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Description

Gomol (Go Multi-Output Logger) is an MIT-licensed structured logging library for Go. Gomol grew from a desire to have a structured logging library that could write to any number of outputs while also keeping a small in-band footprint.

Programming language: Go
License: MIT License

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README

gomol

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Gomol (Go Multi-Output Logger) is an MIT-licensed structured logging library for Go. Gomol grew from a desire to have a structured logging library that could write to any number of outputs while also keeping a small in-band footprint.

Features

  • Attach meta-data to each log message with attributes
  • Multiple outputs at the same time
  • Pluggable Logger interface
  • Asynchronous logging so slow loggers won't slow down your application

Installation

Gomol can also be installed the standard way for Go:

go get github.com/aphistic/gomol
...
import "github.com/aphistic/gomol"

Vendoring is recommended!

Loggers

Gomol has a growing list of supported logging formats. The known loggers are listed below. If you have a logger you've written to support gomol and you'd like to add it to this list please either submit a pull request with the updated document or let me know and I can add it!

Other Usages

In addition to the loggers listed above, gomol can be used with other projects as well.

Examples

For brevity a lot of error checking has been omitted, be sure you do your checks!

This is a super basic example of adding a number of loggers and then logging a few messages:

package main

import (
    "github.com/aphistic/gomol"
    gc "github.com/aphistic/gomol-console"
    gg "github.com/aphistic/gomol-gelf"
)

func main() {
    // Add a console logger
    consoleCfg := gc.NewConsoleLoggerConfig()
    consoleLogger, _ := gc.NewConsoleLogger(consoleCfg)
    // Set the template to display the full message, including
    // attributes.
    consoleLogger.SetTemplate(gc.NewTemplateFull())
    gomol.AddLogger(consoleLogger)

    // Add a GELF logger
    gelfCfg := gg.NewGelfLoggerConfig()
    gelfCfg.Hostname = "localhost"
    gelfCfg.Port = 12201
    gelfLogger, _ := gg.NewGelfLogger(gelfCfg)
    gomol.AddLogger(gelfLogger)

    // Set some global attrs that will be added to all
    // messages automatically
    gomol.SetAttr("facility", "gomol.example")
    gomol.SetAttr("another_attr", 1234)

    // Configure gomol to add the filename and line number that the
    // log was generated from, the internal sequence number to help
    // with ordering events if your log system doesn't support a
    // small enough sub-second resolution, and set the size of the
    // internal queue (default is 10k messages).
    cfg := gomol.NewConfig()
    cfg.FilenameAttr = "filename"
    cfg.LineNumberAttr = "line"
    cfg.SequenceAttr = "sequence"
    cfg.MaxQueueSize = 50000
    gomol.SetConfig(cfg)

    // Initialize the loggers
    gomol.InitLoggers()
    defer gomol.ShutdownLoggers()

    // Create a channel on which to receive internal (asynchronous)
    // logger errors. This is optional, but recommended in order to
    // determine when logging may be dropping messages.
    ch := make(chan error)

    go func() {
        // This consumer is expected to be efficient as writes to 
        // the channel are blocking. If this handler is slow, the
        // user should add a buffer to the channel, or manually
        // queue and batch errors for processing.

        for err := range ch {
            fmt.Printf("[Internal Error] %s\n", err.Error())
        }
    }()

    gomol.SetErrorChan(ch)

    // Log some debug messages with message-level attrs
    // that will be sent only with that message
    for idx := 1; idx <= 10; idx++ {
        gomol.Dbgm(gomol.NewAttrsFromMap(map[string]interface{}{
            "msg_attr1": 4321,
        }), "Test message %v", idx)
    }
}

Fallback Logger

One feature gomol supports is the concept of a fallback logger. In some cases a logger may go unhealthy (a logger to a remote server, for example) and you want to log to a different logger to ensure log messages are not lost. The SetFallbackLogger method is available for these such instances.

A fallback logger will be triggered if any of the primary loggers goes unhealthy even if all others are fine. It's recommended the fallback logger not be added to the primary loggers or you may see duplicate messages. This does mean if multiple loggers are added as primary loggers and just one is unhealthy the fallback logger logger will be triggered.

To add a fallback logger there are two options. One is to use the default gomol instance (gomol.SetFallbackLogger()) and the other is to use the method on a Base instance:

import (
    "github.com/aphistic/gomol"
    "github.com/aphistic/gomol-console"
    "github.com/aphistic/gomol-json"
)

func main() {
    // Create a logger that logs over TCP using JSON
    jsonCfg := gomoljson.NewJSONLoggerConfig("tcp://192.0.2.125:4321")
    // Continue startup even if we can't connect initially
    jsonCfg.AllowDisconnectedInit = true
    jsonLogger, _ := gomoljson.NewJSONLogger(jsonCfg)
    gomol.AddLogger(jsonLogger)

    // Create a logger that logs to the console
    consoleCfg := gomolconsole.NewConsoleLoggerConfig()
    consoleLogger, _ := gomolconsole.NewConsoleLogger(consoleCfg)

    // Set the fallback logger to the console so if the
    // TCP JSON logger is unhealthy we still get logs
    // to stdout.
    _ = gomol.SetFallbackLogger(consoleLogger)

    gomol.InitLoggers()
    defer gomol.ShutdownLoggers()

    gomol.Debug("This is my message!")
}


*Note that all licence references and agreements mentioned in the gomol README section above are relevant to that project's source code only.