lumberjack
Lumberjack is a Go package for writing logs to rolling files.
Package lumberjack provides a rolling logger.
Note that this is v2.0 of lumberjack, and should be imported using gopkg.in
thusly:
import "gopkg.in/natefinch/lumberjack.v2"
The package name remains simply lumberjack, and the code resides at
https://github.com/natefinch/lumberjack under the v2.0 branch.
Lumberjack is intended to be one part of a logging infrastructure.
It is not an all-in-one solution, but instead is a pluggable
component at the bottom of the logging stack that simply controls the files
to which logs are written.
Lumberjack plays well with any logging package that can write to an
io.Writer, including the standard library's log package.
Lumberjack assumes that only one process is writing to the output files.
Using the same lumberjack configuration from multiple processes on the same
machine will result in improper behavior.
Example
To use lumberjack with the standard library's log package, just pass it into the SetOutput function when your application starts.
Code:
log.SetOutput(&lumberjack.Logger{
Filename: "/var/log/myapp/foo.log",
MaxSize: 500,
MaxBackups: 3,
MaxAge: 28,
Compress: true,
callback: func(filename string) {}
})
type Logger
type Logger struct {
Filename string `json:"filename" yaml:"filename"`
MaxSize int `json:"maxsize" yaml:"maxsize"`
MaxAge int `json:"maxage" yaml:"maxage"`
MaxBackups int `json:"maxbackups" yaml:"maxbackups"`
LocalTime bool `json:"localtime" yaml:"localtime"`
Compress bool `json:"compress" yaml:"compress"`
callback func(filename string) bool
}
Logger is an io.WriteCloser that writes to the specified filename.
Logger opens or creates the logfile on first Write. If the file exists and
is less than MaxSize megabytes, lumberjack will open and append to that file.
If the file exists and its size is >= MaxSize megabytes, the file is renamed
by putting the current time in a timestamp in the name immediately before the
file's extension (or the end of the filename if there's no extension). A new
log file is then created using original filename.
Whenever a write would cause the current log file exceed MaxSize megabytes,
the current file is closed, renamed, and a new log file created with the
original name. Thus, the filename you give Logger is always the "current" log
file.
Backups use the log file name given to Logger, in the form name-timestamp.ext
where name is the filename without the extension, timestamp is the time at which
the log was rotated formatted with the time.Time format of
2006-01-02T15-04-05.000
and the extension is the original extension. For
example, if your Logger.Filename is /var/log/foo/server.log
, a backup created
at 6:30pm on Nov 11 2016 would use the filename
/var/log/foo/server-2016-11-04T18-30-00.000.log
Cleaning Up Old Log Files
Whenever a new logfile gets created, old log files may be deleted. The most
recent files according to the encoded timestamp will be retained, up to a
number equal to MaxBackups (or all of them if MaxBackups is 0). Any files
with an encoded timestamp older than MaxAge days are deleted, regardless of
MaxBackups. Note that the time encoded in the timestamp is the rotation
time, which may differ from the last time that file was written to.
If MaxBackups and MaxAge are both 0, no old log files will be deleted.
func (*Logger) Close
func (l *Logger) Close() error
Close implements io.Closer, and closes the current logfile.
func (*Logger) Rotate
func (l *Logger) Rotate() error
Rotate causes Logger to close the existing log file and immediately create a
new one. This is a helper function for applications that want to initiate
rotations outside of the normal rotation rules, such as in response to
SIGHUP. After rotating, this initiates a cleanup of old log files according
to the normal rules.
Example
Example of how to rotate in response to SIGHUP.
Code:
l := &lumberjack.Logger{}
log.SetOutput(l)
c := make(chan os.Signal, 1)
signal.Notify(c, syscall.SIGHUP)
go func() {
for {
<-c
l.Rotate()
}
}()
func (*Logger) Write
func (l *Logger) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error)
Write implements io.Writer. If a write would cause the log file to be larger
than MaxSize, the file is closed, renamed to include a timestamp of the
current time, and a new log file is created using the original log file name.
If the length of the write is greater than MaxSize, an error is returned.
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