Note!
You need to have a proper AKS cluster setup in order to proceed with these steps. Refer to Set Up Kubernetes Cluster - Azure to create the OKE cluster first.
By default Usage Engine deployed in Kubernetes outputs logging to disk and console output. If persistent disk storage is enabled, the logs end up on the mounted shared disk. But persistent disk is not always the desired log target, especially in a cloud environment where persistent data is typically accessed through services and APIs rather than as files. The console logs can be accessed through the "kubectl logs" command or from a Kubernetes dashboard. The buffer for storing the Kubernetes console logs is stored in memory only though and thus will be lost when a Pod terminates.
To get a production ready log configuration you can use tools from the Kubernetes ecosystem and Azure Monitor Logs Service. In this guide we show you how to set up:
Fluent-bit for log collection and log forwarding
Elasticsearch for log storage
Kibana for log visualization
Azure Monitor Logs for Analytics