# Troubleshooting This section aids you in finding problems when working with Constellation. ## Cloud logging To provide information during early stages of the node's boot process, Constellation logs messages into the cloud providers' log systems. Since these offerings **aren't** confidential, only generic information without any sensitive values are stored. This provides administrators with a high level understanding of the current state of a node. You can view these information in the follow places: 1. In your Azure subscription find the Constellation resource group. 2. Inside the resource group find the Application Insights resource called `constellation-insights-*`. 3. On the left-hand side go to `Logs`, which is located in the section `Monitoring`. + Close the Queries page if it pops up. 5. In the query text field type in `traces`, and click `Run`. To **find the disk UUIDs** use the following query: `traces | where message contains "Disk UUID"` 1. Select the project that hosts Constellation. 2. Go to the `Compute Engine` service. 3. On the right-hand side of a VM entry select `More Actions` (a stacked ellipsis) + Select `View logs` To **find the disk UUIDs** use the following query: `resource.type="gce_instance" text_payload=~"Disk UUID:.*\n" logName=~".*/constellation-boot-log"` :::info Constellation uses the default bucket to store logs. Its [default retention period is 30 days](https://cloud.google.com/logging/quotas#logs_retention_periods). ::: 1. Open [AWS CloudWatch](https://console.aws.amazon.com/cloudwatch/home) 2. Select [Log Groups](https://console.aws.amazon.com/cloudwatch/home#logsV2:log-groups) 3. Select the log group that matches the name of your cluster. 4. Select the log stream for control or worker type nodes. ## Connect to nodes via SSH Debugging via a shell on a node is [directly supported by Kubernetes](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/debug/debug-application/debug-running-pod/#node-shell-session). 1. Figure out which node to connect to: ```sh kubectl get nodes # or to see more information, such as IPs: kubectl get nodes -o wide ``` 2. Connect to the node: ```sh kubectl debug node/constell-worker-xksa0-000000 -it --image=busybox ``` You will be presented with a prompt. The nodes file system is mounted at `/host`. 3. Once finished, clean up the debug pod: ```sh kubectl delete pod node-debugger-constell-worker-xksa0-000000-bjthj ```