What is an sos report and how to create one in Red Hat Enterprise Linux?
Environment
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 4.6+, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
- Exceptions:
- For System Is Not Booting cases
- Follow the directions in: "How to generate sos report from the rescue environment" for cases where the system is not booting or does not stay running long enough to generate an sos report via normal means.
- For Azure Virtual Guests
- Follow the directions in: "How to Create a Microsoft Azure Virtual Machine sos report and Submit the Report to Red Hat" for Azure virtual guests.
- For OpenShift 4 nodes
- Follow the directions in: "How to generate SOS REPORT within OpenShift4 nodes without SSH".
- For Pacemaker cluster nodes
- Follow the directions in: "sosreport on RHEL7 pacemaker cluster does not collect pacemaker data".
Issue
- What is
sos report, is it the same as an sosreport
?- How do I collect system log files, configuration details and system information from a Red Hat Enterprise Linux system to provide to Red Hat Technical Support for analysis?
- How can I generate an
sos report
?- I am opening a service request with Red Hat Technical Support for technical assistance. What data I have to provide for initial analysis of my system?
- How can I control how the
sos report
command runs? - How to install the package containing sos report
- What to do if an sos report hangs
- What commands a particular sos report plugin runs in the background
Resolution
Table of Contents
- Installing sos package
- What is an sos report, is it different from an sosreport?
- How can I generate an sos report?
- How can I control how the
sos report
command runs?- How can I disable or enable specific plugins?
- How do I use plugin options?
- Why does
sos report
sometimes skip collecting certain command output? - Running
sos report
on my system uses too much CPU time or memory (it is supported with sos version 3.6 or later) - How do I automatically upload an sos report?
- How do I run newer sos versions on older RHEL releases?
- Troubleshooting:
What is an sos report and is it different from an sosreport?
A sos report
within RHEL 8+ is equivalent to the sosreport
command in RHEL7 and earlier. So sos report is the same as sosreport -- just different command syntax used within the sos package.
- Within RHEL 7 and earlier releases, while the installed package name was sos, the command to capture data from a system was
sosreport
. - Starting with RHEL 8+, the command name was changed to just
sos
and the optional argument ofreport
is needed to perform the same data collection activities assosreport
in older sos packages. - The convention within this document is to utilize the new syntax of
sos report
generically unless it is specifically referencing a command example where the older syntax ofsosreport
is used. - The command syntax of
sosreport
will work on all kernel version, but is deprecated in RHEL 8+ kernels and will result in an "Redirecting to sos report" warning output.
The sos report
command is a tool that collects configuration details, system information and diagnostic information from a Red Hat Enterprise Linux system. For instance: the running kernel version, loaded modules, and system and service configuration files. The command also runs external programs to collect further information, and stores this output in the resulting archive.
» Why am I being asked to provide an sos report?
The output of sos report
is the common starting point for Red Hat support engineers when performing an initial analysis of a service request for a Red Hat Enterprise Linux system.
The utility provides a standardized way to collect diagnostic information that your Red Hat support engineer will reference throughout their investigation of issues reported in support cases.
The use of sos report
helps to ensure that you are not being continually asked for piecemeal data outputs.
How can I generate an sos report?
Once the sos
package has been installed, issue the following commands to run sos report. The first command ensures the latest package is installed so that most current data collection procedures are performed.
# yum update sos
# sosreport
Notice Starting in RHEL 8, the sosreport
command is deprecated in favor ofsos report
. A message to this effect is output ifsosreport
is issued on a RHEL 8 or 9 system and "Redirecting to 'sos report'
" is performed.Notice In RHEL8+, change the above command name to sos report
, with the added space between sos and report, to avoid the "Redirecting to sos report" related messages.Notice The sos report
command requires root permissions to gather data correctly. There is no current mechanism to allow non-root executions ofsos report
.
The command will normally complete within a few minutes on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6. Older versions may take longer to complete. Depending on local configuration and the options specified in some cases the command may take longer to finish. If you are concerned about the run time of the sos report
command contact your Red Hat support representative for assistance.
