Mercurial > yakumo_izuru > aya
comparison vendor/github.com/sirupsen/logrus/README.md @ 66:787b5ee0289d draft
Use vendored modules
Signed-off-by: Izuru Yakumo <yakumo.izuru@chaotic.ninja>
author | yakumo.izuru |
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date | Sun, 23 Jul 2023 13:18:53 +0000 |
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1 # Logrus <img src="http://i.imgur.com/hTeVwmJ.png" width="40" height="40" alt=":walrus:" class="emoji" title=":walrus:"/> [](https://github.com/sirupsen/logrus/actions?query=workflow%3ACI) [](https://travis-ci.org/sirupsen/logrus) [](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/sirupsen/logrus) | |
2 | |
3 Logrus is a structured logger for Go (golang), completely API compatible with | |
4 the standard library logger. | |
5 | |
6 **Logrus is in maintenance-mode.** We will not be introducing new features. It's | |
7 simply too hard to do in a way that won't break many people's projects, which is | |
8 the last thing you want from your Logging library (again...). | |
9 | |
10 This does not mean Logrus is dead. Logrus will continue to be maintained for | |
11 security, (backwards compatible) bug fixes, and performance (where we are | |
12 limited by the interface). | |
13 | |
14 I believe Logrus' biggest contribution is to have played a part in today's | |
15 widespread use of structured logging in Golang. There doesn't seem to be a | |
16 reason to do a major, breaking iteration into Logrus V2, since the fantastic Go | |
17 community has built those independently. Many fantastic alternatives have sprung | |
18 up. Logrus would look like those, had it been re-designed with what we know | |
19 about structured logging in Go today. Check out, for example, | |
20 [Zerolog][zerolog], [Zap][zap], and [Apex][apex]. | |
21 | |
22 [zerolog]: https://github.com/rs/zerolog | |
23 [zap]: https://github.com/uber-go/zap | |
24 [apex]: https://github.com/apex/log | |
25 | |
26 **Seeing weird case-sensitive problems?** It's in the past been possible to | |
27 import Logrus as both upper- and lower-case. Due to the Go package environment, | |
28 this caused issues in the community and we needed a standard. Some environments | |
29 experienced problems with the upper-case variant, so the lower-case was decided. | |
30 Everything using `logrus` will need to use the lower-case: | |
31 `github.com/sirupsen/logrus`. Any package that isn't, should be changed. | |
32 | |
33 To fix Glide, see [these | |
34 comments](https://github.com/sirupsen/logrus/issues/553#issuecomment-306591437). | |
35 For an in-depth explanation of the casing issue, see [this | |
36 comment](https://github.com/sirupsen/logrus/issues/570#issuecomment-313933276). | |
37 | |
38 Nicely color-coded in development (when a TTY is attached, otherwise just | |
39 plain text): | |
40 | |
41  | |
42 | |
43 With `log.SetFormatter(&log.JSONFormatter{})`, for easy parsing by logstash | |
44 or Splunk: | |
45 | |
46 ```json | |
47 {"animal":"walrus","level":"info","msg":"A group of walrus emerges from the | |
48 ocean","size":10,"time":"2014-03-10 19:57:38.562264131 -0400 EDT"} | |
49 | |
50 {"level":"warning","msg":"The group's number increased tremendously!", | |
51 "number":122,"omg":true,"time":"2014-03-10 19:57:38.562471297 -0400 EDT"} | |
52 | |
53 {"animal":"walrus","level":"info","msg":"A giant walrus appears!", | |
54 "size":10,"time":"2014-03-10 19:57:38.562500591 -0400 EDT"} | |
55 | |
56 {"animal":"walrus","level":"info","msg":"Tremendously sized cow enters the ocean.", | |
57 "size":9,"time":"2014-03-10 19:57:38.562527896 -0400 EDT"} | |
58 | |
59 {"level":"fatal","msg":"The ice breaks!","number":100,"omg":true, | |
60 "time":"2014-03-10 19:57:38.562543128 -0400 EDT"} | |
61 ``` | |
62 | |
63 With the default `log.SetFormatter(&log.TextFormatter{})` when a TTY is not | |
