1.9 KiB
1.9 KiB
summary, read_when
| summary | read_when | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnostics flags for targeted debug logs |
|
Diagnostics Flags
Diagnostics flags let you enable targeted debug logs without turning on verbose logging everywhere. Flags are opt-in and have no effect unless a subsystem checks them.
How it works
- Flags are strings (case-insensitive).
- You can enable flags in config or via an env override.
- Wildcards are supported:
telegram.*matchestelegram.http*enables all flags
Enable via config
{
"diagnostics": {
"flags": ["telegram.http"]
}
}
Multiple flags:
{
"diagnostics": {
"flags": ["telegram.http", "gateway.*"]
}
}
Restart the gateway after changing flags.
Env override (one-off)
CLAWDBOT_DIAGNOSTICS=telegram.http,telegram.payload
Disable all flags:
CLAWDBOT_DIAGNOSTICS=0
Where logs go
Flags emit logs into the standard diagnostics log file. By default:
/tmp/moltbot/moltbot-YYYY-MM-DD.log
If you set logging.file, use that path instead. Logs are JSONL (one JSON object per line). Redaction still applies based on logging.redactSensitive.
Extract logs
Pick the latest log file:
ls -t /tmp/moltbot/moltbot-*.log | head -n 1
Filter for Telegram HTTP diagnostics:
rg "telegram http error" /tmp/moltbot/moltbot-*.log
Or tail while reproducing:
tail -f /tmp/moltbot/moltbot-$(date +%F).log | rg "telegram http error"
For remote gateways, you can also use moltbot logs --follow (see /cli/logs).
Notes
- If
logging.levelis set higher thanwarn, these logs may be suppressed. Defaultinfois fine. - Flags are safe to leave enabled; they only affect log volume for the specific subsystem.
- Use /logging to change log destinations, levels, and redaction.