Package Usage: go: cloud.google.com/go/logging
Package logging contains a Cloud Logging client suitable for writing logs.
For reading logs, and working with sinks, metrics and monitored resources,
see package cloud.google.com/go/logging/logadmin.
This client uses Logging API v2.
See https://cloud.google.com/logging/docs/api/v2/ for an introduction to the API.
Use a Client to interact with the Cloud Logging API.
For most use cases, you'll want to add log entries to a buffer to be periodically
flushed (automatically and asynchronously) to the Cloud Logging service.
You should call Client.Close before your program exits to flush any buffered log entries to the Cloud Logging service.
For critical errors, you may want to send your log entries immediately.
LogSync is slow and will block until the log entry has been sent, so it is
not recommended for normal use.
For cases when runtime environment supports out-of-process log ingestion,
like logging agent, you can opt-in to write log entries to io.Writer instead of
ingesting them to Cloud Logging service. Usually, you will use os.Stdout or os.Stderr as
writers because Google Cloud logging agents are configured to capture logs from standard output.
The entries will be Jsonified and wrote as one line strings following the structured logging format.
See https://cloud.google.com/logging/docs/structured-logging#special-payload-fields for the format description.
To instruct Logger to redirect log entries add RedirectAsJSON() LoggerOption`s.
An entry payload can be a string, as in the examples above. It can also be any value
that can be marshaled to a JSON object, like a map[string]interface{} or a struct:
If you have a []byte of JSON, wrap it in json.RawMessage:
If you have proto.Message and want to send it as a protobuf payload, marshal it to anypb.Any:
You may want use a standard log.Logger in your program.
An Entry may have one of a number of severity levels associated with it.
You can view Cloud logs for projects at
https://console.cloud.google.com/logs/viewer. Use the dropdown at the top left. When
running from a Google Cloud Platform VM, select "GCE VM Instance". Otherwise, select
"Google Project" and then the project ID. Logs for organizations, folders and billing
accounts can be viewed on the command line with the "gcloud logging read" command.
To group all the log entries written during a single HTTP request, create two
Loggers, a "parent" and a "child," with different log IDs. Both should be in the same
project, and have the same MonitoredResource type and labels.
- A child entry's timestamp must be within the time interval covered by the parent request. (i.e., before
the parent.Timestamp and after the parent.Timestamp - parent.HTTPRequest.Latency. This assumes the
parent.Timestamp marks the end of the request.)
- The trace field must be populated in all of the entries and match exactly.
You should observe the child log entries grouped under the parent on the console. The
parent entry will not inherit the severity of its children; you must update the
parent severity yourself.
You can automatically populate the Trace, SpanID, and TraceSampled fields of an Entry object by providing an http.Request object
within the Entry's HTTPRequest field:
When Entry with an http.Request is logged, its Trace, SpanID, and TraceSampled fields may be automatically populated as follows:
Note that if Trace, SpanID, or TraceSampled are explicitly provided within an Entry object, then those values take precedence over values automatically
extracted values.
20 versions
Latest release: over 1 year ago
1,068 dependent packages
View more package details: https://packages.ecosystem.code.gouv.fr/registries/proxy.golang.org/packages/cloud.google.com/go/logging
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