General Queue Parameters

Authors:

Rainer Gerhards <rgerhards@adiscon.com>;

Usage

Queue parameters can be used together with the following statements:

Queues need to be configured in the action or ruleset it should affect. If nothing is configured, default values will be used. Thus, the default ruleset has only the default main queue. Specific Action queues are not set up by default.

To fully understand queue parameters and how they interact, be sure to read the queues documentation.

Configuration Parameters

Note

As with other configuration objects, parameters for this object are case-insensitive.

queue.filename

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

word

none

no

$ActionQueueFileName

File name to be used for the queue files. If specified, this parameter enables disk-assisted queue functionality. If not specified, the queue will operate without saving the queue to disk, either during its operation or when shut down. See the separate queue.saveonshutdown parameter to configure that option. Please note that this is actually just the file name. A directory can NOT be specified in this parameter. If the files shall be created in a specific directory, specify queue.spoolDirectory for this. The filename is used to build to complete path for queue files.

queue.spoolDirectory

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

word

none

no

none

This is the directory into which queue files will be stored. Note that the directory must exist, it is NOT automatically created by rsyslog. If no spoolDirectory is specified, the work directory is used.

queue.size

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

1000/50000

no

$ActionQueueSize

This is the maximum size of the queue in number of messages. Note that setting the queue size to very small values (roughly below 100 messages) is not supported and can lead to unpredictable results. For more information on the current status of this restriction see the rsyslog FAQ: “lower bound for queue sizes”.

The default depends on queue type and rsyslog version, if you need a specific value, please specify it. Otherwise rsyslog selects what it considers appropriate for the version in question. In rsyslog rsyslog 8.30.0, for example, ruleset queues have a default size of 50000 and action queues which are configured to be non-direct have a size of 1000.

queue.dequeueBatchSize

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

128/1024

no

$ActionQueueDequeueBatchSize

Specifies the maximum batch size for dequeue operations. This setting affects performance. As a rule of thumb, larger batch sizes (up to a environment-induced upper limit) provide better performance. For the average system, there usually should be no need to adjust batch sizes as the defaults are sufficient. The default for ruleset queues is 1024 and for action queues 128.

Note that this only specifies the maximum batch size. Batches will be slower if rsyslog does not have as many messages inside the queue at time of dequeuing it. If you want to set a minimum Batch size as well, you can use queue.minDequeueBatchSize.

queue.minDequeueBatchSize

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

0

no

none

Specifies the minimum batch size for dequeue operations. This setting is especially useful with outputs like ElasticSearch or ClickHouse, where you want to limit the number of HTTP requests. With this setting, the queue engine waits up to queue.minDequeueBatchSize.timeout milliseconds when there are fewer messages currently queued. Note that the minimum batch size cannot be larger than the configured maximum batch size. If so, it is automatically adjusted to match the maximum. So if in doubt, you need to specify both parameters.

queue.minDequeueBatchSize.timeout

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

1000

no

none

This parameter is only meaningful if use together with queue.minDequeueBatchSize, otherwise it is ignored. It specifies the amount of time (in milliseconds) rsyslogs waits for new messages so that the minimum batch size can be reached. After this period, the batch is processed, even if it is below minimum size. This capability exists to prevent having messages stalled in an incomplete batch just because no new messages arrive. We would expect that it usually makes little sense to set it to higher than 60.000 (60 seconds), but this is permitted. Just be warned that this potentially delays log processing for that long.

queue.maxDiskSpace

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

0

no

$ActionQueueMaxDiskSpace

The maximum size that all queue files together will use on disk. Note that the actual size may be slightly larger than the configured max, as rsyslog never writes partial queue records.

queue.highWatermark

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

90% of queue.size

no

$ActionQueueHighWaterMark

This applies to disk-assisted queues, only. When the queue fills up to this number of messages, the queue begins to spool messages to disk. Please note that this should not happen as part of usual processing, because disk queue mode is very considerably slower than in-memory queue mode. Going to disk should be reserved for cases where an output action destination is offline for some period.

queue.lowWatermark

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

70% of queue.size

no

$ActionQueueLowWaterMark

This applies to disk-assisted queues, only. When the high watermark is reached, the queue will write data to disk. It does so until the low watermark is reached, then the queue reverts back to in-memory mode.

