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darvaza.org/slog
slog.Logger
provides a simple standardised interface for structured logs for libraries. It supports six log levels and fields with unique string labels (keys).
Every method of this interface, with the exception of Print()
, returns a slog.Logger
so it can be daisy chained when composing a log entry.
A log entry begins with setting the level followed by optional addition of fields and a call stack and ends with a message calling a Print method.
Based on the specified level an entry can be enabled or disabled. Calls to methods on disabled entries will cause no action unless it's used to create a new entry with a level that is enabled.
An slog.Logger
entry can have of one of six levels, of which Fatal is expected to end the execution just like the standard log.Fatal()
right after adding the log entry, and Panic to raise a recoverable panic like log.Panic()
.
New log entries can be created by calling the named shortcut methods (Debug()
, Info()
, Warn()
, Error()
, Fatal()
, and Panic()
) or via WithLevel(level)
.
A log entry is considered Enabled if the handler would actually log entries of the specified level.
It is always safe to operate on disabled loggers and the cost of should be negletable as when a logger
is not Enabled()
string formatting operations or fields and stack commands are not performed.
Sometimes it is useful to know if a certain level is Enabled so you can decide between two levels with different degree
of detail. For this purpose one can use WithEnabled()
like this:
if log, ok := logger.Debug().WithEnabled(); ok {
log.WithField("request", req).Print("Let's write detailed debug stuff")
} else if log, ok := logger.Info().WithEnabled(); ok {
log.Print("Let's write info stuff instead")
}
Logs of Fatal and Panic level are expected to exit/panic regardless of the Enabled state.
In slog
fields are unique key/value pairs where the key is a non-empty string and the value could be any type.
A Call stack is attached to a log entry considering the given distance to a caller/initiator function.
slog.Logger
support three Print methods mimicking their equivalent in the fmt
package from the standard library. Print()
, Println()
, and Printf()
that finally attempt to emit the log entry with the given message and any previously attached Field.
In order to be compatible with the standard library's provided log.Logger
, slog
provides an io.Writer
interface connected to a handler function that is expected to parse the entry and call a provided slog.Logger
as appropriate. This writer is created by calling NewLogWriter
and passing the logger and the handler function, which is then passed to log.New()
to create the *log.Logger
.
Alternatively a generic handler is provided when using NewStdLogger()
.
A handler is an object that implements the slog.Logger
interface.
We provide handlers to use popular loggers as backend.
We also offer backend independent handlers
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