diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log')
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/README.md | 147 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/doc.go | 116 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/json_logger.go | 89 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/level/doc.go | 22 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/level/level.go | 205 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/log.go | 135 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/logfmt_logger.go | 62 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/nop_logger.go | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/stdlib.go | 116 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/sync.go | 116 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/term/LICENSE | 21 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/value.go | 102 |
12 files changed, 1139 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/README.md b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7222f80 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,147 @@ +# package log + +`package log` provides a minimal interface for structured logging in services. +It may be wrapped to encode conventions, enforce type-safety, provide leveled +logging, and so on. It can be used for both typical application log events, +and log-structured data streams. + +## Structured logging + +Structured logging is, basically, conceding to the reality that logs are +_data_, and warrant some level of schematic rigor. Using a stricter, +key/value-oriented message format for our logs, containing contextual and +semantic information, makes it much easier to get insight into the +operational activity of the systems we build. Consequently, `package log` is +of the strong belief that "[the benefits of structured logging outweigh the +minimal effort involved](https://www.thoughtworks.com/radar/techniques/structured-logging)". + +Migrating from unstructured to structured logging is probably a lot easier +than you'd expect. + +```go +// Unstructured +log.Printf("HTTP server listening on %s", addr) + +// Structured +logger.Log("transport", "HTTP", "addr", addr, "msg", "listening") +``` + +## Usage + +### Typical application logging + +```go +w := log.NewSyncWriter(os.Stderr) +logger := log.NewLogfmtLogger(w) +logger.Log("question", "what is the meaning of life?", "answer", 42) + +// Output: +// question="what is the meaning of life?" answer=42 +``` + +### Contextual Loggers + +```go +func main() { + var logger log.Logger + logger = log.NewLogfmtLogger(log.NewSyncWriter(os.Stderr)) + logger = log.With(logger, "instance_id", 123) + + logger.Log("msg", "starting") + NewWorker(log.With(logger, "component", "worker")).Run() + NewSlacker(log.With(logger, "component", "slacker")).Run() +} + +// Output: +// instance_id=123 msg=starting +// instance_id=123 component=worker msg=running +// instance_id=123 component=slacker msg=running +``` + +### Interact with stdlib logger + +Redirect stdlib logger to Go kit logger. + +```go +import ( + "os" + stdlog "log" + kitlog "github.com/go-kit/kit/log" +) + +func main() { + logger := kitlog.NewJSONLogger(kitlog.NewSyncWriter(os.Stdout)) + stdlog.SetOutput(kitlog.NewStdlibAdapter(logger)) + stdlog.Print("I sure like pie") +} + +// Output: +// {"msg":"I sure like pie","ts":"2016/01/01 12:34:56"} +``` + +Or, if, for legacy reasons, you need to pipe all of your logging through the +stdlib log package, you can redirect Go kit logger to the stdlib logger. + +```go +logger := kitlog.NewLogfmtLogger(kitlog.StdlibWriter{}) +logger.Log("legacy", true, "msg", "at least it's something") + +// Output: +// 2016/01/01 12:34:56 legacy=true msg="at least it's something" +``` + +### Timestamps and callers + +```go +var logger log.Logger +logger = log.NewLogfmtLogger(log.NewSyncWriter(os.Stderr)) +logger = log.With(logger, "ts", log.DefaultTimestampUTC, "caller", log.DefaultCaller) + +logger.Log("msg", "hello") + +// Output: +// ts=2016-01-01T12:34:56Z caller=main.go:15 msg=hello +``` + +## Supported output formats + +- [Logfmt](https://brandur.org/logfmt) ([see also](https://blog.codeship.com/logfmt-a-log-format-thats-easy-to-read-and-write)) +- JSON + +## Enhancements + +`package log` is centered on the one-method Logger interface. + +```go +type Logger interface { + Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error +} +``` + +This interface, and its supporting code like is the product of much iteration +and evaluation. For more details on the evolution of the Logger interface, +see [The Hunt for a Logger Interface](http://go-talks.appspot.com/github.com/ChrisHines/talks/structured-logging/structured-logging.slide#1), +a talk by [Chris Hines](https://github.com/ChrisHines). +Also, please see +[#63](https://github.com/go-kit/kit/issues/63), +[#76](https://github.com/go-kit/kit/pull/76), +[#131](https://github.com/go-kit/kit/issues/131), +[#157](https://github.com/go-kit/kit/pull/157), +[#164](https://github.com/go-kit/kit/issues/164), and +[#252](https://github.com/go-kit/kit/pull/252) +to review historical conversations about