Hi rafael,
See as below. (Referred from https://open5gs.org/open5gs/docs/guide/04-troubleshooting/)
Thanks!
You can modify the configuration file to record more logs.
diff -u /etc/open5gs/mme.yaml.old /etc/open5gs/mme.yaml--- mme.yaml.old 2018-04-15 18:28:31.000000000 +0900+++ mme.yaml 2018-04-15 19:53:10.000000000 +0900@@ -2,6 +2,7 @@
logger: file: /var/log/open5gs/mme.log+ level: debug parameter:
After changing conf files, please restart Open5GS daemons.
$ sudo systemctl restart open5gs-mmed$ sudo systemctl restart open5gs-sgwd
2020년 2월 29일 (토) 오전 2:53, Rafael Diniz rafael@rhizomatica.org님이 작성:
Thanks Spencer!
I'm willing if I should use the "-e", "-m", "-d" and "-t" in the systemd open5gs-* service files for a more verbose output.
juba
On 2/28/20 1:40 PM, Spencer Sevilla wrote:
Hi Juba!
If open5gs is running as a systemd service (the default if you installed
with apt-get) you should use journalctl. The relevant systemd service names are open5gs-hssd, open5gs-mmed, open5gs-sgwd, open5gs-pgwd, and open5gs-pcrfd. If you built them from source, they will output all information in the terminal window you’re running them in, and will also write to log files located in {installation_directory}/var/log/open5gs/.
To see all the journalctl logs in one terminal: “sudo journalctl -f -u
open5gs-hssd -u open5gs-mmed -u open5gs-pgwd -u open5gs-sgwd -u open5gs-pcrfd"
On Feb 28, 2020, at 06:58, Rafael Diniz rafael@rhizomatica.org wrote:
Hi all,
Which cmd line should I use to get all the debug information possible from the EPC components?
Thanks, Rafael Diniz