64 attached, the output is compatible with the | |
65 [logfmt](http://godoc.org/github.com/kr/logfmt) format: | |
66 | |
67 ```text | |
68 time="2015-03-26T01:27:38-04:00" level=debug msg="Started observing beach" animal=walrus number=8 | |
69 time="2015-03-26T01:27:38-04:00" level=info msg="A group of walrus emerges from the ocean" animal=walrus size=10 | |
70 time="2015-03-26T01:27:38-04:00" level=warning msg="The group's number increased tremendously!" number=122 omg=true | |
71 time="2015-03-26T01:27:38-04:00" level=debug msg="Temperature changes" temperature=-4 | |
72 time="2015-03-26T01:27:38-04:00" level=panic msg="It's over 9000!" animal=orca size=9009 | |
73 time="2015-03-26T01:27:38-04:00" level=fatal msg="The ice breaks!" err=&{0x2082280c0 map[animal:orca size:9009] 2015-03-26 01:27:38.441574009 -0400 EDT panic It's over 9000!} number=100 omg=true | |
74 ``` | |
75 To ensure this behaviour even if a TTY is attached, set your formatter as follows: | |
76 | |
77 ```go | |
78 log.SetFormatter(&log.TextFormatter{ | |
79 DisableColors: true, | |
80 FullTimestamp: true, | |
81 }) | |
82 ``` | |
83 | |
84 #### Logging Method Name | |
85 | |
86 If you wish to add the calling method as a field, instruct the logger via: | |
87 ```go | |
88 log.SetReportCaller(true) | |
89 ``` | |
90 This adds the caller as 'method' like so: | |
91 | |
92 ```json | |
93 {"animal":"penguin","level":"fatal","method":"github.com/sirupsen/arcticcreatures.migrate","msg":"a penguin swims by", | |
94 "time":"2014-03-10 19:57:38.562543129 -0400 EDT"} | |
95 ``` | |
96 | |
97 ```text | |
98 time="2015-03-26T01:27:38-04:00" level=fatal method=github.com/sirupsen/arcticcreatures.migrate msg="a penguin swims by" animal=penguin | |
99 ``` | |
100 Note that this does add measurable overhead - the cost will depend on the version of Go, but is | |
101 between 20 and 40% in recent tests with 1.6 and 1.7. You can validate this in your | |
102 environment via benchmarks: | |
103 ``` | |
104 go test -bench=.*CallerTracing | |
105 ``` | |
106 | |
107 | |
108 #### Case-sensitivity | |
109 | |
110 The organization's name was changed to lower-case--and this will not be changed | |
111 back. If you are getting import conflicts due to case sensitivity, please use | |
112 the lower-case import: `github.com/sirupsen/logrus`. | |
113 | |
114 #### Example | |
115 | |
116 The simplest way to use Logrus is simply the package-level exported logger: | |
117 | |
118 ```go | |
119 package main | |
120 | |
121 import ( | |
122 log "github.com/sirupsen/logrus" | |
123 ) | |
124 | |
125 func main() { | |
126 log.WithFields(log.Fields{ | |
127 "animal": "walrus", | |
128 }).Info("A walrus appears") | |
129 } | |
130 ``` | |
131 | |
132 Note that it's completely api-compatible with the stdlib logger, so you can | |
133 replace your `log` imports everywhere with `log "github.com/sirupsen/logrus"` | |
134 and you'll now have the flexibility of Logrus. You can customize it all you | |
135 want: | |
136 | |
137 ```go | |
138 package main | |
139 | |
140 import ( | |
141 "os" | |
142 log "github.com/sirupsen/logrus" | |
143 ) | |
144 | |
145 func init() { | |
146 // Log as JSON instead of the default ASCII formatter. | |
147 log.SetFormatter(&log.JSONFormatter{}) | |
148 | |
149 // Output to stdout instead of the default stderr | |
150 // Can be any io.Writer, see below for File example | |
151 log.SetOutput(os.Stdout) | |
152 | |
153 // Only log the warning severity or above. | |
154 log.SetLevel(log.WarnLevel) | |
155 } | |
156 | |
157 func main() { | |
158 log.WithFields(log.Fields{ | |
159 "animal": "walrus", | |
160 "size": 10, | |
161 }).Info("A group of walrus emerges from the ocean") | |
162 | |
163 log.WithFields(log.Fields{ | |
164 "omg": true, | |
165 "number": 122, | |
166 }).Warn("The group's number increased tremendously!") | |
