Awesome
Onelog
Onelog is a dead simple but very efficient JSON logger. It is one of the fastest JSON logger out there. Also, it is one of the logger with the lowest allocation.
It gives more control over log levels enabled by using bitwise operation for setting levels on a logger.
It is also modular as you can add a custom hook, define level text values, level and message keys.
Go 1.9 is required as it uses a type alias over gojay.Encoder.
It is named onelog as a reference to zerolog and because it sounds like One Love
song from Bob Marley :)
Get Started
go get github.com/francoispqt/onelog
Basic usage:
import "github.com/francoispqt/onelog"
func main() {
// create a new Logger
// first argument is an io.Writer
// second argument is the level, which is an integer
logger := onelog.New(
os.Stdout,
onelog.ALL, // shortcut for onelog.DEBUG|onelog.INFO|onelog.WARN|onelog.ERROR|onelog.FATAL,
)
logger.Info("hello world !") // {"level":"info","message":"hello world"}
}
Levels
Levels are ints mapped to a string. The logger will check if level is enabled with an efficient bitwise &(AND), if disabled, it returns right away which makes onelog the fastest when running disabled logging with 0 allocs and less than 1ns/op. See benchmarks
When creating a logger you must use the |
operator with different levels to toggle bytes.
Example if you want levels INFO and WARN:
logger := onelog.New(
os.Stdout,
onelog.INFO|onelog.WARN,
)
This allows you to have a logger with different levels, for example you can do:
var logger *onelog.Logger
func init() {
// if we are in debug mode, enable DEBUG lvl
if os.Getenv("DEBUG") != "" {
logger = onelog.New(
os.Stdout,
onelog.ALL, // shortcut for onelog.DEBUG|onelog.INFO|onelog.WARN|onelog.ERROR|onelog.FATAL
)
return
}
logger = onelog.New(
os.Stdout,
onelog.INFO|onelog.WARN|onelog.ERROR|onelog.FATAL,
)
}
Available levels:
- onelog.DEBUG
- onelog.INFO
- onelog.WARN
- onelog.ERROR
- onelog.FATAL
You can change their textual values by doing, do this only once at runtime as it is not thread safe:
onelog.LevelText(onelog.INFO, "INFO")
Hook
You can define a hook which will be run for every log message.
Example:
logger := onelog.New(
os.Stdout,
onelog.ALL,
)
logger.Hook(func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("time", time.Now().Format(time.RFC3339))
})
logger.Info("hello world !") // {"level":"info","message":"hello world","time":"2018-05-06T02:21:01+08:00"}
Context
Context allows enforcing a grouping format where all logs fields key-values pairs from all logging methods (With, Info, Debug, InfoWith, InfoWithEntry, ...etc) except
for values from using logger.Hook
, will be enclosed in giving context name provided as it's key. For example using a context key "params" as below
logger := onelog.NewContext(
os.Stdout,
onelog.INFO|onelog.WARN,
"params"
)
logger.InfoWithFields("breaking news !", func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("userID", "123455")
})
// {"level":"info","message":"breaking news !", "params":{"userID":"123456"}}
This principle also applies when inheriting from a previous created logger as below
parentLogger := onelog.New(
os.Stdout,
onelog.INFO|onelog.WARN,
)
logger := parentLogger.WithContext("params")
logger.InfoWithFields("breaking news !", func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("userID", "123455")
})
// {"level":"info","message":"breaking news !", "params":{"userID":"123456"}}
You can always reset the context by calling WithContext("")
to create a no-context logger from a
context logger parent.