package log and the Logger interface. + +Value-add packages and suggestions, +like improvements to [the leveled logger](https://godoc.org/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/level), +are of course welcome. Good proposals should + +- Be composable with [contextual loggers](https://godoc.org/github.com/go-kit/kit/log#With), +- Not break the behavior of [log.Caller](https://godoc.org/github.com/go-kit/kit/log#Caller) in any wrapped contextual loggers, and +- Be friendly to packages that accept only an unadorned log.Logger. + +## Benchmarks & comparisons + +There are a few Go logging benchmarks and comparisons that include Go kit's package log. + +- [imkira/go-loggers-bench](https://github.com/imkira/go-loggers-bench) includes kit/log +- [uber-common/zap](https://github.com/uber-common/zap), a zero-alloc logging library, includes a comparison with kit/log diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/doc.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/doc.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..918c0af --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/doc.go @@ -0,0 +1,116 @@ +// Package log provides a structured logger. +// +// Structured logging produces logs easily consumed later by humans or +// machines. Humans might be interested in debugging errors, or tracing +// specific requests. Machines might be interested in counting interesting +// events, or aggregating information for off-line processing. In both cases, +// it is important that the log messages are structured and actionable. +// Package log is designed to encourage both of these best practices. +// +// Basic Usage +// +// The fundamental interface is Logger. Loggers create log events from +// key/value data. The Logger interface has a single method, Log, which +// accepts a sequence of alternating key/value pairs, which this package names +// keyvals. +// +// type Logger interface { +// Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error +// } +// +// Here is an example of a function using a Logger to create log events. +// +// func RunTask(task Task, logger log.Logger) string { +// logger.Log("taskID", task.ID, "event", "starting task") +// ... +// logger.Log("taskID", task.ID, "event", "task complete") +// } +// +// The keys in the above example are "taskID" and "event". The values are +// task.ID, "starting task", and "task complete". Every key is followed +// immediately by its value. +// +// Keys are usually plain strings. Values may be any type that has a sensible +// encoding in the chosen log format. With structured logging it is a good +// idea to log simple values without formatting them. This practice allows +// the chosen logger to encode values in the most appropriate way. +// +// Contextual Loggers +// +// A contextual logger stores keyvals that it includes in all log events. +// Building appropriate contextual loggers reduces repetition and aids +// consistency in the resulting log output. With and WithPrefix add context to +// a logger. We can use With to improve the RunTask example. +// +// func RunTask(task Task, logger log.Logger) string { +// logger = log.With(logger, "taskID", task.ID) +// logger.Log("event", "starting task") +// ... +// taskHelper(task.Cmd, logger) +// ... +// logger.Log("event", "task complete") +// } +// +// The improved version emits the same log events as the original for the +// first and last calls to Log. Passing the contextual logger to taskHelper +// enables each log event created by taskHelper to include the task.ID even +// though taskHelper does not have access to that value. Using contextual +// loggers this way simplifies producing log output that enables tracing the +// life cycle of individual tasks. (See the Contextual example for the full +// code of the above snippet.) +// +// Dynamic Contextual Values +// +// A Valuer function stored in a contextual logger generates a new value each +// time an event is logged. The Valuer example demonstrates how this feature +// works. +// +// Valuers provide the basis for consistently logging timestamps and source +// code location. The log package defines several valuers for that purpose. +// See Timestamp, DefaultTimestamp, DefaultTimestampUTC, Caller, and +// DefaultCaller. A common logger initialization sequence that ensures all log +// entries contain a timestamp and source location looks like this: +// +// logger := log.NewLogfmtLogger(log.NewSyncWriter(os.Stdout)) +// logger = log.With(logger, "ts", log.DefaultTimestampUTC, "caller", log.DefaultCaller) +// +// Concurrent Safety +// +// Applications with multiple goroutines want each log event written to the +// same logger to remain separate from other log events. Package log provides +// two simple solutions for concurrent safe logging. +// +// NewSyncWriter wraps an io.Writer and serializes each call to its Write +// method. Using a SyncWriter has the benefit that the smallest practical +// portion of the logging logic is performed within a mutex, but it requires +// the formatting Logger to make only one call to Write per log event. +// +// NewSyncLogger wraps any Logger and