167 | |
168 log.WithFields(log.Fields{ | |
169 "omg": true, | |
170 "number": 100, | |
171 }).Fatal("The ice breaks!") | |
172 | |
173 // A common pattern is to re-use fields between logging statements by re-using | |
174 // the logrus.Entry returned from WithFields() | |
175 contextLogger := log.WithFields(log.Fields{ | |
176 "common": "this is a common field", | |
177 "other": "I also should be logged always", | |
178 }) | |
179 | |
180 contextLogger.Info("I'll be logged with common and other field") | |
181 contextLogger.Info("Me too") | |
182 } | |
183 ``` | |
184 | |
185 For more advanced usage such as logging to multiple locations from the same | |
186 application, you can also create an instance of the `logrus` Logger: | |
187 | |
188 ```go | |
189 package main | |
190 | |
191 import ( | |
192 "os" | |
193 "github.com/sirupsen/logrus" | |
194 ) | |
195 | |
196 // Create a new instance of the logger. You can have any number of instances. | |
197 var log = logrus.New() | |
198 | |
199 func main() { | |
200 // The API for setting attributes is a little different than the package level | |
201 // exported logger. See Godoc. | |
202 log.Out = os.Stdout | |
203 | |
204 // You could set this to any `io.Writer` such as a file | |
205 // file, err := os.OpenFile("logrus.log", os.O_CREATE|os.O_WRONLY|os.O_APPEND, 0666) | |
206 // if err == nil { | |
207 // log.Out = file | |
208 // } else { | |
209 // log.Info("Failed to log to file, using default stderr") | |
210 // } | |
211 | |
212 log.WithFields(logrus.Fields{ | |
213 "animal": "walrus", | |
214 "size": 10, | |
215 }).Info("A group of walrus emerges from the ocean") | |
216 } | |
217 ``` | |
218 | |
219 #### Fields | |
220 | |
221 Logrus encourages careful, structured logging through logging fields instead of | |
222 long, unparseable error messages. For example, instead of: `log.Fatalf("Failed | |
223 to send event %s to topic %s with key %d")`, you should log the much more | |
224 discoverable: | |
225 | |
226 ```go | |
227 log.WithFields(log.Fields{ | |
228 "event": event, | |
229 "topic": topic, | |
230 "key": key, | |
231 }).Fatal("Failed to send event") | |
232 ``` | |
233 | |
234 We've found this API forces you to think about logging in a way that produces | |
235 much more useful logging messages. We've been in countless situations where just | |
236 a single added field to a log statement that was already there would've saved us | |
237 hours. The `WithFields` call is optional. | |
238 | |
239 In general, with Logrus using any of the `printf`-family functions should be | |
240 seen as a hint you should add a field, however, you can still use the | |
241 `printf`-family functions with Logrus. | |
242 | |
243 #### Default Fields | |
244 | |
245 Often it's helpful to have fields _always_ attached to log statements in an | |
246 application or parts of one. For example, you may want to always log the | |
247 `request_id` and `user_ip` in the context of a request. Instead of writing | |
248 `log.WithFields(log.Fields{"request_id": request_id, "user_ip": user_ip})` on | |
249 every line, you can create a `logrus.Entry` to pass around instead: | |
250 | |
251 ```go | |
252 requestLogger := log.WithFields(log.Fields{"request_id": request_id, "user_ip": user_ip}) | |
253 requestLogger.Info("something happened on that request") # will log request_id and user_ip | |
254 requestLogger.Warn("something not great happened") | |
255 ``` | |
256 | |
257 #### Hooks | |
258 | |
259 You can add hooks for logging levels. For example to send errors to an exception | |
260 tracking service on `Error`, `Fatal` and `Panic`, info to StatsD or log to | |
261 multiple places simultaneously, e.g. syslog. | |
262 | |
263 Logrus comes with [built-in hooks](hooks/). Add those, or your custom hook, in | |
264 `init`: | |
265 | |
266 ```go | |