Once completed, sos report
will generate a compressed file under /tmp
(for RHEL6 and earlier) or under /var/tmp
(for RHEL7 and later). The file should be provided to your support representative (normally as an attachment to an open support case).
» Running sos report
results in "no valid plugins were enabled" message
-
Typically the "no valid plugins" message is output then the
sos report
command run without full root privileges. Thesos report
command requires root permissions to gather data from the system correctly. Many of the files, commands, and tools that it runs to gather information required root access privilege. For example, if multipath is configured on the system then sos report will gather information from multipath subsystem on the current configuration settings, which it cannot do as a normal user.$ multipathd -k"show config" need to be root
-
Please try running again as root, and if you are still experiencing issues, open a support case so that we may investigate.*
» Running sos report
fills my available disk space
-
The size of the archive varies depending on system configuration and any optional
sos report
features that are enabled. For example--all-logs
will greatly increase the size of the archive as it removes size-limiting features for command output and log file collection. -
If
/tmp/
or/var/tmp
is too small to hold an sos report archive, use the--tmp-dir
option to specify an alternate location with sufficient available space.
» How do I provide an sos report
to Red Hat?
sos
is able to directly upload an archive to Red Hat via the--upload
option, e.g.sos report --upload
.- See section How do I automatically upload an sos report? for more in-depth information.
Alternative upload methods that are also available include:
- To post
sos report
, or any other file, to an existing support case you can use the redhat-support-tool command line option, the Red Hat Portal UI or several different methods using FTP. - If the collected
sos report
file is too big to upload to the case, it may be uploaded to the Red Hat Secure FTP.- If you use the ftp option, update your support case with the exact filename as this is the only way your support engineer will be able to retrieve it.
» I do not have a case number yet, do I need to provide one for sos report
to run?
-
The case number input prompt is optional, and if provided the case number will be part of the archive's file name. Omitting the case number will not have any negative effect on running the
sos report
command. -
Also, the command may be run in batch mode using the
--batch
option in order to avoid the need to enter user and account information interactively.
How can I control how the sos report
command runs?
The sos report command has a plugin structure and allows the user to enable and disable plugins and specify plugin options via the command line. Available plugins and their options may be listed by running the following command:
# sosreport -l
» How can I disable or enable specific plugins?
Users may selectively enable or disable plugins using the -e/--enable-plugins
and -n/--skip-plugins
options respectively. These options take comma-delimited lists of plugin names or may be specified multiple times. For example, to disable the amd
and kvm
plugins, use the following:
# sosreport -n kvm,amd
» How do I use plugin options?
Individual plugins may provide additional options that may be specified via the -k
option. These options are listed in the same output as the listing of available plugins (sosreport -l
). The format this option takes is plugin_name.option_name=value
. For example, to enable collection of container logs, use the following:
# sosreport -k podman.logs=on
Options will specify whether they are boolean toggles or expect a string or integer. For boolean toggles, users may use True
, on
, or yes
and False
, off
, or no
interchangeably.
» Why does sos report
sometimes skip collecting certain command output?
An sos report execution might print to console a message like the following:
[plugin:networking] skipped command 'nft list ruleset': required kernel modules or services not present (kmods=[nf_tables] services=[]).
sos report
aims to not alter the system it runs on in any way. Some commands called by certain plugins may automatically trigger a change (load a kernel module in the example above) and are thus gated by default. If making these changes is acceptable for your environment, and you would like to have sos report
make them in order to collect the skipped commands, run sos report
like so:
# sos report --allow-system-changes
» *Running sos report
on my system uses too much CPU time or memory»* (it is supported with sos version 3.6 or later)
By default sos report
will run up to 4 plugins in parallel in an effort to reduce total runtime. This may cause memory contention or high CPU usage on certain systems depending on which plugins are being run (and particularly if each of those plugins collects journal output). To reduce the number of simultaneous collections use the --threads
option. For example, to run plugins one at a time, use the following:
# sosreport --threads=1
Installing sos package
The sos
package must be installed in order to run the sos report
command. You can check to see if the sos
package is installed and whether there is any problems with the installation using the following command:
# rpm -qa | grep sos
sos-3.2-35.el7_2.3.noarch << sos package is installed
# rpm -V sos << run verification on installed package
» Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 and later
If the system is registered with RHSM, use the yum
command:
# yum install sos
If the system is not registered with RHSM, the sos
package can be downloaded from the RHN website or found on the installation CDs or DVD. The rpm command may be used to install the package on any version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux:
# rpm -Uvh sos-<version>.noarch.rpm
(Note: the above rpm
command may state that there are failed dependencies. If so, then include the missing RPM files in the same command line. For example, if it needs the xz RPM, then run: rpm -Uvh sos-<version>.noarch.rpm xz-<version>.x86_64.rpm
.)