serializes each call to its Log method. +// Using a SyncLogger has the benefit that it guarantees each log event is +// handled atomically within the wrapped logger, but it typically serializes +// both the formatting and output logic. Use a SyncLogger if the formatting +// logger may perform multiple writes per log event. +// +// Error Handling +// +// This package relies on the practice of wrapping or decorating loggers with +// other loggers to provide composable pieces of functionality. It also means +// that Logger.Log must return an error because some +// implementations—especially those that output log data to an io.Writer—may +// encounter errors that cannot be handled locally. This in turn means that +// Loggers that wrap other loggers should return errors from the wrapped +// logger up the stack. +// +// Fortunately, the decorator pattern also provides a way to avoid the +// necessity to check for errors every time an application calls Logger.Log. +// An application required to panic whenever its Logger encounters +// an error could initialize its logger as follows. +// +// fmtlogger := log.NewLogfmtLogger(log.NewSyncWriter(os.Stdout)) +// logger := log.LoggerFunc(func(keyvals ...interface{}) error { +// if err := fmtlogger.Log(keyvals...); err != nil { +// panic(err) +// } +// return nil +// }) +package log diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/json_logger.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/json_logger.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..66094b4 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/json_logger.go @@ -0,0 +1,89 @@ +package log + +import ( + "encoding" + "encoding/json" + "fmt" + "io" + "reflect" +) + +type jsonLogger struct { + io.Writer +} + +// NewJSONLogger returns a Logger that encodes keyvals to the Writer as a +// single JSON object. Each log event produces no more than one call to +// w.Write. The passed Writer must be safe for concurrent use by multiple +// goroutines if the returned Logger will be used concurrently. +func NewJSONLogger(w io.Writer) Logger { + return &jsonLogger{w} +} + +func (l *jsonLogger) Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error { + n := (len(keyvals) + 1) / 2 // +1 to handle case when len is odd + m := make(map[string]interface{}, n) + for i := 0; i < len(keyvals); i += 2 { + k := keyvals[i] + var v interface{} = ErrMissingValue + if i+1 < len(keyvals) { + v = keyvals[i+1] + } + merge(m, k, v) + } + return json.NewEncoder(l.Writer).Encode(m) +} + +func merge(dst map[string]interface{}, k, v interface{}) { + var key string + switch x := k.(type) { + case string: + key = x + case fmt.Stringer: + key = safeString(x) + default: + key = fmt.Sprint(x) + } + + // We want json.Marshaler and encoding.TextMarshaller to take priority over + // err.Error() and v.String(). But json.Marshall (called later) does that by + // default so we force a no-op if it's one of those 2 case. + switch x := v.(type) { + case json.Marshaler: + case encoding.TextMarshaler: + case error: + v = safeError(x) + case fmt.Stringer: + v = safeString(x) + } + + dst[key] = v +} + +func safeString(str fmt.Stringer) (s string) { + defer func() { + if panicVal := recover(); panicVal != nil { + if v := reflect.ValueOf(str); v.Kind() == reflect.Ptr && v.IsNil() { + s = "NULL" + } else { + panic(panicVal) + } + } + }() + s = str.String() + return +} + +func safeError(err error) (s interface{}) { + defer func() { + if panicVal := recover(); panicVal != nil { + if v := reflect.ValueOf(err); v.Kind() == reflect.Ptr && v.IsNil() { + s = nil + } else { + panic(panicVal) + } + } + }() + s = err.Error() + return +} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/level/doc.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/level/doc.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..feadc4c --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/level/doc.go @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +// Package level implements leveled logging on top of package log. To use the +// level package, create a logger as per normal in your func main, and wrap it +// with level.NewFilter. +// +// var logger log.Logger +// logger = log.NewLogfmtLogger(os.Stderr) +// logger = level.NewFilter(logger, level.AllowInfo()) // <-- +// logger = log.With(logger, "ts", log.DefaultTimestampUTC) +// +// Then, at the callsites, use one of the level.Debug, Info, Warn, or Error +// helper methods to emit leveled log events. +// +// logger.Log("foo", "bar") // as normal, no level +// level.Debug(logger).Log("request_id", reqID, "trace_data", trace.Get()) +// if value > 100 { +// level.Error(logger).Log("value", value) +// } +// +// NewFilter allows precise control over what happens when a log event is +// emitted without a level key, or if a squelched level is used. Check the +// Option functions for details. +package level diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/level/level.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/level/level.