Consider the following scenario: your compliance department urgently needs to be quickly made aware of who changed what in Jira. Perhaps a work item was removed, a workflow was updated, or a project setting just changed. All eyes are on you, the Jira admin.
Where do you start?
Jira stores much valuable information, although not in one place. There are those that are buried deep within system logs. Otherwise, they are spread in audit logs, activity tabs, and reports.
This is where it is necessary to export Jira logs not only for troubleshooting, but also for compliance audit, security, and accountability.
We are going to take a closer look at the two primary Jira logs (System Logs and Activity Logs) and demonstrate how to export them.
When someone speaks about Jira logs, it could mean very different things.
Factually, Jira manages two significant categories of data:
👉 System Logs - technical background activity.
👉 Activity (Audit or History) Logs - user and admin actions.
They both have different purposes and can be both helpful depending on your objective, troubleshooting, or compliance.
These logs capture the activity going on behind the scenes in Jira, the technical heartbeat of the instance. They assist the admins in diagnosing problems, performance monitoring, and error troubleshooting.
System logs usually contain information such as:
Where to find them:
🔗 Atlassian Docs: Logging and profiling (Server/DC)
🔗 Atlassian Community: Provide the ability for Cloud Admins to access application logs
Activity logs include all the activities performed by the user and admins within Jira. They are the most important for accountability, compliance, and security audits.
These logs include:
Where to find them:
Image source: Atlassian Support
In case you are using Jira Data Center, access to system logs is possible on your server. They are saved in Jira Home /log/ folder.
The path to the folder can be located in Administration → System → System Info → Jira Home. To copy or zip these files, you will require server access, and they can’t be exported in the Jira UI.
On Jira Cloud, system logs are maintained by Atlassian and can’t be viewed directly by admins. You may still review important events via:
Jira has such native options:
If you need to export full change history of work items, it's better to use an app like Issue History for Jira by SaaSJet.
The main benefits of Issue History for Jira app are:
How to start using Issue History for Jira app:
In just a few steps, you’ll have a complete audit-ready report that you can share with managers, auditors, or stakeholders.
🔗 Explore all the capabilities of Issue History for Jira app
Jira provides two major types of logs: System Logs, used to diagnose technical problems, and Activity Logs, used to track user and admin actions.
Jira Cloud users use Audit log and Atlassian Support to gain more in-depth knowledge of log files, whereas Data Center users may access them directly.
In compliance or audit reporting, native tools only present half the picture, particularly because Jira only displays each work item's current status. Apps such as Issue History for Jira make it effortless to track work item changes, ensuring complete visibility.
Natalia_Kovalchuk_SaaSJet_
Product Marketer
SaaSJet
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