It is possible to have mysqld write the error
        log to the system log (the Event Log on Windows, and
        syslog on Unix and Unix-like systems).
      
        This section describes how to configure error logging using the
        built-in filter, log_filter_internal, and the
        system log sink, log_sink_syseventlog, to
        take effect immediately and for subsequent server startups. For
        general information about configuring error logging, see
        Section 7.4.2.1, “Error Log Configuration”.
      
        To enable the system log sink, first load the sink component,
        then modify the
        log_error_services value:
      
INSTALL COMPONENT 'file://component_log_sink_syseventlog';
SET PERSIST log_error_services = 'log_filter_internal; log_sink_syseventlog';
        To set log_error_services to
        take effect at server startup, use the instructions at
        Section 7.4.2.1, “Error Log Configuration”. Those instructions
        apply to other error-logging system variables as well.
Error logging to the system log may require additional system configuration. Consult the system log documentation for your platform.
On Windows, error messages written to the Event Log within the Application log have these characteristics:
Entries marked as
Error,Warning, andNoteare written to the Event Log, but not messages such as information statements from individual storage engines.Event Log entries have a source of
MySQL(orMySQL-iftagsyseventlog.tagis defined astag).
        On Unix and Unix-like systems, logging to the system log uses
        syslog. The following system variables affect
        syslog messages:
syseventlog.facility: The default facility forsyslogmessages isdaemon. Set this variable to specify a different facility.syseventlog.include_pid: Whether to include the server process ID in each line ofsyslogoutput.syseventlog.tag: This variable defines a tag to add to the server identifier (mysqld) insyslogmessages. If defined, the tag is appended to the identifier with a leading hyphen.
        MySQL uses the custom label “System” for important
        system messages about non-error situations, such as startup,
        shutdown, and some significant changes to settings. In logs that
        do not support custom labels, including the Event Log on
        Windows, and syslog on Unix and Unix-like
        systems, system messages are assigned the label used for the
        information priority level. However, these messages are printed
        to the log even if the MySQL
        log_error_verbosity setting
        normally excludes messages at the information level.
      
        When a log sink must fall back to a label of
        “Information” instead of “System” in
        this way, and the log event is further processed outside of the
        MySQL server (for example, filtered or forwarded by a
        syslog configuration), these events may by
        default be processed by the secondary application as being of
        “Information” priority rather than
        “System” priority.