go-pulse/log/handler.go
Felix Lange b628d72766
build: upgrade to go 1.19 (#25726)
This changes the CI / release builds to use the latest Go version. It also
upgrades golangci-lint to a newer version compatible with Go 1.19.

In Go 1.19, godoc has gained official support for links and lists. The
syntax for code blocks in doc comments has changed and now requires a
leading tab character. gofmt adapts comments to the new syntax
automatically, so there are a lot of comment re-formatting changes in this
PR. We need to apply the new format in order to pass the CI lint stage with
Go 1.19.

With the linter upgrade, I have decided to disable 'gosec' - it produces
too many false-positive warnings. The 'deadcode' and 'varcheck' linters
have also been removed because golangci-lint warns about them being
unmaintained. 'unused' provides similar coverage and we already have it
enabled, so we don't lose much with this change.
2022-09-10 13:25:40 +02:00

357 lines
10 KiB
Go

package log
import (
"fmt"
"io"
"net"
"os"
"reflect"
"sync"
"github.com/go-stack/stack"
)
// Handler defines where and how log records are written.
// A Logger prints its log records by writing to a Handler.
// Handlers are composable, providing you great flexibility in combining
// them to achieve the logging structure that suits your applications.
type Handler interface {
Log(r *Record) error
}
// FuncHandler returns a Handler that logs records with the given
// function.
func FuncHandler(fn func(r *Record) error) Handler {
return funcHandler(fn)
}
type funcHandler func(r *Record) error
func (h funcHandler) Log(r *Record) error {
return h(r)
}
// StreamHandler writes log records to an io.Writer
// with the given format. StreamHandler can be used
// to easily begin writing log records to other
// outputs.
//
// StreamHandler wraps itself with LazyHandler and SyncHandler
// to evaluate Lazy objects and perform safe concurrent writes.
func StreamHandler(wr io.Writer, fmtr Format) Handler {
h := FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
_, err := wr.Write(fmtr.Format(r))
return err
})
return LazyHandler(SyncHandler(h))
}
// SyncHandler can be wrapped around a handler to guarantee that
// only a single Log operation can proceed at a time. It's necessary
// for thread-safe concurrent writes.
func SyncHandler(h Handler) Handler {
var mu sync.Mutex
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
mu.Lock()
defer mu.Unlock()
return h.Log(r)
})
}
// FileHandler returns a handler which writes log records to the give file
// using the given format. If the path
// already exists, FileHandler will append to the given file. If it does not,
// FileHandler will create the file with mode 0644.
func FileHandler(path string, fmtr Format) (Handler, error) {
f, err := os.OpenFile(path, os.O_CREATE|os.O_APPEND|os.O_WRONLY, 0644)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return closingHandler{f, StreamHandler(f, fmtr)}, nil
}
// NetHandler opens a socket to the given address and writes records
// over the connection.
func NetHandler(network, addr string, fmtr Format) (Handler, error) {
conn, err := net.Dial(network, addr)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return closingHandler{conn, StreamHandler(conn, fmtr)}, nil
}
// XXX: closingHandler is essentially unused at the moment
// it's meant for a future time when the Handler interface supports
// a possible Close() operation
type closingHandler struct {
io.WriteCloser
Handler
}
func (h *closingHandler) Close() error {
return h.WriteCloser.Close()
}
// CallerFileHandler returns a Handler that adds the line number and file of
// the calling function to the context with key "caller".
func CallerFileHandler(h Handler) Handler {
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
r.Ctx = append(r.Ctx, "caller", fmt.Sprint(r.Call))
return h.Log(r)
})
}
// CallerFuncHandler returns a Handler that adds the calling function name to
// the context with key "fn".
func CallerFuncHandler(h Handler) Handler {
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
r.Ctx = append(r.Ctx, "fn", formatCall("%+n", r.Call))
return h.Log(r)
})
}
// This function is here to please go vet on Go < 1.8.
func formatCall(format string, c stack.Call) string {
return fmt.Sprintf(format, c)
}
// CallerStackHandler returns a Handler that adds a stack trace to the context
// with key "stack". The stack trace is formatted as a space separated list of
// call sites inside matching []'s. The most recent call site is listed first.
// Each call site is formatted according to format. See the documentation of
// package github.com/go-stack/stack for the list of supported formats.
func CallerStackHandler(format string, h Handler) Handler {
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
s := stack.Trace().TrimBelow(r.Call).TrimRuntime()
if len(s) > 0 {
r.Ctx = append(r.Ctx, "stack", fmt.Sprintf(format, s))
}
return h.Log(r)
})
}
// FilterHandler returns a Handler that only writes records to the
// wrapped Handler if the given function evaluates true. For example,
// to only log records where the 'err' key is not nil:
//
// logger.SetHandler(FilterHandler(func(r *Record) bool {
// for i := 0; i < len(r.Ctx); i += 2 {
// if r.Ctx[i] == "err" {
// return r.Ctx[i+1] != nil
// }
// }
// return false
// }, h))
func FilterHandler(fn func(r *Record) bool, h Handler) Handler {
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
if fn(r) {
return h.Log(r)
}
return nil
})
}
// MatchFilterHandler returns a Handler that only writes records
// to the wrapped Handler if the given key in the logged
