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There are a number of common issues that can get in the way when sending new logs to Datadog via the log collector in the dd-agent
. If you experience issues sending new logs to Datadog, this list helps you troubleshoot. If you continue to have trouble, contact Datadog support for further assistance.
Changes in the configuration of the datadog-agent
won’t be taken into account until you have restarted the Agent.
The Datadog Agent sends its logs to Datadog over TCP using port 10516. If that connection is not available, logs fail to be sent and an error is recorded in the agent.log
file to that effect.
You can manually test your connection using OpenSSL, GnuTLS, or another SSL/TLS client. For OpenSSL, run the following command:
openssl s_client -connect intake.logs.datadoghq.com:10516
For GnuTLS, run the following command:
gnutls-cli intake.logs.datadoghq.com:10516
And then by sending a log like the following:
<API_KEY> this is a test message
datadog.yaml
:logs_config:
force_use_http: true
See the HTTPS log forwarding section for more information.
Often, checking the Agent status command results will help you troubleshoot what is happening.
The Datadog Agent only collects logs that have been written after it has started trying to collect them (whether it be tailing or listening for them). In order to confirm whether log collection has been successfully set up, make sure that new logs have been written.
The Datadog Agent does not run as root (and running as root is not recommended, as a general best practice). When you configure your Agent to tail log files for custom logs or for integrations, you need to take special care to ensure the Agent user has the correct access to the log files.
The default Agent user per operating system:
Operating system | Default Agent user |
---|---|
Linux | datadog-agent |
MacOS | datadog-agent |
Windows | ddagentuser |
If the Agent does not have the correct permissions, you might see one of the following error messages when checking the Agent status:
<path/to/filename>
, check that all its subdirectories are executable.To fix the error, give the Datadog Agent user read and execute permissions to the log file and subdirectories.
Run the namei
command to obtain more information about the file permissions:
> namei -m /path/to/log/file
In the following example, the Agent user does not have execute
permissions on the application
directory or read permissions on the error.log
file.
> namei -m /var/log/application/error.log
> f: /var/log/application/
drwxr-xr-x /
drwxr-xr-x var
drwxrwxr-x log
drw-r--r-- application
-rw-r----- error.log
Make the logs folder and its children readable:
sudo chmod o+rx /path/to/logs
Note: Make sure that these permissions are correctly set in your log rotation configuration. Otherwise, on the next log rotate, the Datadog Agent might lose its read permissions. Set permissions as 644
in the log rotation configuration to make sure the Agent has read access to the files.
Use the icacls
command on the log folder to obtain more information about the file permissions:
icacls path/to/logs/file /t
The /t
flag runs the command recursively on files and sub-folders.
In the following example, the test
directory and its children are not accessible to ddagentuser
:
PS C:\Users\Administrator> icacls C:\test\ /t
C:\test\ NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM:(OI)(CI)(F)
BUILTIN\Administrators:(OI)(CI)(F)
CREATOR OWNER:(OI)(CI)(IO)(F)
C:\test\file.log NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM:(F)
BUILTIN\Administrators:(F)
C:\test\file2.log NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM:(F)
BUILTIN\Administrators:(F)
Use the icacls
command to grant ddagentuser
the required permissions (include the quotes):
icacls "path\to\folder" /grant "ddagentuser:(OI)(CI)(RX)" /t
In case the application uses log rotation, (OI)
and (CI)
inheritance rights ensure that any future log files created in the directory inherit the parent folder permissions.
Run icacls
again to check that ddagentuser
has the correct permissions:
icacls path/to/logs/file /t
In the following example, ddagentuser
is listed in the file permissions:
PS C:\Users\Administrator> icacls C:\test\ /t
C:\test\ EC2-ABCD\ddagentuser:(OI)(CI)(RX)
NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM:(OI)(CI)(F)
BUILTIN\Administrators:(OI)(CI)(F)
CREATOR OWNER:(OI)(CI)(IO)(F)
C:\test\file.log NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM:(F)
BUILTIN\Administrators:(F)
EC2-ABCD\ddagentuser:(RX)
C:\test\file2.log NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM:(F)
BUILTIN\Administrators:(F)
EC2-ABCD\ddagentuser:(RX)
Successfully processed 3 files; Failed processing 0 files
Restart the Agent service and check the status to see if the problem is resolved:
& "$env:ProgramFiles\Datadog\Datadog Agent\bin\agent.exe" restart-service
& "$env:ProgramFiles\Datadog\Datadog Agent\bin\agent.exe" status
Retrieve the ACL permissions for the file:
PS C:\Users\Administrator> get-acl C:\app\logs | fl
Path : Microsoft.PowerShell.Core\FileSystem::C:\app\logs
Owner : BUILTIN\Administrators
Group : EC2-ABCD\None
Access : NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM Allow FullControl
BUILTIN\Administrators Allow FullControl
...
In this example, the application
directory is not executable by the Agent.
Run this PowerShell script to give read and execute privileges to ddagentuser
:
$acl = Get-Acl <path\to\logs\folder>
$AccessRule = New-Object System.Security.AccessControl.FileSystemAccessRule("ddagentuser","ReadAndExecute","Allow")
$acl.SetAccessRule($AccessRule)
$acl | Set-Acl <path\to\logs\folder>
Retrieve the ACL permissions for the file again to check if ddagentuser
has the correct permissions:
PS C:\Users\Administrator> get-acl C:\app\logs | fl
Path : Microsoft.PowerShell.Core\FileSystem::C:\app\logs
Owner : BUILTIN\Administrators
Group : EC2-ABCD\None
Access : EC2-ABCD\ddagentuser Allow ReadAndExecute, Synchronize
NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM Allow FullControl
BUILTIN\Administrators Allow FullControl
...
Restart the Agent service and check the status to see if the problem is resolved:
& "$env:ProgramFiles\Datadog\Datadog Agent\bin\agent.exe" restart-service
& "$env:ProgramFiles\Datadog\Datadog Agent\bin\agent.exe" status
When collecting logs from Journald, make sure that the Datadog Agent user is added in the systemd group as shown in the Journald integration.
Note: Journald sends an empty payload if the file permissions are incorrect. Accordingly, it is not possible to raise or send an explicit error message in this case.
These are a few of the common configuration issues that are worth triple-checking in your datadog-agent
setup:
Check if the api_key
is defined in datadog.yaml
.
Check if you have logs_enabled: true
in your datadog.yaml
By default the Agent does not collect any logs, make sure there is at least one .yaml file in the Agent’s conf.d/
directory that includes a logs section and the appropriate values.
You may have some .yaml parsing errors in your configuration files. YAML can be finicky, so when in doubt rely on a YAML validator.
There might be an error in the logs that would explain the issue. Run the following command to check for errors:
sudo grep -i error /var/log/datadog/agent.log
See the Docker Log Collection Troubleshooting Guide
See the Lambda Log Collection Troubleshooting Guide
Check if logs appear in the Datadog Live Tail.
If they appear in the Live Tail, check the Indexes configuration page for any exclusion filters that could match your logs.
If they do not appear in the Live Tail, they might have been dropped if their timestamp was further than 18 hours in the past. You can check which service
and source
may be impacted with the datadog.estimated_usage.logs.drop_count
metric.
Logs above 1MB are truncated. You can check which service
and source
are impacted with the datadog.estimated_usage.logs.truncated_count
and datadog.estimated_usage.logs.truncated_bytes
metrics.