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dd4ef60 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/level/level.go @@ -0,0 +1,205 @@ +package level + +import "github.com/go-kit/kit/log" + +// Error returns a logger that includes a Key/ErrorValue pair. +func Error(logger log.Logger) log.Logger { + return log.WithPrefix(logger, Key(), ErrorValue()) +} + +// Warn returns a logger that includes a Key/WarnValue pair. +func Warn(logger log.Logger) log.Logger { + return log.WithPrefix(logger, Key(), WarnValue()) +} + +// Info returns a logger that includes a Key/InfoValue pair. +func Info(logger log.Logger) log.Logger { + return log.WithPrefix(logger, Key(), InfoValue()) +} + +// Debug returns a logger that includes a Key/DebugValue pair. +func Debug(logger log.Logger) log.Logger { + return log.WithPrefix(logger, Key(), DebugValue()) +} + +// NewFilter wraps next and implements level filtering. See the commentary on +// the Option functions for a detailed description of how to configure levels. +// If no options are provided, all leveled log events created with Debug, +// Info, Warn or Error helper methods are squelched and non-leveled log +// events are passed to next unmodified. +func NewFilter(next log.Logger, options ...Option) log.Logger { + l := &logger{ + next: next, + } + for _, option := range options { + option(l) + } + return l +} + +type logger struct { + next log.Logger + allowed level + squelchNoLevel bool + errNotAllowed error + errNoLevel error +} + +func (l *logger) Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error { + var hasLevel, levelAllowed bool + for i := 1; i < len(keyvals); i += 2 { + if v, ok := keyvals[i].(*levelValue); ok { + hasLevel = true + levelAllowed = l.allowed&v.level != 0 + break + } + } + if !hasLevel && l.squelchNoLevel { + return l.errNoLevel + } + if hasLevel && !levelAllowed { + return l.errNotAllowed + } + return l.next.Log(keyvals...) +} + +// Option sets a parameter for the leveled logger. +type Option func(*logger) + +// AllowAll is an alias for AllowDebug. +func AllowAll() Option { + return AllowDebug() +} + +// AllowDebug allows error, warn, info and debug level log events to pass. +func AllowDebug() Option { + return allowed(levelError | levelWarn | levelInfo | levelDebug) +} + +// AllowInfo allows error, warn and info level log events to pass. +func AllowInfo() Option { + return allowed(levelError | levelWarn | levelInfo) +} + +// AllowWarn allows error and warn level log events to pass. +func AllowWarn() Option { + return allowed(levelError | levelWarn) +} + +// AllowError allows only error level log events to pass. +func AllowError() Option { + return allowed(levelError) +} + +// AllowNone allows no leveled log events to pass. +func AllowNone() Option { + return allowed(0) +} + +func allowed(allowed level) Option { + return func(l *logger) { l.allowed = allowed } +} + +// ErrNotAllowed sets the error to return from Log when it squelches a log +// event disallowed by the configured Allow[Level] option. By default, +// ErrNotAllowed is nil; in this case the log event is squelched with no +// error. +func ErrNotAllowed(err error) Option { + return func(l *logger) { l.errNotAllowed = err } +} + +// SquelchNoLevel instructs Log to squelch log events with no level, so that +// they don't proceed through to the wrapped logger. If SquelchNoLevel is set +// to true and a log event is squelched in this way, the error value +// configured with ErrNoLevel is returned to the caller. +func SquelchNoLevel(squelch bool) Option { + return func(l *logger) { l.squelchNoLevel = squelch } +} + +// ErrNoLevel sets the error to return from Log when it squelches a log event +// with no level. By default, ErrNoLevel is nil; in this case the log event is +// squelched with no error. +func ErrNoLevel(err error) Option { + return func(l *logger) { l.errNoLevel = err } +} + +// NewInjector wraps next and returns a logger that adds a Key/level pair to +// the beginning of log events that don't already contain a level. In effect, +// this gives a default level to logs without a level. +func NewInjector(next log.Logger, level Value) log.Logger { + return &injector{ + next: next, + level: level, + } +} + +type injector struct { + next log.Logger + level interface{} +} + +func (l *injector) Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error { + for i := 1; i < len(keyvals); i += 2 { + if _, ok := keyvals[i].(*levelValue); ok { + return l.next.Log(keyvals...) + } + } + kvs := make([]interface{}, len(keyvals)+2) + kvs[0], kvs[1] = key, l.level + copy(kvs[2:], keyvals) + return l.next.Log(kvs...) +} + +// Value is the interface that each of the canonical level values implement. +// It contains unexported methods that prevent types from other packages from +// implementing it and guaranteeing that NewFilter can distinguish the levels +// defined in this package from all other values. +type Value interface { + String() string + levelVal() +} + +// Key returns the unique key added to log events by the loggers in this +// package. +func Key() interface{} { return key } + +// ErrorValue returns the unique value added to log events by Error. +func ErrorValue() Value { return errorValue } + +// WarnValue returns the unique value added to log events by