Contributed and maintained by Chromatic.
When using ddev to develop in a framework with a database abstraction layer, it can be finicky to set up the ability to see the actual database queries generated by the application.
dblog is a custom ddev command that allows a user to easily turn on or off database query logging and to (optionally) tail that log.
Due to the noisy nature of database query log output, the command does not add the database queries to the ddev logs
output but uses its own file within your db container to store the queries.
Database query logging will slow down your application, so this command is intended to be used briefly during troubleshooting, which is why it is designed the way it is.
Get and install your db log command
ddev get chromatichq/ddev-dblog
To follow the logs live (tail), do
ddev dblog tail
which will tail the log file right in your current terminal window. ctrl+c
to quit. When you quit tailing, the db query log is turned off automatically.
If you just want to turn on the logging so you can capture a bunch of output and examine it later, do
ddev dblog on
You can find the logs in your db service at /tmp/dblog. Use
ddev ssh -s db
less /tmp/dblog
to page through it or search it.
Remember to turn off the db query logging. The logging is a drain on your application performance.
ddev dblog off