2.3 KiB
Maintenance and Troubleshooting
How to see the current status of your services
You can check the status of your services by using systemctl status. Example:
sudo systemctl status matrix-synapse
● matrix-synapse.service - Synapse server
Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/matrix-synapse.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled)
Active: active (running) since Sun 2024-01-14 09:13:06 UTC; 1h 31min ago
Docker containers that the playbook configures are supervised by systemd and their logs are configured to go to systemd-journald.
To prevent double-logging, Docker logging is disabled by explicitly passing --log-driver=none to all containers. Due to this, you cannot view logs using docker logs.
To view systemd-journald logs using journalctl, run a command like this:
sudo journalctl -fu matrix-synapse
Increasing Synapse logging
Because the Synapse Matrix server is originally very chatty when it comes to logging, we intentionally reduce its logging level from INFO to WARNING.
If you'd like to debug an issue or report a Synapse bug to the developers, it'd be better if you temporarily increasing the logging level to INFO.
Example configuration (inventory/host_vars/matrix.example.com/vars.yml):
matrix_synapse_log_level: "INFO"
matrix_synapse_storage_sql_log_level: "INFO"
matrix_synapse_root_log_level: "INFO"
Re-run the playbook after making these configuration changes.
Remove unused Docker data
You can free some disk space from Docker, see docker system prune for more information.
ansible-playbook -i inventory/hosts setup.yml --tags=run-docker-prune
The shortcut command with just program is also available: just run-tags run-docker-prune
Postgres
See the dedicated PostgreSQL Maintenance documentation page.
Ma1sd
See the dedicated Adjusting ma1sd Identity Server configuration documentation page.