267 import ( | |
268 log "github.com/sirupsen/logrus" | |
269 "gopkg.in/gemnasium/logrus-airbrake-hook.v2" // the package is named "airbrake" | |
270 logrus_syslog "github.com/sirupsen/logrus/hooks/syslog" | |
271 "log/syslog" | |
272 ) | |
273 | |
274 func init() { | |
275 | |
276 // Use the Airbrake hook to report errors that have Error severity or above to | |
277 // an exception tracker. You can create custom hooks, see the Hooks section. | |
278 log.AddHook(airbrake.NewHook(123, "xyz", "production")) | |
279 | |
280 hook, err := logrus_syslog.NewSyslogHook("udp", "localhost:514", syslog.LOG_INFO, "") | |
281 if err != nil { | |
282 log.Error("Unable to connect to local syslog daemon") | |
283 } else { | |
284 log.AddHook(hook) | |
285 } | |
286 } | |
287 ``` | |
288 Note: Syslog hook also support connecting to local syslog (Ex. "/dev/log" or "/var/run/syslog" or "/var/run/log"). For the detail, please check the [syslog hook README](hooks/syslog/README.md). | |
289 | |
290 A list of currently known service hooks can be found in this wiki [page](https://github.com/sirupsen/logrus/wiki/Hooks) | |
291 | |
292 | |
293 #### Level logging | |
294 | |
295 Logrus has seven logging levels: Trace, Debug, Info, Warning, Error, Fatal and Panic. | |
296 | |
297 ```go | |
298 log.Trace("Something very low level.") | |
299 log.Debug("Useful debugging information.") | |
300 log.Info("Something noteworthy happened!") | |
301 log.Warn("You should probably take a look at this.") | |
302 log.Error("Something failed but I'm not quitting.") | |
303 // Calls os.Exit(1) after logging | |
304 log.Fatal("Bye.") | |
305 // Calls panic() after logging | |
306 log.Panic("I'm bailing.") | |
307 ``` | |
308 | |
309 You can set the logging level on a `Logger`, then it will only log entries with | |
310 that severity or anything above it: | |
311 | |
312 ```go | |
313 // Will log anything that is info or above (warn, error, fatal, panic). Default. | |
314 log.SetLevel(log.InfoLevel) | |
315 ``` | |
316 | |
317 It may be useful to set `log.Level = logrus.DebugLevel` in a debug or verbose | |
318 environment if your application has that. | |
319 | |
320 #### Entries | |
321 | |
322 Besides the fields added with `WithField` or `WithFields` some fields are | |
323 automatically added to all logging events: | |
324 | |
325 1. `time`. The timestamp when the entry was created. | |
326 2. `msg`. The logging message passed to `{Info,Warn,Error,Fatal,Panic}` after | |
327 the `AddFields` call. E.g. `Failed to send event.` | |
328 3. `level`. The logging level. E.g. `info`. | |
329 | |
330 #### Environments | |
331 | |
332 Logrus has no notion of environment. | |
333 | |
334 If you wish for hooks and formatters to only be used in specific environments, | |
335 you should handle that yourself. For example, if your application has a global | |
336 variable `Environment`, which is a string representation of the environment you | |
337 could do: | |
338 | |
339 ```go | |
340 import ( | |
341 log "github.com/sirupsen/logrus" | |
342 ) | |
343 | |
344 func init() { | |
345 // do something here to set environment depending on an environment variable | |
346 // or command-line flag | |
347 if Environment == "production" { | |
348 log.SetFormatter(&log.JSONFormatter{}) | |
349 } else { | |
350 // The TextFormatter is default, you don't actually have to do this. | |
351 log.SetFormatter(&log.TextFormatter{}) | |
352 } | |
353 } | |
354 ``` | |
355 | |
356 This configuration is how `logrus` was intended to be used, but JSON in | |
357 production is mostly only useful if you do log aggregation with tools like | |
358 Splunk or Logstash. | |
359 | |
360 #### Formatters | |
361 | |
362 The built-in logging formatters are: | |
363 | |
364 * `logrus.TextFormatter`. Logs the event in colors if stdout is a tty, otherwise | |
