| // Copyright 2022 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. | |
| // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style | |
| // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. | |
| /* | |
| Package slog provides structured logging, | |
| in which log records include a message, | |
| a severity level, and various other attributes | |
| expressed as key-value pairs. | |
| It defines a type, [Logger], | |
| which provides several methods (such as [Logger.Info] and [Logger.Error]) | |
| for reporting events of interest. | |
| Each Logger is associated with a [Handler]. | |
| A Logger output method creates a [Record] from the method arguments | |
| and passes it to the Handler, which decides how to handle it. | |
| There is a default Logger accessible through top-level functions | |
| (such as [Info] and [Error]) that call the corresponding Logger methods. | |
| A log record consists of a time, a level, a message, and a set of key-value | |
| pairs, where the keys are strings and the values may be of any type. | |
| As an example, | |
| slog.Info("hello", "count", 3) | |
| creates a record containing the time of the call, | |
| a level of Info, the message "hello", and a single | |
| pair with key "count" and value 3. | |
| The [Info] top-level function calls the [Logger.Info] method on the default Logger. | |
| In addition to [Logger.Info], there are methods for Debug, Warn and Error levels. | |
| Besides these convenience methods for common levels, | |
| there is also a [Logger.Log] method which takes the level as an argument. | |
| Each of these methods has a corresponding top-level function that uses the | |
| default logger. | |
| The default handler formats the log record's message, time, level, and attributes | |
| as a string and passes it to the [log] package. | |
| 2022/11/08 15:28:26 INFO hello count=3 | |
| For more control over the output format, create a logger with a different handler. | |
| This statement uses [New] to create a new logger with a [TextHandler] | |
| that writes structured records in text form to standard error: | |
| logger := slog.New(slog.NewTextHandler(os.Stderr, nil)) | |
| [TextHandler] output is a sequence of key=value pairs, easily and unambiguously | |
| parsed by machine. This statement: | |
| logger.Info("hello", "count", 3) | |
| produces this output: | |
| time=2022-11-08T15:28:26.000-05:00 level=INFO msg=hello count=3 | |
| The package also provides [JSONHandler], whose output is line-delimited JSON: | |
| logger := slog.New(slog.NewJSONHandler(os.Stdout, nil)) | |
| logger.Info("hello", "count", 3) | |
| produces this output: | |
| {"time":"2022-11-08T15:28:26.000000000-05:00","level":"INFO","msg":"hello","count":3} | |
| Both [TextHandler] and [JSONHandler] can be configured with [HandlerOptions]. | |
| There are options for setting the minimum level (see Levels, below), | |
| displaying the source file and line of the log call, and | |
| modifying attributes before they are logged. | |
| Setting a logger as the default with | |
| slog.SetDefault(logger) | |
| will cause the top-level functions like [Info] to use it. | |
| [SetDefault] also updates the default logger used by the [log] package, | |
| so that existing applications that use [log.Printf] and related functions | |
| will send log records to the logger's handler without needing to be rewritten. | |
| Some attributes are common to many log calls. | |
| For example, you may wish to include the URL or trace identifier of a server request | |
| with all log events arising from the request. | |
| Rather than repeat the attribute with every log call, you can use [Logger.With] | |
| to construct a new Logger containing the attributes: | |
| logger2 := logger.With("url", r.URL) | |
| The arguments to With are the same key-value pairs used in [Logger.Info]. | |
| The result is a new Logger with the same handler as the original, but additional | |
| attributes that will appear in the output of every call. | |
| # Levels | |
| A [Level] is an integer representing the importance or severity of a log event. | |
| The higher the level, the more severe the event. | |
| This package defines constants for the most common levels, | |
| but any int can be used as a level. | |
| In an application, you may wish to log messages only at a certain level or greater. | |
| One common configuration is to log messages at Info or higher levels, | |
| suppressing debug logging until it is needed. | |
| The built-in handlers can be configured with the minimum level to output by | |
| setting [HandlerOptions.Level]. | |
