| // Copyright 2020 The Monogon Project Authors. |
| // |
| // SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 |
| // |
| // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| // You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| // |
| // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| // |
| // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| // limitations under the License. |
| |
| /* |
| Package logtree implements a tree-shaped logger for debug events. It provides log publishers (ie. Go code) with a |
| glog-like API, with loggers placed in a hierarchical structure defined by a dot-delimited path (called a DN, short for |
| Distinguished Name). |
| |
| tree.MustLeveledFor("foo.bar.baz").Warningf("Houston, we have a problem: %v", err) |
| |
| Logs in this context are unstructured, operational and developer-centric human readable text messages presented as lines |
| of text to consumers, with some attached metadata. Logtree does not deal with 'structured' logs as some parts of the |
| industry do, and instead defers any machine-readable logs to either be handled by metrics systems like Prometheus or |
| event sourcing systems like Kafka. |
| |
| Tree Structure |
| |
| As an example, consider application that produces logs with the following DNs: |
| |
| listener.http |
| listener.grpc |
| svc |
| svc.cache |
| svc.cache.gc |
| |
| This would correspond to a tree as follows: |
| |
| .------. |
| | "" | |
| | (root) | |
| '------' |
| .----------------' '------. |
| .--------------. .---------------. |
| | svc | | listener | |
| '--------------' '---------------' |
| | .----' '----. |
| .--------------. .---------------. .---------------. |
| | svc.cache | | listener.http | | listener.grpc | |
| '--------------' '---------------' '---------------' |
| | |
| .--------------. |
| | svc.cache.gc | |
| '--------------' |
| |
| In this setup, every DN acts as a separate logging target, each with its own retention policy and quota. Logging to a DN |
| under foo.bar does NOT automatically log to foo - all tree mechanisms are applied on log access by consumers. Loggers |
| are automatically created on first use, and importantly, can be created at any time, and will automatically be created |
| if a sub-DN is created that requires a parent DN to exist first. Note, for instance, that a `listener` logging node was |
| created even though the example application only logged to `listener.http` and `listener.grpc`. |
| |
| An implicit root node is always present in the tree, accessed by DN "" (an empty string). All other logger nodes are |
| children (or transitive children) of the root node. |
| |
| Log consumers (application code that reads the log and passes them on to operators, or ships them off for aggregation in |
| other systems) to select subtrees of logs for readout. In the example tree, a consumer could select to either read all |
| logs of the entire tree, just a single DN (like svc), or a subtree (like everything under listener, ie. messages emitted |
| to listener.http and listener.grpc). |
| |
| Log Producer API |
| |
| As part of the glog-like logging API available to producers, the following metadata is attached to emitted logs in |
| addition to the DN of the logger to which the log entry was emitted: |
| |
| - timestamp at which the entry was emitted |
| - a severity level (one of FATAL, ERROR, WARN or INFO) |
| - a source of the message (file name and line number) |
| |
| In addition, the logger mechanism supports a variable verbosity level (so-called 'V-logging') that can be set at every |
| node of the tree. For more information about the producer-facing logging API, see the documentation of the LeveledLogger |
| interface, which is the main interface exposed to log producers. |
| |
| Log Access API |
| |
| The Log Access API is mostly exposed via a single function on the LogTree struct: Read. It allows access to log entries |
| that have been already buffered inside LogTree and to subscribe to receive future entries over a channel. As outlined |
| earlier, any access can specify whether it is just interested in a single logger (addressed by DN), or a subtree of |
| loggers. |
| |
| Due to the current implementation of the logtree, subtree accesses of backlogged data is significantly slower than |
| accessing data of just one DN, or the whole tree (as every subtree backlog access performs a scan on all logged data). |
| Thus, log consumers should be aware that it is much better to stream and buffer logs specific to some long-standing |
| logging request on their own, rather than repeatedly perform reads of a subtree backlog. |
| |
| */ |
| package logtree |