365 without colors. | |
366 * *Note:* to force colored output when there is no TTY, set the `ForceColors` | |
367 field to `true`. To force no colored output even if there is a TTY set the | |
368 `DisableColors` field to `true`. For Windows, see | |
369 [github.com/mattn/go-colorable](https://github.com/mattn/go-colorable). | |
370 * When colors are enabled, levels are truncated to 4 characters by default. To disable | |
371 truncation set the `DisableLevelTruncation` field to `true`. | |
372 * When outputting to a TTY, it's often helpful to visually scan down a column where all the levels are the same width. Setting the `PadLevelText` field to `true` enables this behavior, by adding padding to the level text. | |
373 * All options are listed in the [generated docs](https://godoc.org/github.com/sirupsen/logrus#TextFormatter). | |
374 * `logrus.JSONFormatter`. Logs fields as JSON. | |
375 * All options are listed in the [generated docs](https://godoc.org/github.com/sirupsen/logrus#JSONFormatter). | |
376 | |
377 Third party logging formatters: | |
378 | |
379 * [`FluentdFormatter`](https://github.com/joonix/log). Formats entries that can be parsed by Kubernetes and Google Container Engine. | |
380 * [`GELF`](https://github.com/fabienm/go-logrus-formatters). Formats entries so they comply to Graylog's [GELF 1.1 specification](http://docs.graylog.org/en/2.4/pages/gelf.html). | |
381 * [`logstash`](https://github.com/bshuster-repo/logrus-logstash-hook). Logs fields as [Logstash](http://logstash.net) Events. | |
382 * [`prefixed`](https://github.com/x-cray/logrus-prefixed-formatter). Displays log entry source along with alternative layout. | |
383 * [`zalgo`](https://github.com/aybabtme/logzalgo). Invoking the Power of Zalgo. | |
384 * [`nested-logrus-formatter`](https://github.com/antonfisher/nested-logrus-formatter). Converts logrus fields to a nested structure. | |
385 * [`powerful-logrus-formatter`](https://github.com/zput/zxcTool). get fileName, log's line number and the latest function's name when print log; Sava log to files. | |
386 * [`caption-json-formatter`](https://github.com/nolleh/caption_json_formatter). logrus's message json formatter with human-readable caption added. | |
387 | |
388 You can define your formatter by implementing the `Formatter` interface, | |
389 requiring a `Format` method. `Format` takes an `*Entry`. `entry.Data` is a | |
390 `Fields` type (`map[string]interface{}`) with all your fields as well as the | |
391 default ones (see Entries section above): | |
392 | |
393 ```go | |
394 type MyJSONFormatter struct { | |
395 } | |
396 | |
397 log.SetFormatter(new(MyJSONFormatter)) | |
398 | |
399 func (f *MyJSONFormatter) Format(entry *Entry) ([]byte, error) { | |
400 // Note this doesn't include Time, Level and Message which are available on | |
401 // the Entry. Consult `godoc` on information about those fields or read the | |
402 // source of the official loggers. | |
403 serialized, err := json.Marshal(entry.Data) | |
404 if err != nil { | |
405 return nil, fmt.Errorf("Failed to marshal fields to JSON, %w", err) | |
406 } | |
407 return append(serialized, '\n'), nil | |
408 } | |
409 ``` | |
410 | |
411 #### Logger as an `io.Writer` | |
412 | |
413 Logrus can be transformed into an `io.Writer`. That writer is the end of an `io.Pipe` and it is your responsibility to close it. | |
414 | |
415 ```go | |
416 w := logger.Writer() | |
417 defer w.Close() | |
418 | |
419 srv := http.Server{ | |
420 // create a stdlib log.Logger that writes to | |
421 // logrus.Logger. | |
422 ErrorLog: log.New(w, "", 0), | |
423 } | |
424 ``` | |
425 | |
426 Each line written to that writer will be printed the usual way, using formatters | |
427 and hooks. The level for those entries is `info`. | |
428 | |
429 This means that we can override the standard library logger easily: | |