Sos Package Update
The sos report command constantly gets updated with important bug fixes and data collection updates to ensure that all the proper data collection needed by our support engineers is performed. Not using the latest sos report often impeded support's ability to review a case in a timely manner and will often require a secondary request for information or an update and redo of sos report. Making sure the latest sos package is installed prevents these issues and inconveniences
# yum update sos
» Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 Update 6 and later 4.x kernels
If the system is registered with Red Hat Subscription Manager (RHSM), sos
can be installed using the up2date
command:
# up2date sos
How do I automatically upload an sos report to Red Hat Support?
As of sos-3.9
and later, sos supports the --upload
option to automatically upload an archive once it is generated. Note that a local copy of the archive will still exist. This option requires the use of the python3-requests
package, which is defined as a weak dependency for the sos rpm. Systems that are not configured to resolve weak dependencies, or do not enable the AppStream repository, will need to manually install this package.
When run on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux system, using the --upload
option will prompt the user for their Customer Portal credentials:
# sos report --upload
sosreport (version 4.2)
[...]
Please enter the case id that you are generating this report for []: 123456
Enter your Red Hat Customer Portal username (empty to use public dropbox): your-username
Please provide the upload password for your-username:
[...]
Your sosreport has been generated and saved in:
/var/tmp/sosreport-myhost-123456-2022-08-11-sgczqyo.tar.xz
Attempting upload to Red Hat Customer Portal
Uploaded archive successfully
By providing a case number and login credentials which are capable of accessing the specified case number, sos will upload the resulting archive directly to the case upon completion. If either of these are not provided or are incorrect (e.g. an incorrect case number for the credentials provided), then sos will fallback to uploading the archive to Red Hat's secure FTP server:
# sos report --upload
sosreport (version 4.2)
[...]
Please enter the case id that you are generating this report for []: 123456
Enter your Red Hat Customer Portal username (empty to use public dropbox): incorrect-user
Please provide the upload password for your-username:
[...]
Your sosreport has been generated and saved in:
/var/tmp/sosreport-myhost-123456-2022-08-11-hyrtzji.tar.xz
Attempting upload to Red Hat Customer Portal
Upload to Red Hat Customer Portal failed. Trying sftp://sftp.access.redhat.com
Attempting upload to Red Hat Secure FTP
Unable to retrieve Red Hat auth token using provided credentials. Will try anonymous.
User 'xAnrDdnP'used for anonymous upload. Please inform your support engineer so they may retrieve the data.
Uploaded archive successfully
Note: The anonymous user is a temporary user that may not be re-used, and must be provided to your support engineer in the relevant support case so that the engineer will be able to retrieve and review the archive.
The following methods are available for providing --upload
credentials:
- Use
--upload
as demonstrated above, and use the interactive prompts.
Versions of sos before 4.6.1-1 can use the following options: - Use the
--upload-user
and--upload-pass
to provide the credentials without a prompt. This may be useful when using--batch
to avoid interactive executions ofsos report
. Note however, that this will result in the plaintext password being captured by various process information collections, such asps
. - Use the
SOSUPLOADUSER
and/orSOSUPLOADPASSWORD
environment variables. If set, the--upload
function will not prompt for credentials, and these values will not appear in any collections within the archive.
Versions of sos from 4.6.1-1 onwards will make use of the new web authentication system, where the user has to authenticate via an URL and receive a token that will authorize the upload. As a result, options --upload-user
and --upload-pass
and the equivalent environment variables have been deprecated and will be ignored by sos.
