4.8 KiB
VictoriaLogs Quick Start
It is recommended to read README and Key Concepts before you start working with VictoriaLogs.
How to install and run VictoriaLogs
There are the following options exist:
Docker image
You can run VictoriaLogs in a Docker container. It is the easiest way to start using VictoriaLogs. Here is the command to run VictoriaLogs in a Docker container:
docker run --rm -it -p 9428:9428 -v ./victoria-logs-data:/victoria-logs-data \
docker.io/victoriametrics/victoria-logs:heads-public-single-node-0-ga638f5e2b
See also:
Helm charts
You can run VictoriaLogs in Kubernetes environment with these Helm charts.
Building from source code
Follow the following steps in order to build VictoriaLogs from source code:
-
Checkout VictoriaLogs source code. It is located in the VictoriaMetrics repository:
git clone https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics cd VictoriaMetrics
-
Build VictoriaLogs. The build command requires Go 1.20.
make victoria-logs
-
Run the built binary:
bin/victoria-logs
VictoriaLogs is ready for data ingestion
and querying at the TCP port 9428
now!
It has no any external dependencies, so it may run in various environments without additional setup and configuration.
VictoriaLogs automatically adapts to the available CPU and RAM resources. It also automatically setups and creates
the needed indexes during data ingestion.
See also:
How to configure VictoriaLogs
VictoriaLogs is configured via command-line flags. All the command-line flags have sane defaults, so there is no need in tuning them in general case. VictoriaLogs runs smoothly in most environments without additional configuration.
Pass -help
to VictoriaLogs in order to see the list of supported command-line flags with their description and default values:
/path/to/victoria-logs -help
VictoriaLogs stores the ingested data to the victoria-logs-data
directory by default. The directory can be changed
via -storageDataPath
command-line flag. See these docs for details.
By default VictoriaLogs stores log entries with timestamps
in the time range [now-7d, now]
, while dropping logs outside the given time range.
E.g. it uses the retention of 7 days. Read these docs on how to control the retention
for the ingested logs.
It is recommended setting up monitoring of VictoriaLogs according to these docs.
See also:
Docker demos
Here are a Docker-compose demos, which start VictoriaLogs and push logs to it via various log collectors:
You can use this Helm chart as a demo for running Fluentbit in Kubernetes with VictoriaLogs.