queue.fullDelaymark

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

97% of queue.size

no

none

Number of messages when the queue should block delayable messages. Messages are NO LONGER PROCESSED until the queue has sufficient space again. If a message is delayable depends on the input. For example, messages received via imtcp are delayable (because TCP can push back), but those received via imudp are not (as UDP does not permit a push back). The intent behind this setting is to leave some space in an almost-full queue for non-delayable messages, which would be lost if the queue runs out of space. Please note that if you use a DA queue, setting the fulldelaymark BELOW the highwatermark makes the queue never activate disk mode for delayable inputs. So this is probably not what you want.

queue.lightDelayMark

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

70% of queue.size

no

none

If this mark is reached the sender will be throttled if possible. The main idea to do this is leave some space inside the queue for inputs like UDP which cannot be throttled - and so any data arriving at “queue full” would be discarded.

If the special value 0 is used, queue.LightDelayMark will be set to the value of queue.size. This effectively disables light delay functionality. This is useful if a queue is not used by non-delayable inputs like UDP. The special value was introduced in rsyslog 8.1904.0 and is not available in earlier versions. There, you can achieve the same result by setting queue.LightDelayMark to a very large value.

queue.discardMark

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

80% of queue.size

no

$ActionQueueDiscardMark

Specifies the threshold at which rsyslog begins to discard less important messages. To define which messages should be discarded use the queue.discardseverity parameter.

queue.discardSeverity

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

8

no

$ActionQueueDiscardSeverity

As soon as the threshold of the parameter queue.discardMark is reached incoming as well as queued messages with a priority equal or lower than specified will be erased. With the default no messages will be erased. You have to specify a numeric severity value for this parameter.

queue.checkpointInterval

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

0

no

$ActionQueueCheckpointInterval

Disk queues by default do not update housekeeping structures every time the queue writes to disk. This is for performance reasons. In the event of failure, data will still be lost (except when data is mangled via the file structures). However, disk queues can be set to write bookkeeping information on checkpoints (every n records), so that this can be made ultra-reliable, too. If the checkpoint interval is set to one, no data can be lost, but the queue is exceptionally slow.

queue.syncqueuefiles

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

binary

off

no

$ActionQueueSyncQueueFiles

Disk-based queues can be made very reliable by issuing a (f)sync after each write operation. This happens when you set the parameter to “on”. Activating this option has a performance penalty, so it should not be turned on without a good reason. Note that the penalty also depends on queue.checkpointInterval frequency.

queue.samplingInterval

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

0

no

none

New in version 8.23.0.

This option allows queues to be populated by events produced at a specific interval. It provides a way to sample data each N events, instead of processing all, in order to reduce resources usage (disk, bandwidth…)

queue.type

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

word

Direct

no

$ActionQueueType

Specifies the type of queue that will be used. Possible options are “FixedArray”, “LinkedList”, “Direct” or “Disk”. For more information read the documentation for queues.

queue.workerThreads

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

1

no

$ActionQueueWorkerThreads

Specifies the maximum number of worker threads that can be run parallel.

queue.workerThreadMinimumMessages

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

queue.size/queue.workerthreads

no

$ActionQueueWorkerThreadMinimumMessages

Specify the number of messages a worker thread is processing before another worker thread is created. This number is limited by parameter queue.workerThreads. For example if this parameter is set to 200 and in the queue are 201 messages a second worker thread will be created.

queue.timeoutWorkerthreadShutdown

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

60000

no

$ActionQueueTimeoutWorkerthreadShutdown

After starting a worker thread, it will process messages until there are no messages for him to process. This parameter specifies the time the worker thread has to be inactive before it times out. The parameter must be specified in milliseconds. Which means the default of 60000 is 1 minute.

queue.timeoutshutdown

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

10/1500

no

$ActionQueueTimeoutShutdown

If a queue that still contains messages is terminated it will wait the specified time interval for the worker thread to finish. The time is specified in milliseconds (1000ms is 1sec). Default for action queues is 10, for ruleset queues it is 1500.

queue.timeoutActionCompletion

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

1000

no

$ActionQueueTimeoutActionCompletion

When a queue is terminated, the timeout shutdown is over and there is still data in the queue, the queue will finish the current data element and then terminate. This parameter specifies the timeout for processing this last element. Parameter is specified in milliseconds (1000ms is 1sec).

queue.timeoutEnqueue

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

2000

no

$ActionQueueTimeoutEnqueue

This timeout value is used when the queue is full. If rsyslog cannot enqueue a message within the timeout period, the message is discarded. Note that this is setting of last resort (assuming defaults are used for the queue settings or proper parameters are set): all delayable inputs (like imtcp or imfile) have already been pushed back at this stage. Also, discarding of lower priority messages (if configured) has already happened. So we run into one of these situations if we do not timeout quickly enough:

  • if using imuxsock and no systemd journal is involved, the system would become unresponsive and most probably a hard reset would be required.

