Check Cloudflare Worker logs
Use this skill when you need to see what is happening inside the deployed Workers: request paths, response status, console.log output, and errors. Both the main site and the API are separate Cloudflare Workers.
When to use this skill
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Debugging 401/500 from openagents.com or openagents.com/api.
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Verifying that a Worker receives the expected headers (e.g. X-OA-Internal-Key) and why it might return "unauthorized".
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Seeing console.log / console_error! output from the Rust API or the web app.
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Correlating with Khala logs (Khala calls the API worker; tail the API worker while reproducing).
Workers in this repo
Worker Config Routes Purpose
openagents-api apps/api/wrangler.toml
openagents.com/api/*
Rust API: legacyparity, control, D1, R2, etc.
openagents-web-app apps/web/wrangler.jsonc
openagents.com (main site) TanStack/React app (Node compat).
Run wrangler tail from the app directory that contains that worker's config (or use --config / --cwd ).
Wrangler tail (real-time only)
Cloudflare does not provide historical Worker logs via the CLI. You get a live stream of requests and logs. For historical data, use the dashboard: Workers & Pages → your worker → Logs / Real-time Logs or Logpush.
Basic usage
API worker (Rust) — run from apps/api
cd apps/api npx wrangler tail
Web app worker — run from apps/web
cd apps/web npx wrangler tail
Leave the command running, then reproduce the issue in the browser. You'll see each request, status, and any console output.
Tail options
Option Meaning
--format pretty
Human-readable (default).
--format json
One JSON object per log line (e.g. pipe to jq ).
--status ok
Only successful requests.
--status error
Only errors/failures.
--method GET
Filter by HTTP method.
--search "legacyparity"
Filter by text in console.log messages.
--header "x-oa-internal-key"
Filter by presence of header.
--sampling-rate 1
Log 100% of requests (default can sample).
Examples
API worker: only errors, pretty
cd apps/api npx wrangler tail --status error --format pretty
API worker: JSON and filter by URL path with jq
cd apps/api npx wrangler tail --format json | jq 'select(.url | contains("legacyparity"))'
Web worker: tail while reproducing a page error
cd apps/web npx wrangler tail
Two workers, two terminals
To see both the site and the API when debugging a flow (e.g. Hatchery calling Khala, Khala calling API):
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Terminal 1: cd apps/api && npx wrangler tail --format pretty
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Terminal 2: cd apps/web && npx wrangler tail --format pretty
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Optional: Khala logs in a third terminal: cd apps/web && npx khala logs --prod --success
Then reproduce; watch for the request to the API worker and any console.log / diagnostic output.
Limitations
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Real-time only: No --history ; tail streams until you Ctrl+C.
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Sampling: Under heavy load, tail may sample; use --sampling-rate 1 to reduce sampling.
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Max 10 clients: Up to 10 concurrent tail sessions per worker.
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Secrets: Logs must not print secrets; use lengths or "present/absent" in diagnostic logs.
Diagnostic logging (this repo)
For legacyparity auth, the API worker logs:
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legacyparity auth: no internal key header path=... — request reached the worker but the X-OA-Internal-Key header was missing (e.g. stripped or not sent by Khala).
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legacyparity auth 401: path=... provided_len=... expected_len=... — header was present but value didn’t match the worker secret (compare lengths; if equal, values differ).
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legacyparity auth ok path=... key_len=... — internal key matched; request was authorized.
Use wrangler tail from apps/api while reproducing 401 to see which line appears. Khala actions log [legacyparityApi <label>] fetch key_len=<n> url=... before each request; correlate with worker logs to confirm what Khala sent vs what the worker received.