Warn. +func WarnValue() Value { return warnValue } + +// InfoValue returns the unique value added to log events by Info. +func InfoValue() Value { return infoValue } + +// DebugValue returns the unique value added to log events by Warn. +func DebugValue() Value { return debugValue } + +var ( + // key is of type interfae{} so that it allocates once during package + // initialization and avoids allocating every time the value is added to a + // []interface{} later. + key interface{} = "level" + + errorValue = &levelValue{level: levelError, name: "error"} + warnValue = &levelValue{level: levelWarn, name: "warn"} + infoValue = &levelValue{level: levelInfo, name: "info"} + debugValue = &levelValue{level: levelDebug, name: "debug"} +) + +type level byte + +const ( + levelDebug level = 1 << iota + levelInfo + levelWarn + levelError +) + +type levelValue struct { + name string + level +} + +func (v *levelValue) String() string { return v.name } +func (v *levelValue) levelVal() {} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/log.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/log.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..66a9e2f --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/log.go @@ -0,0 +1,135 @@ +package log + +import "errors" + +// Logger is the fundamental interface for all log operations. Log creates a +// log event from keyvals, a variadic sequence of alternating keys and values. +// Implementations must be safe for concurrent use by multiple goroutines. In +// particular, any implementation of Logger that appends to keyvals or +// modifies or retains any of its elements must make a copy first. +type Logger interface { + Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error +} + +// ErrMissingValue is appended to keyvals slices with odd length to substitute +// the missing value. +var ErrMissingValue = errors.New("(MISSING)") + +// With returns a new contextual logger with keyvals prepended to those passed +// to calls to Log. If logger is also a contextual logger created by With or +// WithPrefix, keyvals is appended to the existing context. +// +// The returned Logger replaces all value elements (odd indexes) containing a +// Valuer with their generated value for each call to its Log method. +func With(logger Logger, keyvals ...interface{}) Logger { + if len(keyvals) == 0 { + return logger + } + l := newContext(logger) + kvs := append(l.keyvals, keyvals...) + if len(kvs)%2 != 0 { + kvs = append(kvs, ErrMissingValue) + } + return &context{ + logger: l.logger, + // Limiting the capacity of the stored keyvals ensures that a new + // backing array is created if the slice must grow in Log or With. + // Using the extra capacity without copying risks a data race that + // would violate the Logger interface contract. + keyvals: kvs[:len(kvs):len(kvs)], + hasValuer: l.hasValuer || containsValuer(keyvals), + } +} + +// WithPrefix returns a new contextual logger with keyvals prepended to those +// passed to calls to Log. If logger is also a contextual logger created by +// With or WithPrefix, keyvals is prepended to the existing context. +// +// The returned Logger replaces all value elements (odd indexes) containing a +// Valuer with their generated value for each call to its Log method. +func WithPrefix(logger Logger, keyvals ...interface{}) Logger { + if len(keyvals) == 0 { + return logger + } + l := newContext(logger) + // Limiting the capacity of the stored keyvals ensures that a new + // backing array is created if the slice must grow in Log or With. + // Using the extra capacity without copying risks a data race that + // would violate the Logger interface contract. + n := len(l.keyvals) + len(keyvals) + if len(keyvals)%2 != 0 { + n++ + } + kvs := make([]interface{}, 0, n) + kvs = append(kvs, keyvals...) + if len(kvs)%2 != 0 { + kvs = append(kvs, ErrMissingValue) + } + kvs = append(kvs, l.keyvals...) + return &context{ + logger: l.logger, + keyvals: kvs, + hasValuer: l.hasValuer || containsValuer(keyvals), + } +} + +// context is the Logger implementation returned by With and WithPrefix. It +// wraps a Logger and holds keyvals that it includes in all log events. Its +// Log method calls bindValues to generate values for each Valuer in the +// context keyvals. +// +// A context must always have the same number of stack frames between calls to +// its Log method and the eventual binding of Valuers to their value. This +// requirement comes from the functional requirement to allow a context to +// resolve application call site information for a Caller stored in the +// context. To do this we must be able to predict the number of logging +// functions on the stack when bindValues is called. +// +// Two implementation details provide the needed stack depth consistency. +// +// 1. newContext avoids introducing an additional layer when asked to +// wrap another context. +// 2. With and WithPrefix avoid introducing an additional layer by +// returning a newly constructed context with a merged keyvals rather +// than simply wrapping the existing context. +type context struct { + logger Logger + keyvals []interface{} + hasValuer bool +} + +func newContext(logger Logger) *context { + if c, ok := logger.