Description:
The value of 'log_statement' flag determined the SQL statements that are logged. Valid values are:
The value 'ddl' logs all data definition statements.
The value 'mod' logs all ddl statements, plus data-modifying statements.
The statements are logged after a basic parsing is done and statement type is determined, thus this does not logs statements with errors. When using extended query protocol, logging occurs after an Execute message is received and values of the Bind parameters are included.
A value of 'ddl' is recommended unless otherwise directed by your organization's logging policy.
Rationale:
Auditing helps in forensic analysis. If 'log_statement' is not set to the correct value, too many statements may be logged leading to issues in finding the relevant information from the logs, or too few statements may be logged with relevant information missing from the logs. Setting log_statement to align with your organization's security and logging policies facilitates later auditing and review of database activities.
This recommendation is applicable to PostgreSQL database instances.
Turning on logging will increase the required storage over time. Mismanaged logs may cause your storage costs to increase. Setting custom flags via command line on certain instances will cause all omitted flags to be reset to defaults. This may cause you to lose custom flags and could result in unforeseen complications or instance restarts. Because of this, it is recommended you apply these flags changes during a period of low usage.
From Google Cloud Console
From Google Cloud CLI
gcloud sql instances patch --database-flags log_statement=<ddl|mod|all|none>
Note: This command will overwrite all database flags previously set. To keep those and add new ones, include the values for all flags you want set on the instance; any flag not specifically included is set to its default value. For flags that do not take a value, specify the flag name followed by an equals sign ("=").