Zerolog based logging libary optimized for Cloud Logging (formerly Stackdriver Logging). This package is inspired by Zapdriver.
This package provides simple structured logger optimized for Cloud Logging based on zerolog.
Key features of zerodriver are:
- zerolog based simple method chaining API
- optimized for Cloud Logging LogEntry format
First of all, initialize a logger.
logger := zerodriver.NewProductionLogger() // production mode (global log level set to `info`)
logger := zerodriver.NewDevelopmentLogger() // development mode (global log level set to `debug`)
Then, write logs by using zerolog based fluent API!
logger.Info().Str("key", "value").Msg("Hello World!")
// output: {"severity":"INFO","key":"value","time":"2009-11-10T23:00:00Z","message":"hello world"}
Here's complete example:
package main
import (
"github.com/hirosassa/zerodriver"
)
func main() {
logger := zerodriver.NewProductionLogger()
logger.Info().Str("key", "value").Msg("hello world")
}
// output: {"severity":"INFO","key":"value","time":"2009-11-10T23:00:00Z","message":"hello world"}
If your log follows LogEntry format, you can query logs or create metrics alert easier and efficiently on GCP Cloud Logging console.
To log HTTP related metrics and information, you can use following function
func (e *Event) HTTP(req *HTTPPayload) *zerolog.Event
This feature is forked from zapdriver. You can generate zerodriver.HTTPPayload
from http.Request
and http.Response
using NewHTTP
function.
Same as zapdriver.NewHTTP, following fields needs to be set manually:
ServerIP
Latency
CacheLookup
CacheHit
CacheValidatedWithOriginServer
CacheFillBytes
Using these feature, you can log HTTP related information as follows,
p := NewHTTP(req, res)
p.Latency = time.Since(start) // add some fields manually
logger.Info().HTTP(p).Msg("request received")
To add trace information to your log, you can use TraceContext
. The signature of the function is as follows:
func (e *Event) TraceContext(trace string, spanId string, sampled bool, projectID string) *zerolog.Event
You can use this feature as follows:
import "go.opencensus.io/trace"
span := trace.FromContext(r.Context()).SpanContext()
logger.Info().TraceContext(span.TraceID.String(), span.SpanID.String(), true, "my-project").Msg("trace contexts")
// {"severity":"INFO","logging.googleapis.com/trace":"projects/my-project/traces/00000000000000000000000000000000","logging.googleapis.com/spanId":"0000000000000000","logging.googleapis.com/trace_sampled":true,"message":"trace contexts"}
You can add any "labels" to your log by following:
logger.Info().Labels(zerodriver.Label("foo", "var")).Msg("labeled log")
// {"severity":"INFO","logging.googleapis.com/labels":{"foo":"var"},"message":"labeled log"}
You can add additional information about a potentially long-running operation with which a log entry is associated by following function:
func (e *Event) Operation(id, producer string, first, last bool) *zerolog.Event
Log entries with the same id
are assumed to be part of the same operation.
The producer is an arbitrary identifier that should be globally unique amongst all the logs of all your applications (meaning it should probably be the unique name of the current application).
You should set first
to true for the first log in the operation, and last
to true for the final log of the operation.
Also see, https://cloud.google.com/logging/docs/reference/v2/rest/v2/LogEntry#LogEntryOperation
For readable implementation of operation
log, you can use following functions:
func (e *Event) OperationStart(id, producer string) *zerolog.Event
func (e *Event) OperationContinue(id, producer string) *zerolog.Event
func (e *Event) OperationEnd(id, producer string) *zerolog.Event
A concrete example of operation log is as follows:
logger.Info().OperationStart("foo", "bar").Msg("started")
logger.Debug().OperationContinue("foo", "bar").Msg("processing")
logger.Info().OperationEnd("foo", "bar").Msg("done")