// context matches the value. For example, to only log records
// from your ui package:
//
// log.MatchFilterHandler("pkg", "app/ui", log.StdoutHandler)
func MatchFilterHandler(key string, value interface{}, h Handler) Handler {
return FilterHandler(func(r *Record) (pass bool) {
switch key {
case r.KeyNames.Lvl:
return r.Lvl == value
case r.KeyNames.Time:
return r.Time == value
case r.KeyNames.Msg:
return r.Msg == value
}
for i := 0; i < len(r.Ctx); i += 2 {
if r.Ctx[i] == key {
return r.Ctx[i+1] == value
}
}
return false
}, h)
}
// LvlFilterHandler returns a Handler that only writes
// records which are less than the given verbosity
// level to the wrapped Handler. For example, to only
// log Error/Crit records:
//
// log.LvlFilterHandler(log.LvlError, log.StdoutHandler)
func LvlFilterHandler(maxLvl Lvl, h Handler) Handler {
return FilterHandler(func(r *Record) (pass bool) {
return r.Lvl <= maxLvl
}, h)
}
// MultiHandler dispatches any write to each of its handlers.
// This is useful for writing different types of log information
// to different locations. For example, to log to a file and
// standard error:
//
// log.MultiHandler(
// log.Must.FileHandler("/var/log/app.log", log.LogfmtFormat()),
// log.StderrHandler)
func MultiHandler(hs ...Handler) Handler {
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
for _, h := range hs {
// what to do about failures?
h.Log(r)
}
return nil
})
}
// FailoverHandler writes all log records to the first handler
// specified, but will failover and write to the second handler if
// the first handler has failed, and so on for all handlers specified.
// For example you might want to log to a network socket, but failover
// to writing to a file if the network fails, and then to
// standard out if the file write fails:
//
// log.FailoverHandler(
// log.Must.NetHandler("tcp", ":9090", log.JSONFormat()),
// log.Must.FileHandler("/var/log/app.log", log.LogfmtFormat()),
// log.StdoutHandler)
//
// All writes that do not go to the first handler will add context with keys of
// the form "failover_err_{idx}" which explain the error encountered while
// trying to write to the handlers before them in the list.
func FailoverHandler(hs ...Handler) Handler {
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
var err error
for i, h := range hs {
err = h.Log(r)
if err == nil {
return nil
}
r.Ctx = append(r.Ctx, fmt.Sprintf("failover_err_%d", i), err)
}
return err
})
}
// ChannelHandler writes all records to the given channel.
// It blocks if the channel is full. Useful for async processing
// of log messages, it's used by BufferedHandler.
func ChannelHandler(recs chan<- *Record) Handler {
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
recs <- r
return nil
})
}
// BufferedHandler writes all records to a buffered
// channel of the given size which flushes into the wrapped
// handler whenever it is available for writing. Since these
// writes happen asynchronously, all writes to a BufferedHandler
// never return an error and any errors from the wrapped handler are ignored.
func BufferedHandler(bufSize int, h Handler) Handler {
recs := make(chan *Record, bufSize)
go func() {
for m := range recs {
_ = h.Log(m)
}
}()
return ChannelHandler(recs)
}
// LazyHandler writes all values to the wrapped handler after evaluating
// any lazy functions in the record's context. It is already wrapped
// around StreamHandler and SyslogHandler in this library, you'll only need
// it if you write your own Handler.
func LazyHandler(h Handler) Handler {
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
// go through the values (odd indices) and reassign
// the values of any lazy fn to the result of its execution
hadErr := false
for i := 1; i < len(r.Ctx); i += 2 {
lz, ok := r.Ctx[i].(Lazy)
if ok {
v, err := evaluateLazy(lz)
if err != nil {
hadErr = true
r.Ctx[i] = err
} else {
if cs, ok := v.(stack.CallStack); ok {
v = cs.TrimBelow(r.Call).TrimRuntime()
}
r.Ctx[i] = v
}
}
}
if hadErr {
r.Ctx = append(r.Ctx, errorKey, "bad lazy")
}
return h.Log(r)
})
}
func evaluateLazy(lz Lazy) (interface{}, error) {
t := reflect.TypeOf(lz.Fn)
if t.Kind() != reflect.Func {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("INVALID_LAZY, not func: %+v", lz.Fn)
}
if t.NumIn() > 0 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("INVALID_LAZY, func takes args: %+v", lz.Fn)
}
if t.NumOut() == 0 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("INVALID_LAZY, no func return val: %+v", lz.Fn)
}
value := reflect.ValueOf(lz.Fn)
results := value.Call([]reflect.Value{})
if len(results) == 1 {
return results[0].Interface(), nil
}
values := make([]interface{}, len(results))
for i, v := range results {
values[i] = v.Interface()
}
return values, nil
}
// DiscardHandler reports success for all writes but does nothing.
// It is useful for dynamically disabling logging at runtime via
// a Logger's SetHandler method.
func DiscardHandler() Handler {
return FuncHandler(func(r *Record) error {
return nil
})
}
// Must provides the following Handler creation functions
// which instead of returning an error parameter only return a Handler
// and panic on failure: FileHandler, NetHandler, SyslogHandler, SyslogNetHandler
var Must muster
func must(h Handler, err error) Handler {
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return h
}
type muster struct{}
func (m muster) FileHandler(path string, fmtr Format) Handler {
return must(FileHandler(path, fmtr))
}
func (m muster) NetHandler(network, addr string, fmtr Format) Handler {
return must(NetHandler(network, addr, fmtr))
}