A structured event logger
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'fluent-logger'
And then execute:
$ bundle install
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install fluent-logger
require 'fluent-logger'
# API: FluentLogger.new(tag_prefix, options)
log = Fluent::Logger::FluentLogger.new(nil, :host => 'localhost', :port => 24224)
unless log.post("myapp.access", {"agent" => "foo"})
p log.last_error # You can get last error object via last_error method
end
# output: myapp.access {"agent":"foo"}
require 'fluent-logger'
log = Fluent::Logger::FluentLogger.new(nil, :socket_path => "/tmp/fluent.sock")
unless log.post("myapp.access", {"agent" => "foo"})
# Passed records are stored into logger's internal buffer so don't re-post same event.
p log.last_error # You can get last error object via last_error method
end
# output: myapp.access {"agent":"foo"}
require 'fluent-logger'
log = Fluent::Logger::FluentLogger.new('myapp', :host => 'localhost', :port => 24224)
log.post("access", {"agent" => "foo"})
# output: myapp.access {"agent":"foo"}
require 'fluent-logger'
log = Fluent::Logger::FluentLogger.new(nil, :host => 'localhost', :port => 24224, :use_nonblock => true, :wait_writeable => false)
# When wait_writeable is false
begin
log.post("myapp.access", {"agent" => "foo"})
rescue IO::EAGAINWaitWritable => e
# wait code for avoding "Resource temporarily unavailable"
# Passed records are stored into logger's internal buffer so don't re-post same event.
end
# When wait_writeable is true
unless log.post("myapp.access", {"agent" => "foo"})
# same as other example
end
# output: myapp.access {"agent":"foo"}
require 'fluent-logger'
tls_opts = {
:ca => '/path/to/cacert.pem',
:cert => '/path/to/client-cert.pem',
:key => '/path/to/client-key.pem',
:key_passphrase => 'test'
}
log = Fluent::Logger::FluentLogger.new(nil, :host => 'localhost', :port => 24224, :tls_options => tls_opts)
in_forward
config example:
<source>
@type forward
<transport tls>
version TLS1_2
ca_path /path/to/cacert.pem
cert_path /path/to/server-cert.pem
private_key_path /path/to/server-key.pem
private_key_passphrase test
client_cert_auth true
</transport>
</source>
require 'fluent-logger'
Fluent::Logger::FluentLogger.open(nil, :host => 'localhost', :port => 24224)
Fluent::Logger.post("myapp.access", {"agent" => "foo"})
# output: myapp.access {"agent":"foo"}
fluentd instance host
fluentd instance port
If specified, fluentd uses unix domain socket instead of TCP.
Use nano second event time instead of epoch. See also "Tips" section.
Use nonblocking write(IO#write_nonblock
) instead of normal write(IO#write
). If Logger#post
stuck on your environment, specify true
. Default: false
If false
, Logger#post
raises an error when nonblocking write gets EAGAIN
(i.e. use_nonblock
must be true
, otherwise this will have no effect). Default: true
Pass callback for handling buffer overflow with pending data. See "Buffer overflow" section.
Pass TLS related options.
- use_default_ca: Set
true
if you want to use default CA - ca: CA file path
- cert: Certificate file path
- key: Private key file path
- key_passphrase: Private key passphrase
- version: TLS version. Default is
OpenSSL::SSL::TLS1_2_VERSION
- ciphers: The list of cipher suites. Default is
ALL:!aNULL:!eNULL:!SSLv2
- insecure: Set
true
whenin_forward
usesinsecure true
require 'fluent-logger'
f = Fluent::Logger::LevelFluentLogger.new('fluent')
f.info("some application running.")
# output: fluent.info: {"level":"INFO","message":"some application running."}
f.warn("some application running.")
# output: fluent.warn: {"level":"WARN","message":"some application running."}
require 'fluent-logger'
f = Fluent::Logger::LevelFluentLogger.new('fluent')
f.info("some_application") {"some application running."}
# output: fluent.info: {"level":"INFO","message":"some application running.","progname":"some_application"}
require 'fluent-logger'
f = Fluent::Logger::LevelFluentLogger.new('fluent')
f.level = Logger::WARN
f.info("some_application") {"some application running."}
Log level is ERROR so no output.
default log level is debug.
require 'fluent-logger'
f = Fluent::Logger::LevelFluentLogger.new('fluent')
f.formatter = proc do |severity, datetime, progname, message|
map = { level: severity }
map[:message] = message if message
map[:progname] = progname if progname
map[:stage] = ENV['RAILS_ENV']
map[:service_name] = "SomeApp"
map
end
f.info("some_application"){"some application running."}
# output: fluent.info: {"level":"INFO","message":"some application running.","progname":"some_application","stage":"production","service_name":"SomeApp"}
Fluent::Logger::FluentLogger.open('tag_prefix', :host => 'localhost', :port => 24224)
Fluent::Logger::ConsoleLogger.open(io)
Fluent::Logger::NullLogger.open
To send events with nanosecond-precision time (Fluent 0.14 and up), specify nanosecond_precision
to FluentLogger
constructor.
log = Fluent::Logger::FluentLogger.new(nil, :host => 'localhost', :port => 24224, :nanosecond_precision => true)
# Use nanosecond time instead
log.post("myapp.access", {"agent" => "foo"})
log.post_with_time("myapp.access", {"agent" => "foo"}, Time.now) # Need Time object for post_with_time
You can inject your own custom proc to handle buffer overflow in the event of connection failure. This will mitigate the loss of data instead of simply throwing data away.
Your proc must accept a single argument, which will be the internal buffer of messages from the logger. A typical use-case for this would be writing to disk or possibly writing to Redis.
class BufferOverflowHandler
attr_accessor :buffer
def flush(messages)
@buffer ||= []
MessagePack::Unpacker.new.feed_each(messages) do |msg|
@buffer << msg
end
end
end
handler = Proc.new { |messages| BufferOverflowHandler.new.flush(messages) }
Fluent::Logger::FluentLogger.new(nil,
:host => 'localhost', :port => 24224,
:buffer_overflow_handler => handler)
name | description |
---|---|
Web site | http://fluentd.org/ |
Documents | http://docs.fluentd.org/ |
Source repository | https://github.com/fluent/fluent-logger-ruby |
Author | Sadayuki Furuhashi |
Copyright | (c) 2011 FURUHASHI Sadayuki |
License | Apache License, Version 2.0 |