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- /*
- Package log15 provides an opinionated, simple toolkit for best-practice logging that is
- both human and machine readable. It is modeled after the standard library's io and net/http
- packages.
- This package enforces you to only log key/value pairs. Keys must be strings. Values may be
- any type that you like. The default output format is logfmt, but you may also choose to use
- JSON instead if that suits you. Here's how you log:
- log.Info("page accessed", "path", r.URL.Path, "user_id", user.id)
- This will output a line that looks like:
- lvl=info t=2014-05-02T16:07:23-0700 msg="page accessed" path=/org/71/profile user_id=9
- Getting Started
- To get started, you'll want to import the library:
- import log "github.com/inconshreveable/log15"
- Now you're ready to start logging:
- func main() {
- log.Info("Program starting", "args", os.Args())
- }
- Convention
- Because recording a human-meaningful message is common and good practice, the first argument to every
- logging method is the value to the *implicit* key 'msg'.
- Additionally, the level you choose for a message will be automatically added with the key 'lvl', and so
- will the current timestamp with key 't'.
- You may supply any additional context as a set of key/value pairs to the logging function. log15 allows
- you to favor terseness, ordering, and speed over safety. This is a reasonable tradeoff for
- logging functions. You don't need to explicitly state keys/values, log15 understands that they alternate
- in the variadic argument list:
- log.Warn("size out of bounds", "low", lowBound, "high", highBound, "val", val)
- If you really do favor your type-safety, you may choose to pass a log.Ctx instead:
- log.Warn("size out of bounds", log.Ctx{"low": lowBound, "high": highBound, "val": val})
- Context loggers
- Frequently, you want to add context to a logger so that you can track actions associated with it. An http
- request is a good example. You can easily create new loggers that have context that is automatically included
- with each log line:
- requestlogger := log.New("path", r.URL.Path)
- // later
- requestlogger.Debug("db txn commit", "duration", txnTimer.Finish())
- This will output a log line that includes the path context that is attached to the logger:
- lvl=dbug t=2014-05-02T16:07:23-0700 path=/repo/12/add_hook msg="db txn commit" duration=0.12
- Handlers
- The Handler interface defines where log lines are printed to and how they are formated. Handler is a
- single interface that is inspired by net/http's handler interface:
- type Handler interface {
- Log(r *Record) error
- }
- Handlers can filter records, format them, or dispatch to multiple other Handlers.
- This package implements a number of Handlers for common logging patterns that are
- easily composed to create flexible, custom logging structures.
- Here's an example handler that prints logfmt output to Stdout:
- handler := log.StreamHandler(os.Stdout, log.LogfmtFormat())
- Here's an example handler that defers to two other handlers. One handler only prints records
- from the rpc package in logfmt to standard out. The other prints records at Error level
- or above in JSON formatted output to the file /var/log/service.json
- handler := log.MultiHandler(
- log.LvlFilterHandler(log.LvlError, log.Must.FileHandler("/var/log/service.json", log.JSONFormat())),
- log.MatchFilterHandler("pkg", "app/rpc" log.StdoutHandler())
- )
- Logging File Names and Line Numbers
- This package implements three Handlers that add debugging information to the
- context, CallerFileHandler, CallerFuncHandler and CallerStackHandler. Here's
- an example that adds the source file and line number of each logging call to
- the context.
- h := log.CallerFileHandler(log.StdoutHandler)
- log.Root().SetHandler(h)
- ...
- log.Error("open file", "err", err)
- This will output a line that looks like:
- lvl=eror t=2014-05-02T16:07:23-0700 msg="open file" err="file not found" caller=data.go:42
- Here's an example that logs the call stack rather than just the call site.
- h := log.CallerStackHandler("%+v", log.StdoutHandler)
- log.Root().SetHandler(h)
- ...
- log.Error("open file", "err", err)
- This will output a line that looks like:
- lvl=eror t=2014-05-02T16:07:23-0700 msg="open file" err="file not found" stack="[pkg/data.go:42 pkg/cmd/main.go]"
- The "%+v" format instructs the handler to include the path of the source file
- relative to the compile time GOPATH. The github.com/go-stack/stack package
- documents the full list of formatting verbs and modifiers available.
- Custom Handlers
- The Handler interface is so simple that it's also trivial to write your own. Let's create an
- example handler which tries to write to one handler, but if that fails it falls back to
- writing to another handler and includes the error that it encountered when trying to write
- to the primary. This might be useful when trying to log over a network socket, but if that
- fails you want to log those records to a file on disk.
- type BackupHandler struct {
- Primary Handler
- Secondary Handler
- }
- func (h *BackupHandler) Log (r *Record) error {
- err := h.Primary.Log(r)
- if err != nil {
- r.Ctx = append(ctx, "primary_err", err)
- return h.Secondary.Log(r)
- }
- return nil
- }
- This pattern is so useful that a generic version that handles an arbitrary number of Handlers
- is included as part of this library called FailoverHandler.
- Logging Expensive Operations
- Sometimes, you want to log values that are extremely expensive to compute, but you don't want to pay
- the price of computing them if you haven't turned up your logging level to a high level of detail.
