# Kubo environment variables ## `IPFS_PATH` Sets the location of the IPFS repo (where the config, blocks, etc. are stored). Default: ~/.ipfs ## `IPFS_LOGGING` Specifies the log level for Kubo. `IPFS_LOGGING` is a deprecated alias for the `GOLOG_LOG_LEVEL` environment variable. See below. ## `IPFS_LOGGING_FMT` Specifies the log message format. `IPFS_LOGGING_FMT` is a deprecated alias for the `GOLOG_LOG_FMT` environment variable. See below. ## `GOLOG_LOG_LEVEL` Specifies the log-level, both globally and on a per-subsystem basis. Level can be one of: * `debug` * `info` * `warn` * `error` * `dpanic` * `panic` * `fatal` Per-subsystem levels can be specified with `subsystem=level`. One global level and one or more per-subsystem levels can be specified by separating them with commas. Default: `error` Example: ```console GOLOG_LOG_LEVEL="error,core/server=debug" ipfs daemon ``` Logging can also be configured at runtime, both globally and on a per-subsystem basis, with the `ipfs log` command. ## `GOLOG_LOG_FMT` Specifies the log message format. It supports the following values: - `color` -- human readable, colorized (ANSI) output - `nocolor` -- human readable, plain-text output. - `json` -- structured JSON. For example, to log structured JSON (for easier parsing): ```bash export GOLOG_LOG_FMT="json" ``` The logging format defaults to `color` when the output is a terminal, and `nocolor` otherwise. ## `GOLOG_FILE` Sets the file to which Kubo logs. By default, Kubo logs to standard error. ## `GOLOG_TRACING_FILE` Sets the file to which Kubo sends tracing events. By default, tracing is disabled. This log can be read at runtime (without writing it to a file) using the `ipfs log tail` command. Warning: Enabling tracing will likely affect performance. ## `IPFS_FUSE_DEBUG` Enables fuse debug logging. Default: false ## `YAMUX_DEBUG` Enables debug logging for the yamux stream muxer. Default: false ## `IPFS_FD_MAX` Sets the file descriptor limit for Kubo. If Kubo fails to set the file descriptor limit, it will log an error. Defaults: 2048 ## `IPFS_DIST_PATH` IPFS Content Path from which Kubo fetches repo migrations (when the daemon is launched with the `--migrate` flag). Default: `/ipfs/` (the exact path is hardcoded in `migrations.CurrentIpfsDist`, depends on the IPFS version) ## `IPFS_NS_MAP` Adds static namesys records for deterministic tests and debugging. Useful for testing things like DNSLink without real DNS lookup. Example: ```console $ IPFS_NS_MAP="dnslink-test1.example.com:/ipfs/bafkreicysg23kiwv34eg2d7qweipxwosdo2py4ldv42nbauguluen5v6am,dnslink-test2.example.com:/ipns/dnslink-test1.example.com" ipfs daemon ... $ ipfs resolve -r /ipns/dnslink-test2.example.com /ipfs/bafkreicysg23kiwv34eg2d7qweipxwosdo2py4ldv42nbauguluen5v6am ``` ## `LIBP2P_TCP_REUSEPORT` Kubo tries to reuse the same source port for all connections to improve NAT traversal. If this is an issue, you can disable it by setting `LIBP2P_TCP_REUSEPORT` to false. Default: true ## `LIBP2P_MUX_PREFS` Deprecated: Use the `Swarm.Transports.Multiplexers` config field. Tells Kubo which multiplexers to use in which order. Default: "/yamux/1.0.0 /mplex/6.7.0" ## `LIBP2P_RCMGR` Forces [libp2p Network Resource Manager](https://github.com/libp2p/go-libp2p-resource-manager#readme) to be enabled (`1`) or disabled (`0`). When set, overrides [`Swarm.ResourceMgr.Enabled`](https://github.com/ipfs/kubo/blob/master/docs/config.md#swarmresourcemgrenabled) from the config. Default: use config (not set) ## `LIBP2P_DEBUG_RCMGR` Enables tracing of [libp2p Network Resource Manager](https://github.com/libp2p/go-libp2p-resource-manager#readme) and outputs it to `rcmgr.json.gz` Default: disabled (not set) # Tracing For advanced configuration (e.g. ratio-based sampling), see also: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specification/blob/main/specification/sdk-environment-variables.md ## `OTEL_TRACES_EXPORTER` Specifies the exporters to use as a comma-separated string. Each exporter has a set of additional environment variables used to configure it. The following values are supported: - `otlp` - `jaeger` - `zipkin` - `file` -- appends traces to a JSON file on the filesystem Setting this enables OpenTelemetry tracing. **NOTE** Tracing support is experimental: releases may contain tracing-related breaking changes. Default: "" (no exporters) ## `OTLP Exporter` Unless specified in this section, the OTLP exporter uses the environment variables documented here: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specification/blob/main/specification/protocol/exporter.md ### `OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_PROTOCOL` Specifies the OTLP protocol to use, which is one of: - `grpc` - `http/protobuf` Default: "grpc" ## `Jaeger Exporter` See: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specification/blob/main/specification/sdk-environment-variables.md#jaeger-exporter ## `Zipkin Exporter` See: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specification/blob/main/specification/sdk-environment-variables.md#zipkin-exporter ## `File Exporter` ### `OTEL_EXPORTER_FILE_PATH` Specifies the filesystem path for the JSON file. Default: "$PWD/traces.json" ### How to use Jaeger UI One can use the `jaegertracing/all-in-one` Docker image to run a full Jaeger stack and configure Kubo to publish traces to it (here, in an ephemeral container): ```console $ docker run --rm -it --name jaeger \ -e COLLECTOR_ZIPKIN_HOST_PORT=:9411 \ -p 5775:5775/udp \ -p 6831:6831/udp \ -p 6832:6832/udp \ -p 5778:5778 \ -p 16686:16686 \ -p 14268:14268 \ -p 14268:14269 \ -p 14250:14250 \ -p 9411:9411 \ jaegertracing/all-in-one ``` Then, in other terminal, start Kubo with Jaeger tracing enabled: ``` $ OTEL_TRACES_EXPORTER=jaeger ipfs daemon ``` Finally, the [Jaeger UI](https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger-ui#readme) is available at http://localhost:16686