Logging
Without extra fields
Logging without extra fields is easy as:
logger := onelog.New(
os.Stdout,
onelog.ALL,
)
logger.Debug("i'm not sure what's going on") // {"level":"debug","message":"i'm not sure what's going on"}
logger.Info("breaking news !") // {"level":"info","message":"breaking news !"}
logger.Warn("beware !") // {"level":"warn","message":"beware !"}
logger.Error("my printer is on fire") // {"level":"error","message":"my printer is on fire"}
logger.Fatal("oh my...") // {"level":"fatal","message":"oh my..."}
With extra fields
Logging with extra fields is quite simple, specially if you have used gojay:
logger := onelog.New(
os.Stdout,
onelog.ALL,
)
logger.DebugWithFields("i'm not sure what's going on", func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("string", "foobar")
e.Int("int", 12345)
e.Int64("int64", 12345)
e.Float("float64", 0.15)
e.Bool("bool", true)
e.Err("err", errors.New("someError"))
e.ObjectFunc("user", func(e Entry) {
e.String("name", "somename")
})
})
// {"level":"debug","message":"i'm not sure what's going on","string":"foobar","int":12345,"int64":12345,"float64":0.15,"bool":true,"err":"someError","user":{"name":"somename"}}
logger.InfoWithFields("breaking news !", func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("userID", "123455")
})
// {"level":"info","message":"breaking news !","userID":"123456"}
logger.WarnWithFields("beware !", func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("userID", "123455")
})
// {"level":"warn","message":"beware !","userID":"123456"}
logger.ErrorWithFields("my printer is on fire", func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("userID", "123455")
})
// {"level":"error","message":"my printer is on fire","userID":"123456"}
logger.FatalWithFields("oh my...", func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("userID", "123455")
})
// {"level":"fatal","message":"oh my...","userID":"123456"}
Alternatively, you can use the chain syntax:
logger.InfoWith("foo bar").
Int("testInt", 1).
Int64("testInt64", 2).
Float("testFloat", 1.15234).
String("testString", "string").
Bool("testBool", true).
ObjectFunc("testObj", func(e Entry) {
e.Int("testInt", 100)
}).
Object("testObj2", testObj). // implementation of gojay.MarshalerJSONObject
Array("testArr", testArr). // implementation of gojay.MarshalerJSONArray
Err("testErr", errors.New("my printer is on fire !")).
Write() // don't forget to call this method!
Accumulate context
You can create get a logger with some accumulated context that will be included on all logs created by this logger.
To do that, you must call the With
method on a logger.
Internally it creates a copy of the current logger and returns it.
Example:
logger := onelog.New(
os.Stdout,
onelog.ALL,
).With(func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("userID", "123456")
})
logger.Info("user logged in") // {"level":"info","message":"user logged in","userID":"123456"}
logger.Debug("wtf?") // {"level":"debug","message":"wtf?","userID":"123456"}
logger.ErrorWithFields("Oops", func(e onelog.Entry) {
e.String("error_code", "ROFL")
}) // {"level":"error","message":"oops","userID":"123456","error_code":"ROFL"}
Change levels txt values, message and/or level keys
You can change globally the levels values by calling the function:
onelog.LevelText(onelog.INFO, "INFO")
You can change the key of the message by calling the function:
onelog.MsgKey("msg")
You can change the key of the level by calling the function:
onelog.LevelKey("lvl")
Beware, these changes are global (affects all instances of the logger). Also, these function should be called only once at runtime to avoid any data race issue.
Benchmarks
For thorough benchmarks please see the results in the bench suite created by the author of zerolog here: https://github.com/rs/logbench
The benchmarks data presented below is the one from Uber's benchmark suite where we added onelog.
Benchmarks are here: https://github.com/francoispqt/zap/tree/onelog-bench/benchmarks
Disabled Logging
ns/op | bytes/op | allocs/op | |
---|---|---|---|
Zap | 8.73 | 0 | 0 |
zerolog | 2.45 | 0 | 0 |
logrus | 12.1 | 16 | 1 |
onelog | 0.74 | 0 | 0 |
Disabled with fields
ns/op | bytes/op | allocs/op | |
---|---|---|---|
Zap | 208 | 768 | 5 |
zerolog | 68.7 | 128 | 4 |
logrus | 721 | 1493 | 12 |
onelog | 1.31 | 0 | 0 |
onelog-chain | 68.2 | 0 | 0 |
Logging basic message
ns/op | bytes/op | allocs/op | |
---|---|---|---|
Zap | 205 | 0 | 0 |
zerolog | 135 | 0 | 0 |
logrus | 1256 | 1554 | 24 |
onelog | 84.8 | 0 | 0 |
Logging basic message and accumulated context
ns/op | bytes/op | allocs/op | |
---|---|---|---|
Zap | 276 | 0 | 0 |
zerolog | 141 | 0 | 0 |
logrus | 1256 | 1554 | 24 |
onelog | 82.4 | 0 | 0 |
Logging message with extra fields
ns/op | bytes/op | allocs/op | |
---|---|---|---|
Zap | 1764 | 770 | 5 |
zerolog | 1210 | 128 | 4 |
logrus | 13211 | 13584 | 129 |
onelog | 971 | 128 | 4 |
onelog-chain | 1030 | 128 | 4 |