430 | |
431 ```go | |
432 logger := logrus.New() | |
433 logger.Formatter = &logrus.JSONFormatter{} | |
434 | |
435 // Use logrus for standard log output | |
436 // Note that `log` here references stdlib's log | |
437 // Not logrus imported under the name `log`. | |
438 log.SetOutput(logger.Writer()) | |
439 ``` | |
440 | |
441 #### Rotation | |
442 | |
443 Log rotation is not provided with Logrus. Log rotation should be done by an | |
444 external program (like `logrotate(8)`) that can compress and delete old log | |
445 entries. It should not be a feature of the application-level logger. | |
446 | |
447 #### Tools | |
448 | |
449 | Tool | Description | | |
450 | ---- | ----------- | | |
451 |[Logrus Mate](https://github.com/gogap/logrus_mate)|Logrus mate is a tool for Logrus to manage loggers, you can initial logger's level, hook and formatter by config file, the logger will be generated with different configs in different environments.| | |
452 |[Logrus Viper Helper](https://github.com/heirko/go-contrib/tree/master/logrusHelper)|An Helper around Logrus to wrap with spf13/Viper to load configuration with fangs! And to simplify Logrus configuration use some behavior of [Logrus Mate](https://github.com/gogap/logrus_mate). [sample](https://github.com/heirko/iris-contrib/blob/master/middleware/logrus-logger/example) | | |
453 | |
454 #### Testing | |
455 | |
456 Logrus has a built in facility for asserting the presence of log messages. This is implemented through the `test` hook and provides: | |
457 | |
458 * decorators for existing logger (`test.NewLocal` and `test.NewGlobal`) which basically just adds the `test` hook | |
459 * a test logger (`test.NewNullLogger`) that just records log messages (and does not output any): | |
460 | |
461 ```go | |
462 import( | |
463 "github.com/sirupsen/logrus" | |
464 "github.com/sirupsen/logrus/hooks/test" | |
465 "github.com/stretchr/testify/assert" | |
466 "testing" | |
467 ) | |
468 | |
469 func TestSomething(t*testing.T){ | |
470 logger, hook := test.NewNullLogger() | |
471 logger.Error("Helloerror") | |
472 | |
473 assert.Equal(t, 1, len(hook.Entries)) | |
474 assert.Equal(t, logrus.ErrorLevel, hook.LastEntry().Level) | |
475 assert.Equal(t, "Helloerror", hook.LastEntry().Message) | |
476 | |
477 hook.Reset() | |
478 assert.Nil(t, hook.LastEntry()) | |
479 } | |
480 ``` | |
481 | |
482 #### Fatal handlers | |
483 | |
484 Logrus can register one or more functions that will be called when any `fatal` | |
485 level message is logged. The registered handlers will be executed before | |
486 logrus performs an `os.Exit(1)`. This behavior may be helpful if callers need | |
487 to gracefully shutdown. Unlike a `panic("Something went wrong...")` call which can be intercepted with a deferred `recover` a call to `os.Exit(1)` can not be intercepted. | |
488 | |
489 ``` | |
490 ... | |
491 handler := func() { | |
492 // gracefully shutdown something... | |
493 } | |
494 logrus.RegisterExitHandler(handler) | |
495 ... | |
496 ``` | |
497 | |
498 #### Thread safety | |
499 | |
500 By default, Logger is protected by a mutex for concurrent writes. The mutex is held when calling hooks and writing logs. | |
501 If you are sure such locking is not needed, you can call logger.SetNoLock() to disable the locking. | |
502 | |
503 Situation when locking is not needed includes: | |
504 | |
505 * You have no hooks registered, or hooks calling is already thread-safe. | |
506 | |
507 * Writing to logger.Out is already thread-safe, for example: | |
508 | |
509 1) logger.Out is protected by locks. | |
510 | |
511 2) logger.Out is an os.File handler opened with `O_APPEND` flag, and every write is smaller than 4k. (This allows multi-thread/multi-process writing) | |
512 | |
513 (Refer to http://www.notthewizard.com/2014/06/17/are-files-appends-really-atomic/) |