| The program's `main` function typically does this. | |
| The default value is LevelInfo. | |
| Setting the [HandlerOptions.Level] field to a [Level] value | |
| fixes the handler's minimum level throughout its lifetime. | |
| Setting it to a [LevelVar] allows the level to be varied dynamically. | |
| A LevelVar holds a Level and is safe to read or write from multiple | |
| goroutines. | |
| To vary the level dynamically for an entire program, first initialize | |
| a global LevelVar: | |
| var programLevel = new(slog.LevelVar) // Info by default | |
| Then use the LevelVar to construct a handler, and make it the default: | |
| h := slog.NewJSONHandler(os.Stderr, &slog.HandlerOptions{Level: programLevel}) | |
| slog.SetDefault(slog.New(h)) | |
| Now the program can change its logging level with a single statement: | |
| programLevel.Set(slog.LevelDebug) | |
| # Groups | |
| Attributes can be collected into groups. | |
| A group has a name that is used to qualify the names of its attributes. | |
| How this qualification is displayed depends on the handler. | |
| [TextHandler] separates the group and attribute names with a dot. | |
| [JSONHandler] treats each group as a separate JSON object, with the group name as the key. | |
| Use [Group] to create a Group attribute from a name and a list of key-value pairs: | |
| slog.Group("request", | |
| "method", r.Method, | |
| "url", r.URL) | |
| TextHandler would display this group as | |
| request.method=GET request.url=http://example.com | |
| JSONHandler would display it as | |
| "request":{"method":"GET","url":"http://example.com"} | |
| Use [Logger.WithGroup] to qualify all of a Logger's output | |
| with a group name. Calling WithGroup on a Logger results in a | |
| new Logger with the same Handler as the original, but with all | |
| its attributes qualified by the group name. | |
| This can help prevent duplicate attribute keys in large systems, | |
| where subsystems might use the same keys. | |
| Pass each subsystem a different Logger with its own group name so that | |
| potential duplicates are qualified: | |
| logger := slog.Default().With("id", systemID) | |
| parserLogger := logger.WithGroup("parser") | |
| parseInput(input, parserLogger) | |
| When parseInput logs with parserLogger, its keys will be qualified with "parser", | |
| so even if it uses the common key "id", the log line will have distinct keys. | |
| # Contexts | |
| Some handlers may wish to include information from the [context.Context] that is | |
| available at the call site. One example of such information | |
| is the identifier for the current span when tracing is enabled. | |
| The [Logger.Log] and [Logger.LogAttrs] methods take a context as a first | |
| argument, as do their corresponding top-level functions. | |
| Although the convenience methods on Logger (Info and so on) and the | |
| corresponding top-level functions do not take a context, the alternatives ending | |
| in "Context" do. For example, | |
| slog.InfoContext(ctx, "message") | |
| It is recommended to pass a context to an output method if one is available. | |
| # Attrs and Values | |
| An [Attr] is a key-value pair. The Logger output methods accept Attrs as well as | |
| alternating keys and values. The statement | |
| slog.Info("hello", slog.Int("count", 3)) | |
| behaves the same as | |
| slog.Info("hello", "count", 3) | |
| There are convenience constructors for [Attr] such as [Int], [String], and [Bool] | |
| for common types, as well as the function [Any] for constructing Attrs of any | |
| type. | |
| The value part of an Attr is a type called [Value]. | |
| Like an [any], a Value can hold any Go value, | |
| but it can represent typical values, including all numbers and strings, | |
| without an allocation. | |
| For the most efficient log output, use [Logger.LogAttrs]. | |
| It is similar to [Logger.Log] but accepts only Attrs, not alternating | |
| keys and values; this allows it, too, to avoid allocation. | |
| The call | |
| logger.LogAttrs(ctx, slog.LevelInfo, "hello", slog.Int("count", 3)) | |
| is the most efficient way to achieve the same output as | |
| slog.InfoContext(ctx, "hello", "count", 3) | |
| # Customizing a type's logging behavior | |
| If a type implements the [LogValuer] interface, the [Value] returned from its LogValue | |
| method is used for logging. You can use this to control how values of the type | |
| appear in logs. For example, you can redact secret information like passwords, | |
| or gather a struct's fields in a Group. See the examples under [LogValuer] for | |
| details. | |