(*context); ok { + return c + } + return &context{logger: logger} +} + +// Log replaces all value elements (odd indexes) containing a Valuer in the +// stored context with their generated value, appends keyvals, and passes the +// result to the wrapped Logger. +func (l *context) Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error { + kvs := append(l.keyvals, keyvals...) + if len(kvs)%2 != 0 { + kvs = append(kvs, ErrMissingValue) + } + if l.hasValuer { + // If no keyvals were appended above then we must copy l.keyvals so + // that future log events will reevaluate the stored Valuers. + if len(keyvals) == 0 { + kvs = append([]interface{}{}, l.keyvals...) + } + bindValues(kvs[:len(l.keyvals)]) + } + return l.logger.Log(kvs...) +} + +// LoggerFunc is an adapter to allow use of ordinary functions as Loggers. If +// f is a function with the appropriate signature, LoggerFunc(f) is a Logger +// object that calls f. +type LoggerFunc func(...interface{}) error + +// Log implements Logger by calling f(keyvals...). +func (f LoggerFunc) Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error { + return f(keyvals...) +} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/logfmt_logger.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/logfmt_logger.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a003052 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/logfmt_logger.go @@ -0,0 +1,62 @@ +package log + +import ( + "bytes" + "io" + "sync" + + "github.com/go-logfmt/logfmt" +) + +type logfmtEncoder struct { + *logfmt.Encoder + buf bytes.Buffer +} + +func (l *logfmtEncoder) Reset() { + l.Encoder.Reset() + l.buf.Reset() +} + +var logfmtEncoderPool = sync.Pool{ + New: func() interface{} { + var enc logfmtEncoder + enc.Encoder = logfmt.NewEncoder(&enc.buf) + return &enc + }, +} + +type logfmtLogger struct { + w io.Writer +} + +// NewLogfmtLogger returns a logger that encodes keyvals to the Writer in +// logfmt format. Each log event produces no more than one call to w.Write. +// The passed Writer must be safe for concurrent use by multiple goroutines if +// the returned Logger will be used concurrently. +func NewLogfmtLogger(w io.Writer) Logger { + return &logfmtLogger{w} +} + +func (l logfmtLogger) Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error { + enc := logfmtEncoderPool.Get().(*logfmtEncoder) + enc.Reset() + defer logfmtEncoderPool.Put(enc) + + if err := enc.EncodeKeyvals(keyvals...); err != nil { + return err + } + + // Add newline to the end of the buffer + if err := enc.EndRecord(); err != nil { + return err + } + + // The Logger interface requires implementations to be safe for concurrent + // use by multiple goroutines. For this implementation that means making + // only one call to l.w.Write() for each call to Log. + if _, err := l.w.Write(enc.buf.Bytes()); err != nil { + return err + } + return nil +} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/nop_logger.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/nop_logger.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1047d62 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/nop_logger.go @@ -0,0 +1,8 @@ +package log + +type nopLogger struct{} + +// NewNopLogger returns a logger that doesn't do anything. +func NewNopLogger() Logger { return nopLogger{} } + +func (nopLogger) Log(...interface{}) error { return nil } diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/stdlib.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/stdlib.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ff96b5d --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/stdlib.go @@ -0,0 +1,116 @@ +package log + +import ( + "io" + "log" + "regexp" + "strings" +) + +// StdlibWriter implements io.Writer by invoking the stdlib log.Print. It's +// designed to be passed to a Go kit logger as the writer, for cases where +// it's necessary to redirect all Go kit log output to the stdlib logger. +// +// If you have any choice in the matter, you shouldn't use this. Prefer to +// redirect the stdlib log to the Go kit logger via NewStdlibAdapter. +type StdlibWriter struct{} + +// Write implements io.Writer. +func (w StdlibWriter) Write(p []byte) (int, error) { + log.Print(strings.TrimSpace(string(p))) + return len(p), nil +} + +// StdlibAdapter wraps a Logger and allows it to be passed to the stdlib +// logger's SetOutput. It will extract date/timestamps, filenames, and +// messages, and place them under relevant keys. +type StdlibAdapter struct { + Logger + timestampKey string + fileKey string + messageKey string +} + +// StdlibAdapterOption sets a parameter for the StdlibAdapter. +type StdlibAdapterOption func(*StdlibAdapter) + +// TimestampKey sets the key for the timestamp field. By default, it's "ts". +func TimestampKey(key string) StdlibAdapterOption { + return func(a *StdlibAdapter) { a.timestampKey = key } +} + +// FileKey sets the key for the file and line field. By default, it's "caller". +func FileKey(key string) StdlibAdapterOption { + return func(a *StdlibAdapter) { a.fileKey = key } +} + +// MessageKey sets the key