Uploads will fail if network or firewall configuration does not allow access to api.access.redhat.com
(for direct-to-case uploads) or sftp.access.redhat.com
(for SFTP (fallback) uploads).
How do I run newer sos versions on older RHEL releases?
If your RHEL system is version locked (e.g. EUS), the latest sos
package may not available in the older repos. Similarly, recent additions or changes to sos
may not always be backported to older RHEL releases for various reasons. However, it is still possible to use the latest sos
package on any version of RHEL by use of the support-tools
container image.
This container image is consistently maintained and updated with the latest available sos
package and is available from the registry.redhat.io container image registry.
In order to collect host-level information with sos via the support-tools container, the image must be deployed in a specific manner. Simply installing the sos
package inside a different container will result in collections occurring within the container, which is unlikely to be useful. The requirements for successful host-level collections from inside the container image are baked into the RUN
label of the image, and the image may be easily deployed using this label as follows:
# podman container runlabel RUN registry.redhat.io/rhel8/support-tools
--- You will now be attached to a root shell inside the container ---
# sos report
After sos report
completes, it will show the location of the archive being at /host/var/tmp/
. The container mounts the host's /
filesystem to /host
when deployed using the podman
command above - so even if the container is exited the tarball will exist on the host under the (normal) /var/tmp
location.
What to do if sos report hangs
First, verify that there is enough free space available in either /tmp
(RHEL 6) or /var/tmp
(RHEL7 and later), and if not, use the --tmp-dir
option as detailed earlier.
If sos report
is hanging/stalling on a specific plugin (currently running plugins are displayed during execution), try running sos report
with the problem plugin(s) disabled using the -n/--skip-plugins
option as detailed earlier.
Note that each plugin has a default timeout of 5 minutes (controllable by the timeout
plugin option available to all plugins). Please allow enough time for this timeout threshold to be hit, and sos report
should automatically terminate that plugin's execution. In the event that this termination does not happen, use the option highlighted above.
If an sos report
can not be completed at all for one reason or another, please see How to gather data from a Red Hat Enterprise Linux system for troubleshooting if the sos report
process goes to hung state? for further guidance.
I cannot run sos report
at all and would like to collect a bare minimum of data to provide
Please see sos report fails. What data should I provide in its place? for an alternative bare-minimum data collection script.
For issue-specific guidance in the case of sos report
failure, please see Additional and alternative steps for gathering an sos report for a Red Hat Enterprise Linux support case
What commands does a particular sos report plugin run in the background?
There are following ways to understand what a particular plugin does when its is executed through the sos report
command.
-
Check the source of
sos
package that providessos report
command.
For a specific version of source code, see downloads section on Customer Portal. -
Check
sos.log
file in the sos report. For example, for pluginscsi
there would be something similar to as shown below-- directories and files collected -- 2020-07-30 11:04:53,632 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting path '/sys/bus/scsi' 2020-07-30 11:04:53,656 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting path '/sys/class/scsi_disk' 2020-07-30 11:04:53,663 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting path '/proc/scsi' 2020-07-30 11:04:53,666 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting path '/sys/class/scsi_generic' 2020-07-30 11:04:53,675 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting path '/sys/class/scsi_host' 2020-07-30 11:04:53,677 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting path '/sys/class/scsi_device' -- these were the commands executed in the background -- 2020-07-30 11:04:53,686 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting output of 'lsscsi -i' 2020-07-30 11:04:53,710 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting output of 'sg_map -x' 2020-07-30 11:04:53,765 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting output of 'udevadm info -a /sys/class/scsi_host/host3' 2020-07-30 11:04:53,789 INFO: [plugin:scsi] collecting output of 'udevadm info -a /sys/class/scsi_host/host1'
-
Generate the
sos report
only with that particular plugin and check the files and directories and the output of the commands in the collected archive.
To generate the sos report with particular plugin, do# sosreport -o plugin-name
-
To see the list of plugins, do
# sosreport -l
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