  • if using imuxsock with imjournal forwarding is active, messages are lost because the journal discards them (more aggressive than rsyslog does)

  • if using imjournal, the journal will buffer messages. If journal runs out of configured space, messages will be discarded. So in this mode discarding is moved to a bit later place.

  • other non-delayable sources like imudp will also loose messages

So this setting is provided in order to guard against problematic situations, which always will result either in message loss or system hang. For action queues, one may debate if it would be better to overflow rapidly to the main queue. If so desired, this is easy to accomplish by setting a very large timeout value. The same, of course, is true for the main queue, but you have been warned if you do so!

In some other words, you can consider this scenario, using default values. With all progress blocked (unable to deliver a message):

  • all delayable inputs (tcp, relp, imfile, imjournal, etc) will block indefinantly (assuming queue.lightdelaymark and queue.fulldelaymark are set sensible, which they are by default).

  • imudp will be loosing messages because the OS will be dropping them

  • messages arriving via UDP or imuxsock that do make it to rsyslog, and that are a severity high enough to not be filtered by discardseverity, will block for 2 seconds trying to put the message in the queue (in the hope that something happens to make space in the queue) and then be dropped to avoid blocking the machine permanently.

    Then the next message to be processed will also be tried for 2 seconds, etc.

  • If this is going into an action queue, the log message will remain in the main queue during these 2 seconds, and additional logs that arrive will accumulate behind this in the main queue.

queue.maxFileSize

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

1m/16m

no

$ActionQueueMaxFileSize

Specifies the maximum size for the disk-assisted queue file. Parameter can be specified in Mebibyte or Gibibyte, default for action queues is 1m and for ruleset queues 16m (1m = 1024*1024).

queue.saveOnShutdown

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

binary

off

no

$ActionQueueSaveOnShutdown

This parameter specifies if data should be saved at shutdown.

queue.dequeueSlowDown

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

0

no

$ActionQueueDequeueSlowDown

Regulates how long dequeueing should be delayed. This value must be specified in microseconds (1000000us is 1sec). It can be used to slow down rsyslog so it won’t send things to fast. For example if this parameter is set to 10000 on a UDP send action, the action won’t be able to put out more than 100 messages per second.

queue.dequeueTimeBegin

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

0

no

$ActionQueueDequeueTimeBegin

With this parameter you can specify rsyslog to process queues during specific time periods. To define a time frame use the 24-hour format without minutes. This parameter specifies the begin and “queue.dequeuetimeend” the end of the time frame.

queue.dequeueTimeEnd

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

integer

25

no

$ActionQueueDequeueTimeEnd

With this parameter you can specify rsyslog to process queues during specific time periods. To define a time frame use the 24-hour format without minutes. This parameter specifies the end and “queue.dequeuetimebegin” the begin of the time frame. The default 25 disables the time-window.

queue.takeFlowCtlFromMsg

type

default

mandatory

obsolete legacy directive

boolean

off

no

none

New in version 8.1911.0.

This is a fine-tuning parameter which permits to control whether or not rsyslog shall always take the flow control setting from the message. If so, non-primary queues may also block when reaching high water mark.

This permits to add some synchronous processing to rsyslog core engine. However, this involves some risk: Improper use may make the core engine stall. As such, enabling this parameter requires very careful planning of the rsyslog configuration and deep understanding of the consequences.

Note that the parameter is applied to individual queues, so a configuration with a large number of queues can (and must if used) be fine-tuned to the exact use case.

The rsyslog team strongly recommends to let this parameter turned off.

Examples

Example 1

The following is a sample of a TCP forwarding action with its own queue.

action(type="omfwd" target="192.168.2.11" port="10514" protocol="tcp"
       queue.filename="forwarding" queue.size="1000000" queue.type="LinkedList"
      )

See also

Help with configuring/using Rsyslog:

See also

Contributing to Rsyslog:

Copyright 2008-2023 Rainer Gerhards (Großrinderfeld), and Others.