for the actual log message. By default, it's "msg". +func MessageKey(key string) StdlibAdapterOption { + return func(a *StdlibAdapter) { a.messageKey = key } +} + +// NewStdlibAdapter returns a new StdlibAdapter wrapper around the passed +// logger. It's designed to be passed to log.SetOutput. +func NewStdlibAdapter(logger Logger, options ...StdlibAdapterOption) io.Writer { + a := StdlibAdapter{ + Logger: logger, + timestampKey: "ts", + fileKey: "caller", + messageKey: "msg", + } + for _, option := range options { + option(&a) + } + return a +} + +func (a StdlibAdapter) Write(p []byte) (int, error) { + result := subexps(p) + keyvals := []interface{}{} + var timestamp string + if date, ok := result["date"]; ok && date != "" { + timestamp = date + } + if time, ok := result["time"]; ok && time != "" { + if timestamp != "" { + timestamp += " " + } + timestamp += time + } + if timestamp != "" { + keyvals = append(keyvals, a.timestampKey, timestamp) + } + if file, ok := result["file"]; ok && file != "" { + keyvals = append(keyvals, a.fileKey, file) + } + if msg, ok := result["msg"]; ok { + keyvals = append(keyvals, a.messageKey, msg) + } + if err := a.Logger.Log(keyvals...); err != nil { + return 0, err + } + return len(p), nil +} + +const ( + logRegexpDate = `(?P<date>[0-9]{4}/[0-9]{2}/[0-9]{2})?[ ]?` + logRegexpTime = `(?P<time>[0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2}(\.[0-9]+)?)?[ ]?` + logRegexpFile = `(?P<file>.+?:[0-9]+)?` + logRegexpMsg = `(: )?(?P<msg>.*)` +) + +var ( + logRegexp = regexp.MustCompile(logRegexpDate + logRegexpTime + logRegexpFile + logRegexpMsg) +) + +func subexps(line []byte) map[string]string { + m := logRegexp.FindSubmatch(line) + if len(m) < len(logRegexp.SubexpNames()) { + return map[string]string{} + } + result := map[string]string{} + for i, name := range logRegexp.SubexpNames() { + result[name] = string(m[i]) + } + return result +} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/sync.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/sync.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c07cdfa --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/sync.go @@ -0,0 +1,116 @@ +package log + +import ( + "io" + "sync" + "sync/atomic" +) + +// SwapLogger wraps another logger that may be safely replaced while other +// goroutines use the SwapLogger concurrently. The zero value for a SwapLogger +// will discard all log events without error. +// +// SwapLogger serves well as a package global logger that can be changed by +// importers. +type SwapLogger struct { + logger atomic.Value +} + +type loggerStruct struct { + Logger +} + +// Log implements the Logger interface by forwarding keyvals to the currently +// wrapped logger. It does not log anything if the wrapped logger is nil. +func (l *SwapLogger) Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error { + s, ok := l.logger.Load().(loggerStruct) + if !ok || s.Logger == nil { + return nil + } + return s.Log(keyvals...) +} + +// Swap replaces the currently wrapped logger with logger. Swap may be called +// concurrently with calls to Log from other goroutines. +func (l *SwapLogger) Swap(logger Logger) { + l.logger.Store(loggerStruct{logger}) +} + +// NewSyncWriter returns a new writer that is safe for concurrent use by +// multiple goroutines. Writes to the returned writer are passed on to w. If +// another write is already in progress, the calling goroutine blocks until +// the writer is available. +// +// If w implements the following interface, so does the returned writer. +// +// interface { +// Fd() uintptr +// } +func NewSyncWriter(w io.Writer) io.Writer { + switch w := w.(type) { + case fdWriter: + return &fdSyncWriter{fdWriter: w} + default: + return &syncWriter{Writer: w} + } +} + +// syncWriter synchronizes concurrent writes to an io.Writer. +type syncWriter struct { + sync.Mutex + io.Writer +} + +// Write writes p to the underlying io.Writer. If another write is already in +// progress, the calling goroutine blocks until the syncWriter is available. +func (w *syncWriter) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) { + w.Lock() + n, err = w.Writer.Write(p) + w.Unlock() + return n, err +} + +// fdWriter is an io.Writer that also has an Fd method. The most common +// example of an fdWriter is an *os.File. +type fdWriter interface { + io.Writer + Fd() uintptr +} + +// fdSyncWriter synchronizes concurrent writes to an fdWriter. +type fdSyncWriter struct { + sync.Mutex + fdWriter +} + +// Write writes p to the underlying io.Writer. If another write is already in +// progress, the calling goroutine blocks until the fdSyncWriter is available. +func (w *fdSyncWriter) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) { + w.Lock() + n, err = w.fdWriter.Write(p) + w.Unlock() + return n, err +} + +// syncLogger provides concurrent safe logging for another Logger. +type syncLogger struct { + mu sync.Mutex + logger Logger +} + +// NewSyncLogger returns a logger that synchronizes concurrent use of the +// wrapped logger. When multiple goroutines use the SyncLogger concurrently +// only one goroutine will be allowed to log to the wrapped logger at