": "WARN", "log.logger": "index.search.slowlog.query", - "elasticsearch.cluster.uuid": "Ui23kfF1SHKJwu_hI1iPPQ", - "elasticsearch.node.id": "JK-jn-XpQ3OsDUsq5ZtfGg", - "elasticsearch.node.name": "node-0", - "elasticsearch.cluster.name": "distribution_run" + "process.thread.name": "elasticsearch[runTask-0][search][T#5]", + "service.name": "ES_ECS", + "user.name": "elastic", + "user.realm": "reserved" } --------------------------- // NOTCONSOLE -If a call was initiated with an `X-Opaque-ID` header, then the ID is included -in Search Slow logs in the **elasticsearch.slowlog.id** field. See -<> for details and best practices. [discrete] [[index-slow-log]] -=== Index Slow log +==== Indexing -The indexing slow log, similar in functionality to the search slow -log. The log file name ends with `_index_indexing_slowlog.json`. Log and -the thresholds are configured in the same way as the search slowlog. -Index slowlog sample: +Indexing slow logs emit per index document. Here is a sample to set all +available options across all indices via the <>: [source,yaml] -------------------------------------------------- @@ -123,11 +148,15 @@ index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.warn: 10s index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.info: 5s index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.debug: 2s index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.trace: 500ms + index.indexing.slowlog.source: 1000 +index.indexing.slowlog.reformat: true + +index.indexing.slowlog.include.user: true -------------------------------------------------- -All of the above settings are _dynamic_ and can be set for each index using the -<> API. For example: +Listing the same available options as dynamically modified via +<>: [source,console] -------------------------------------------------- @@ -137,24 +166,14 @@ PUT /my-index-000001/_settings "index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.info": "5s", "index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.debug": "2s", "index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.trace": "500ms", - "index.indexing.slowlog.source": "1000" -} --------------------------------------------------- -// TEST[setup:my_index] - -To include information about the user that triggered a slow indexing event, -use the `index.indexing.slowlog.include.user` setting. - -[source,console] --------------------------------------------------- -PUT /my-index-000001/_settings -{ + "index.indexing.slowlog.source": "1000", + "index.indexing.slowlog.reformat": true, "index.indexing.slowlog.include.user": true } -------------------------------------------------- // TEST[setup:my_index] -By default Elasticsearch will log the first 1000 characters of the _source in +By default {es} will log the first 1000 characters of the `_source` in the slowlog. You can change that with `index.indexing.slowlog.source`. Setting it to `false` or `0` will skip logging the source entirely, while setting it to `true` will log the entire source regardless of size. The original `_source` is @@ -163,13 +182,78 @@ the original document format is important, you can turn off reformatting by sett `index.indexing.slowlog.reformat` to `false`, which will cause the source to be logged "as is" and can potentially span multiple log lines. -The index slow log file is configured in the `log4j2.properties` file. +Here is an example emitted indexing slow log: + +[source,js] +--------------------------- +{ + "@timestamp" : "2024-12-11T22:34:22.613Z", + "auth.type": "REALM", + "ecs.version": "1.2.0", + "elasticsearch.cluster.name" : "41bd111609d849fc9bf9d25b5df9ce96", + "elasticsearch.cluster.uuid" : "BZTn4I9URXSK26imlia0QA", + "elasticsearch.index.id" : "3VfGR7wRRRKmMCEn7Ii58g", + "elasticsearch.index.name": "my-index-000001", + "elasticsearch.node.id" : "GGiBgg21S3eqPDHzQiCMvQ", + "elasticsearch.node.name" : "instance-0000000001", + "elasticsearch.slowlog.id" : "RCHbt5MBT0oSsCOu54AJ", + "elasticsearch.slowlog.source": "{\"key\":\"value\"}" + "elasticsearch.slowlog.took" : "0.01ms", + "event.dataset": "elasticsearch.index_indexing_slowlog", + "fileset.name" : "slowlog", + "log.level" : "TRACE", + "log.logger" : "index.indexing.slowlog.index", + "service.name" : "ES_ECS", + "user.name": "elastic", + "user.realm": "reserved" +} + +--------------------------- +// NOTCONSOLE [discrete] -=== Slow log levels +[[troubleshoot-slow-log]] +=== Troubleshooting + +Recording slow logs may potentially be resource intensive to your {es} cluster +depending on the qualifying traffic's volume. For example, emitted logs may +increase the index disk usage of your <> +cluster. We generally recommend enabling them against specific indices rather +than across all indices, with high thresholds, and usually only during +troubleshooting. + +Slow log thresholds being met do not guarantee cluster performance issues may +be experienced. In the event that symptoms are noticed, slow logs can provide +helpful data to diagnosis upstream traffic patterns or source to curb +problematic traffic client-side. For example, from data included in `X-Opaque-ID`, +the `_source` request body, or `user.*` fields. This is similar to +troubleshooting <>. For related feature +optimization information, see <> +and <. + +If you are uncertain where to begin investigating problematic traffic, we +recommend dynamically enabling via <> with high thresholds against both slow logs: + +[source,console] +-------------------------------------------------- +PUT _all/_settings +{ + "index.indexing.slowlog.include.user": true + "index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.warn": "30s", + "index.search.slowlog.include.user": true + "index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.warn": "30s", + "index.search.slowlog.threshold.query.warn": "30s", +} +-------------------------------------------------- + +You may also consider searches flagged for their query durations, preferably +in a non-production environment, using the <> in +order to investigate optimization options via the +link:{kibana-ref}/xpack-profiler.html[query profiler]. -You can mimic the search or indexing slow log level by setting appropriate -threshold making "more verbose" loggers to be switched off. -If for instance we want to simulate `index.indexing.slowlog.level: INFO` -then all we need to do is to set -`index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.debug` and `index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.trace` to `-1`. +Slow logging checks the event against reporting threshold upon its completion. +Therefore it cannot report if events trigger <>. If you are troubleshooting this ballpark, you may want to also +consider enabling <> which logs events +before they are executed.