41

I believe Logcat is a circular store and I wonder what the limit is before it overwrites.

Presumably this means that its time range will vary according to usage.

Is there any way to expand its capacity?

1
  • 1
    what do you mean with the capacity ? you mean the number of lines that logcat can display , or the length of one line ??
    – Houcine
    Jun 12, 2011 at 11:00

7 Answers 7

52

To see the size use -g

$ adb logcat -g
ring buffer is 64Kb (63Kb consumed), max entry is 4096b, max payload is 4076b
5
  • 1
    It is important to note that LogCat is very much device dependent. The size and also the handling of bad character differs between different handsets.
    – Janusz
    Jul 22, 2011 at 10:04
  • @Janusz is there any source of info regarding the differences?@
    – ron
    Jul 22, 2011 at 21:48
  • 1
    To expand, logcat's default buffers are /dev/log/main and /dev/log/system. You can check the other two by using -b radio and -b events
    – cde
    Jan 12, 2014 at 9:55
  • 2
    what is max entry and max payload?
    – Lv99Zubat
    Jun 14, 2016 at 21:21
  • 5
    @BrettG, I've tested log output of a string in length of 5000, and the outputted log message was in the length of 4076, so according to my test result, I can say that - max payload number is maximum log message length. All characters after 4076 index, will be ignored.
    – Eido95
    Nov 14, 2017 at 18:33
51

Since Android 5.0, Developer Options shows/allows increasing the size of ring buffer.

Developer Options ScreenShot

8

As already mentioned, you can see the size of the circular buffer with logcat -g. On my Galaxy Nexus, it's 256 KB:

shell@android:/ $ logcat -g
/dev/log/main: ring buffer is 256Kb (255Kb consumed), max entry is 4096b, max payload is 4076b
/dev/log/system: ring buffer is 256Kb (0Kb consumed), max entry is 4096b, max payload is 4076b

If you need to save a continuous log longer than that, you can just open a new adb shell and type

logcat -f myfile.log

This command redirects log entries to the file myfile.log on an ongoing basis, and won't return until you hit ctrl-c to stop it. Now go back to your original adb shell and type the command you wanted to log, and all its output (more than 256 KB in my case) will get saved to myfile.log.

1
  • The log to file works, if you are looking for something new. Will not help for previously lost information, like from boot.
    – cde
    Jan 12, 2014 at 9:55
7

Here's how to change the log ring buffer's capacity on some versions of Android:

adb logcat -G <size>: Set the size of the log ring buffer. Can add K or M at the end to indicate kilobytes or megabytes.

(Source: logcat documentation)

However, it doesn't say at what version of Android this option became available. I see that on my Android 4.2.2 device it's not a recognized option.

3
  • Downvoter, can you suggest a way to improve the answer? The question asked for a way to change the capacity of the log ring buffer, and this answer gives information answering that question that wasn't in other answers.
    – LarsH
    Nov 17, 2017 at 1:33
  • Most likely added in 5.0 as per shubham answer in 2015.
    – cde
    Mar 29, 2018 at 14:36
  • 1
    Assuming the dev option setting that Shubham shows was added at the same time as this logcat -G command, it had to be no later than 5.0 but later than 4.2.2.
    – LarsH
    Mar 29, 2018 at 14:38
4

If you need to change the value by the android shell in a way that survives a reboot, you can use the property persist.logd.size like this:

setprop persist.logd.size 16M

You probably need to reboot for the setting to take effect. This is the same property that is changed by the developer settings.

0
2

Buffer size is determined by the kernel, found in */drivers/staging/android/logger.c

Which buffers are used and the size has changed with Android Versions. Android 3.0 and newer also have a system buffer, and all four are 256kb. You have to recompile the kernel to change it.

2
  • What is the location of log file? And how to access logcat file?
    – Innocent
    Mar 29, 2018 at 13:37
  • 1
    There is none. It's a memory buffer. The log is not saved to a file, as that would strain the flash storage on a typical android device.
    – cde
    Mar 29, 2018 at 14:35
1

Samsung Galaxy S4 (Android 4.3) logcat size:

  • main: 1 MB
  • system: 512 KB

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