Linux Virtual Delivery Agent 2112

Tracing On

Overview

Collecting logs and reproducing issues slow down the diagnostics and degrade the user experience. The Tracing On feature eases such efforts. Tracing is enabled for the Linux VDA by default.

Configuration

The ctxlogd daemon and the setlog utility are now included in the Linux VDA release package. By default, the ctxlogd daemon starts after you install and configure the Linux VDA.

ctxlogd daemon

All the other services that are traced depend on the ctxlogd daemon. You can stop the ctxlogd daemon if you do not want to keep the Linux VDA traced.

setlog utility

Tracing On is configured using the setlog utility, which is under the /opt/Citrix/VDA/bin/ path. Only the root user has the privilege to run it. You can use the GUI or run commands to view and change the configurations. Run the following command for help with the setlog utility:

setlog help
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Values

By default, Log Output Path is set to /var/log/xdl/hdx.log, Max Log Size is set to 200 MB, and you can save up to two old log files under Log Output Path.

View the current setlog values:

setlog values

log_path (Log Output Path) = /var/log/xdl/hdx.log

log_size (Max Log Size (MiB)) = 200

log_count (Max Old Log Files) = 2
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View or set a single setlog value:

setlog value <name> [<value>]
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For example:

setlog value log_size 100
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Levels

By default, log levels are set to warning (case-insensitive).

To view log levels set for different components, run the following command:

setlog levels
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To set log levels (including Disabled, Inherited, Verbose, Information, Warnings, Errors, and Fatal Errors), run the following command:

setlog level <class> [<level>]
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Log Level Command Parameter (Case-Insensitive)
Disabled none
Inherited inherit
Verbose verbose
Information info
Warnings warning
Errors error
Fatal Errors fatal

The <class> variable specifies one component of the Linux VDA. To cover all components, set it to all. For example:

setlog level all error
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Flags

By default, the flags are set as follows:

setlog flags

DATE = true

TIME = true

NAME = true

PID = true

TID = false

SID = true

UID = false

GID = false

CLASS = false

LEVEL = false

FUNC = true

FILE = false
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View the current flags:

setlog flags
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View or set a single log flag:

setlog flag <flag> [<state>]
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Restore Defaults

Revert all levels, flags, and values to the default settings:

setlog default
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Important:

The ctxlogd service is configured using the /var/xdl/.ctxlog file, which only root users can create. Other users do not have write permission to this file. We recommend that root users not give write permission to other users. Failure to comply can cause the arbitrary or malicious configuration to ctxlogd, which can affect server performance and therefore the user experience.

Troubleshooting

The ctxlogd daemon fails and you cannot restart the ctxlogd service when the /var/xdl/.ctxlog file is missing (for example, accidentally deleted).

/var/log/messages:

Apr 1 02:28:21 RH72 citrix-ctxlogd[17881]: Failed to open logging configuration file.

Apr 1 02:28:21 RH72 systemd: ctxlogd.service: main process exited, code=exited, status=1/FAILURE

Apr 1 02:28:21 RH72 systemd: Unit ctxlogd.service entered failed state.

Apr 1 02:28:21 RH72 systemd: ctxlogd.service failed.
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To solve this issue, run setlog as a root user to recreate the /var/xdl/.ctxlog file. Then restart the ctxlogd service on which other services depend.

Tracing On