Logging in go-api-basic
Thoughts on Logging
I’ve gone through a few logging phases in my career. I logged everything. It was great, until the logs became meaningless because there were too many. I logged only errors, but in some cases that was not enough. Now I’m somewhere in the middle. I do believe in logging all errors and detailed how I do that in my last post. There are also times when it’s helpful to have some debugging logs in place. As an example, if you’ve ever tried to build a google doc using their APIs, then you may know that it can be helpful to have some tidbits of information about the document index position along your code/document path. In cases like this, I will leave debug logs in place in order to be able to pull the thread on them later if need be. Often times, I may deploy a change with some logs in place until I’ve seen enough data in action in production and then back out the logs in the next change when I’m satisfied. In general, I try to minimize the amount of logging in my code and only put logs in where it counts.
Logging in go-api-basic with zerolog
go-api-basic uses the zerolog library from Olivier Poitrey. I’m not gonna lie — initially, I chose this library because Olivier uses it at Netflix and that was enough for me. Over time though, I’ve really come to love this logging library and Olivier is a great maintainer. I spent a lot of time a couple of years ago helping with the README and a number of other things in the library along the way. I’ve learned a lot about Go and open source just from these interactions. If I use a library, I generally try to give back in some way to it, but often times through these interactions, I get back more in return, actually.
The mechanics for using zerolog
are straightforward and are well documented in the library's README. zerolog
takes an io.Writer
as input to create a new logger; for simplicity in go-api-basic
, I use os.Stdout
.
Setting Logger State on Startup
When starting go-api-basic
, there are several flags which setup the logger:
go-api-basic
uses the ff library from Peter Bourgon, which allows for using either flags or environment variables. Click here if you want more info on this setup. Going forward, we'll assume you've chosen flags.
The log-level
flag sets the Global logging level for your zerolog.Logger
.
zerolog allows for logging at the following levels (from highest to lowest):
- panic (
zerolog.PanicLevel
, 5) - fatal (
zerolog.FatalLevel
, 4) - error (
zerolog.ErrorLevel
, 3) - warn (
zerolog.WarnLevel
, 2) - info (
zerolog.InfoLevel
, 1) - debug (
zerolog.DebugLevel
, 0) - trace (
zerolog.TraceLevel
, -1)
The log-level-min
flag sets the minimum accepted logging level, which means, for example, if you set the minimum level to error, the only logs that will be sent to your chosen output will be those that are greater than or equal to error ( error
, fatal
and panic
).
The log-error-stack
boolean flag tells whether to log stack traces for each error. If true
, the zerolog.ErrorStackMarshaler
will be set to pkgerrors.MarshalStack
which means, for errors raised using the github.com/pkg/errors package, the error stack trace will be captured and printed along with the log. All errors raised in go-api-basic
are raised using github.com/pkg/errors
.
After parsing the command line flags, zerolog.Logger
is initialized in main.go
// setup logger with appropriate defaults
lgr := logger.NewLogger(os.Stdout, minlvl, true)
and subsequently injected into the app.Server
struct as a Server parameter.
// initialize server configuration parameters
params := app.NewServerParams(lgr, serverDriver)// initialize Server
s, err := app.NewServer(mr, params)
if err != nil {
lgr.Fatal().Err(err).Msg(“Error from app.NewServer”)
}
Logger Setup in Handlers
The Server.routes
method is responsible for registering routes and corresponding middleware/handlers to the Server’s gorilla/mux
router. For each route registered to the handler, upon execution, the initialized zerolog.Logger
struct is added to the request context through the Server.loggerChain
method.
// register routes/middleware/handlers to the Server router
func (s *Server) routes() { // Match only POST requests at /api/v1/movies
// with Content-Type header = application/json
s.router.Handle(moviesV1PathRoot,
s.loggerChain().Extend(s.ctxWithUserChain()).
Append(s.authorizeUserHandler).
Append(s.jsonContentTypeResponseHandler).
ThenFunc(s.handleMovieCreate)).
Methods(http.MethodPost).
Headers(contentTypeHeaderKey, appJSONContentTypeHeaderVal)...
The Server.loggerChain
method sets up the logger with pre-populated fields, including the request method, url, status, size, duration, remote IP, user agent, referer. A unique Request ID
is also added to the logger, context and response headers.
For every request, you’ll get a request log that looks something like the following:
All error logs will have the same request metadata, including request_id
. The Request-Id
is also sent back as part of the error response as a response header, allowing you to link the two. An error log will look something like the following:
If the logger is to be used beyond the scope of the handler, it should be pulled from the request context in the handler and sent as a parameter to any inner calls. The Logger is added only to the request context to capture request related fields with the Logger and be able to pass the initialized logger and middleware handlers easier to the app/route handler. Additional use of the logger should be directly called out in function/method signatures so there are no surprises. All logs from the logger passed down get the benefit of the request metadata though, which is great!
Reading and Modifying Logger State
You can retrieve and update the state of these flags using the {{base_url}}/api/v1/logger
endpoint.
To retrieve the current logger state use a GET
request:
curl --location --request GET 'http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/v1/logger' \ --header 'Authorization: Bearer <REPLACE WITH ACCESS TOKEN>'
and the response will look something like:
In order to update the logger state use a PUT
request:
curl --location --request PUT 'http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/v1/logger' \ --header 'Content-Type: application/json' \ --header 'Authorization: Bearer <REPLACE WITH ACCESS TOKEN>' \ --data-raw '{ "global_log_level": "debug", "log_error_stack": "true" }'
and the response will look something like:
The PUT
response is the same as the GET
response, but with updated values. In the examples above, I used a scenario where the logger state started with the global logging level ( global_log_level
) at error and error stack tracing ( log_error_stack
) set to false. The PUT
request then updates the logger state, setting the global logging level to debug
and the error stack tracing. You might do something like this if you are debugging an issue and need to see debug logs or error stacks to help with that.
Peter Bourgon recently tweeted the above about
github.com/pkg/errors
. He's not wrong. In general the standard library is always the way to go. For years I only used the standard library for raising errors and would annotate each error with the function name in order to capture a pseudo stack trace exactly like Rob Pike does in this post (theerrs.Op
field). I believe in annotating and logging every error - not everyone does. It can cause noise in your logs, but in my experience, it's helpful. After years of trying to annotate every error though, I found I made too many mistakes. I kept forgetting to log the function name or I would misspell it, etc. I switched to usegithub.com/pkg/errors
because of it's stack trace capability as well as the integrationzerolog
has with it. Stack trace for errors can certainly be overkill though, hence the ability to turn it on/off with a service for tactical usage can come in handy.
No actual logs were harmed in this post.
Originally published at https://dangillis.dev on July 13, 2021.