- This package provides a simple type to annotate a logging operation that you want to be evaluated
- lazily, just when it is about to be logged, so that it would not be evaluated if an upstream Handler
- filters it out. Just wrap any function which takes no arguments with the log.Lazy type. For example:
- func factorRSAKey() (factors []int) {
- // return the factors of a very large number
- }
- log.Debug("factors", log.Lazy{factorRSAKey})
- If this message is not logged for any reason (like logging at the Error level), then
- factorRSAKey is never evaluated.
- Dynamic context values
- The same log.Lazy mechanism can be used to attach context to a logger which you want to be
- evaluated when the message is logged, but not when the logger is created. For example, let's imagine
- a game where you have Player objects:
- type Player struct {
- name string
- alive bool
- log.Logger
- }
- You always want to log a player's name and whether they're alive or dead, so when you create the player
- object, you might do:
- p := &Player{name: name, alive: true}
- p.Logger = log.New("name", p.name, "alive", p.alive)
- Only now, even after a player has died, the logger will still report they are alive because the logging
- context is evaluated when the logger was created. By using the Lazy wrapper, we can defer the evaluation
- of whether the player is alive or not to each log message, so that the log records will reflect the player's
- current state no matter when the log message is written:
- p := &Player{name: name, alive: true}
- isAlive := func() bool { return p.alive }
- player.Logger = log.New("name", p.name, "alive", log.Lazy{isAlive})
- Terminal Format
- If log15 detects that stdout is a terminal, it will configure the default
- handler for it (which is log.StdoutHandler) to use TerminalFormat. This format
- logs records nicely for your terminal, including color-coded output based
- on log level.
- Error Handling
- Becasuse log15 allows you to step around the type system, there are a few ways you can specify
- invalid arguments to the logging functions. You could, for example, wrap something that is not
- a zero-argument function with log.Lazy or pass a context key that is not a string. Since logging libraries
- are typically the mechanism by which errors are reported, it would be onerous for the logging functions
- to return errors. Instead, log15 handles errors by making these guarantees to you:
- - Any log record containing an error will still be printed with the error explained to you as part of the log record.
- - Any log record containing an error will include the context key LOG15_ERROR, enabling you to easily
- (and if you like, automatically) detect if any of your logging calls are passing bad values.
- Understanding this, you might wonder why the Handler interface can return an error value in its Log method. Handlers
- are encouraged to return errors only if they fail to write their log records out to an external source like if the
- syslog daemon is not responding. This allows the construction of useful handlers which cope with those failures
- like the FailoverHandler.
- Library Use
- log15 is intended to be useful for library authors as a way to provide configurable logging to
- users of their library. Best practice for use in a library is to always disable all output for your logger
- by default and to provide a public Logger instance that consumers of your library can configure. Like so:
- package yourlib
- import "github.com/inconshreveable/log15"
- var Log = log.New()
- func init() {
- Log.SetHandler(log.DiscardHandler())
- }
- Users of your library may then enable it if they like:
- import "github.com/inconshreveable/log15"
- import "example.com/yourlib"
- func main() {
- handler := // custom handler setup
- yourlib.Log.SetHandler(handler)
- }
- Best practices attaching logger context
- The ability to attach context to a logger is a powerful one. Where should you do it and why?
- I favor embedding a Logger directly into any persistent object in my application and adding
- unique, tracing context keys to it. For instance, imagine I am writing a web browser:
- type Tab struct {
- url string
- render *RenderingContext
- // ...
- Logger
- }
- func NewTab(url string) *Tab {
- return &Tab {
- // ...
- url: url,
- Logger: log.New("url", url),
- }
- }
- When a new tab is created, I assign a logger to it with the url of
- the tab as context so it can easily be traced through the logs.
- Now, whenever we perform any operation with the tab, we'll log with its
- embedded logger and it will include the tab title automatically:
- tab.Debug("moved position", "idx", tab.idx)
- There's only one problem. What if the tab url changes? We could
- use log.Lazy to make sure the current url is always written, but that
- would mean that we couldn't trace a tab's full lifetime through our
- logs after the user navigate to a new URL.
- Instead, think about what values to attach to your loggers the
- same way you think about what to use as a key in a SQL database schema.
- If it's possible to use a natural key that is unique for the lifetime of the
- object, do so. But otherwise, log15's ext package has a handy RandId
- function to let you generate what you might call "surrogate keys"
- They're just random hex identifiers to use for tracing. Back to our
- Tab example, we would prefer to set up our Logger like so:
- import logext "github.com/inconshreveable/log15/ext"
- t := &Tab {
- // ...
- url: url,
- }
- t.Logger = log.New("id", logext.RandId(8), "url", log.Lazy{t.getUrl})
- return t
- Now we'll have a unique traceable identifier even across loading new urls, but
- we'll still be able to see the tab's current url in the log messages.
- Must
- For all Handler functions which can return an error, there is a version of that
- function which will return no error but panics on failure. They are all available
- on the Must object. For example:
- log.Must.FileHandler("/path", log.JSONFormat)
- log.Must.NetHandler("tcp", ":1234", log.JSONFormat)
- Inspiration and Credit
- All of the following excellent projects inspired the design of this library:
- code.google.com/p/log4go
- github.com/op/go-logging
- github.com/technoweenie/grohl
- github.com/Sirupsen/logrus
- github.com/kr/logfmt
- github.com/spacemonkeygo/spacelog
- golang's stdlib, notably io and net/http
- The Name
- https://xkcd.com/927/
- */
- package log
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