| A LogValue method may return a Value that itself implements [LogValuer]. The [Value.Resolve] | |
| method handles these cases carefully, avoiding infinite loops and unbounded recursion. | |
| Handler authors and others may wish to use [Value.Resolve] instead of calling LogValue directly. | |
| # Wrapping output methods | |
| The logger functions use reflection over the call stack to find the file name | |
| and line number of the logging call within the application. This can produce | |
| incorrect source information for functions that wrap slog. For instance, if you | |
| define this function in file mylog.go: | |
| func Infof(logger *slog.Logger, format string, args ...any) { | |
| logger.Info(fmt.Sprintf(format, args...)) | |
| } | |
| and you call it like this in main.go: | |
| Infof(slog.Default(), "hello, %s", "world") | |
| then slog will report the source file as mylog.go, not main.go. | |
| A correct implementation of Infof will obtain the source location | |
| (pc) and pass it to NewRecord. | |
| The Infof function in the package-level example called "wrapping" | |
| demonstrates how to do this. | |
| # Working with Records | |
| Sometimes a Handler will need to modify a Record | |
| before passing it on to another Handler or backend. | |
| A Record contains a mixture of simple public fields (e.g. Time, Level, Message) | |
| and hidden fields that refer to state (such as attributes) indirectly. This | |
| means that modifying a simple copy of a Record (e.g. by calling | |
| [Record.Add] or [Record.AddAttrs] to add attributes) | |
| may have unexpected effects on the original. | |
| Before modifying a Record, use [Record.Clone] to | |
| create a copy that shares no state with the original, | |
| or create a new Record with [NewRecord] | |
| and build up its Attrs by traversing the old ones with [Record.Attrs]. | |
| # Performance considerations | |
| If profiling your application demonstrates that logging is taking significant time, | |
| the following suggestions may help. | |
| If many log lines have a common attribute, use [Logger.With] to create a Logger with | |
| that attribute. The built-in handlers will format that attribute only once, at the | |
| call to [Logger.With]. The [Handler] interface is designed to allow that optimization, | |
| and a well-written Handler should take advantage of it. | |
| The arguments to a log call are always evaluated, even if the log event is discarded. | |
| If possible, defer computation so that it happens only if the value is actually logged. | |
| For example, consider the call | |
| slog.Info("starting request", "url", r.URL.String()) // may compute String unnecessarily | |
| The URL.String method will be called even if the logger discards Info-level events. | |
| Instead, pass the URL directly: | |
| slog.Info("starting request", "url", &r.URL) // calls URL.String only if needed | |
| The built-in [TextHandler] will call its String method, but only | |
| if the log event is enabled. | |
| Avoiding the call to String also preserves the structure of the underlying value. | |
| For example [JSONHandler] emits the components of the parsed URL as a JSON object. | |
| If you want to avoid eagerly paying the cost of the String call | |
| without causing the handler to potentially inspect the structure of the value, | |
| wrap the value in a fmt.Stringer implementation that hides its Marshal methods. | |
| You can also use the [LogValuer] interface to avoid unnecessary work in disabled log | |
| calls. Say you need to log some expensive value: | |
| slog.Debug("frobbing", "value", computeExpensiveValue(arg)) | |
| Even if this line is disabled, computeExpensiveValue will be called. | |
| To avoid that, define a type implementing LogValuer: | |
| type expensive struct { arg int } | |
| func (e expensive) LogValue() slog.Value { | |
| return slog.AnyValue(computeExpensiveValue(e.arg)) | |
| } | |
| Then use a value of that type in log calls: | |
| slog.Debug("frobbing", "value", expensive{arg}) | |
| Now computeExpensiveValue will only be called when the line is enabled. | |
| The built-in handlers acquire a lock before calling [io.Writer.Write] | |
| to ensure that exactly one [Record] is written at a time in its entirety. | |
| Although each log record has a timestamp, | |
| the built-in handlers do not use that time to sort the written records. | |
| User-defined handlers are responsible for their own locking and sorting. | |
| # Writing a handler | |
| For a guide to writing a custom handler, see https://golang.org/s/slog-handler-guide. | |
| */ | |
| package slog | |