a time. +// The other goroutines will block until the logger is available. +func NewSyncLogger(logger Logger) Logger { + return &syncLogger{logger: logger} +} + +// Log logs keyvals to the underlying Logger. If another log is already in +// progress, the calling goroutine blocks until the syncLogger is available. +func (l *syncLogger) Log(keyvals ...interface{}) error { + l.mu.Lock() + err := l.logger.Log(keyvals...) + l.mu.Unlock() + return err +} diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/term/LICENSE b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/term/LICENSE new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f090cb4 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/term/LICENSE @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ +The MIT License (MIT) + +Copyright (c) 2014 Simon Eskildsen + +Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy +of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal +in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights +to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell +copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is +furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: + +The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in +all copies or substantial portions of the Software. + +THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR +IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, +FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE +AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER +LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, +OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN +THE SOFTWARE. diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/value.go b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/value.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b56f154 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-kit/kit/log/value.go @@ -0,0 +1,102 @@ +package log + +import ( + "time" + + "github.com/go-stack/stack" +) + +// A Valuer generates a log value. When passed to With or WithPrefix in a +// value element (odd indexes), it represents a dynamic value which is re- +// evaluated with each log event. +type Valuer func() interface{} + +// bindValues replaces all value elements (odd indexes) containing a Valuer +// with their generated value. +func bindValues(keyvals []interface{}) { + for i := 1; i < len(keyvals); i += 2 { + if v, ok := keyvals[i].(Valuer); ok { + keyvals[i] = v() + } + } +} + +// containsValuer returns true if any of the value elements (odd indexes) +// contain a Valuer. +func containsValuer(keyvals []interface{}) bool { + for i := 1; i < len(keyvals); i += 2 { + if _, ok := keyvals[i].(Valuer); ok { + return true + } + } + return false +} + +// Timestamp returns a timestamp Valuer. It invokes the t function to get the +// time; unless you are doing something tricky, pass time.Now. +// +// Most users will want to use DefaultTimestamp or DefaultTimestampUTC, which +// are TimestampFormats that use the RFC3339Nano format. +func Timestamp(t func() time.Time) Valuer { + return func() interface{} { return t() } +} + +// TimestampFormat returns a timestamp Valuer with a custom time format. It +// invokes the t function to get the time to format; unless you are doing +// something tricky, pass time.Now. The layout string is passed to +// Time.Format. +// +// Most users will want to use DefaultTimestamp or DefaultTimestampUTC, which +// are TimestampFormats that use the RFC3339Nano format. +func TimestampFormat(t func() time.Time, layout string) Valuer { + return func() interface{} { + return timeFormat{ + time: t(), + layout: layout, + } + } +} + +// A timeFormat represents an instant in time and a layout used when +// marshaling to a text format. +type timeFormat struct { + time time.Time + layout string +} + +func (tf timeFormat) String() string { + return tf.time.Format(tf.layout) +} + +// MarshalText implements encoding.TextMarshaller. +func (tf timeFormat) MarshalText() (text []byte, err error) { + // The following code adapted from the standard library time.Time.Format + // method. Using the same undocumented magic constant to extend the size + // of the buffer as seen there. + b := make([]byte, 0, len(tf.layout)+10) + b = tf.time.AppendFormat(b, tf.layout) + return b, nil +} + +// Caller returns a Valuer that returns a file and line from a specified depth +// in the callstack. Users will probably want to use DefaultCaller. +func Caller(depth int) Valuer { + return func() interface{} { return stack.Caller(depth) } +} + +var ( + // DefaultTimestamp is a Valuer that returns the current wallclock time, + // respecting time zones, when bound. + DefaultTimestamp = TimestampFormat(time.Now, time.RFC3339Nano) + + // DefaultTimestampUTC is a Valuer that returns the current time in UTC + // when bound. + DefaultTimestampUTC = TimestampFormat( + func() time.Time { return time.Now().UTC() }, + time.RFC3339Nano, + ) + + // DefaultCaller is a Valuer that returns the file and line where the Log + // method was invoked. It can only be used with log.With. + DefaultCaller = Caller(3) +) |