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-# A minimal logging API for Go
-
-[![Go Reference](https://pkg.go.dev/badge/github.com/go-logr/logr.svg)](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/go-logr/logr)
-
-logr offers an(other) opinion on how Go programs and libraries can do logging
-without becoming coupled to a particular logging implementation. This is not
-an implementation of logging - it is an API. In fact it is two APIs with two
-different sets of users.
-
-The `Logger` type is intended for application and library authors. It provides
-a relatively small API which can be used everywhere you want to emit logs. It
-defers the actual act of writing logs (to files, to stdout, or whatever) to the
-`LogSink` interface.
-
-The `LogSink` interface is intended for logging library implementers. It is a
-pure interface which can be implemented by logging frameworks to provide the actual logging
-functionality.
-
-This decoupling allows application and library developers to write code in
-terms of `logr.Logger` (which has very low dependency fan-out) while the
-implementation of logging is managed "up stack" (e.g. in or near `main()`.)
-Application developers can then switch out implementations as necessary.
-
-Many people assert that libraries should not be logging, and as such efforts
-like this are pointless. Those people are welcome to convince the authors of
-the tens-of-thousands of libraries that *DO* write logs that they are all
-wrong. In the meantime, logr takes a more practical approach.
-
-## Typical usage
-
-Somewhere, early in an application's life, it will make a decision about which
-logging library (implementation) it actually wants to use. Something like:
-
-```
- func main() {
- // ... other setup code ...
-
- // Create the "root" logger. We have chosen the "logimpl" implementation,
- // which takes some initial parameters and returns a logr.Logger.
- logger := logimpl.New(param1, param2)
-
- // ... other setup code ...
-```
-
-Most apps will call into other libraries, create structures to govern the flow,
-etc. The `logr.Logger` object can be passed to these other libraries, stored
-in structs, or even used as a package-global variable, if needed. For example:
-
-```
- app := createTheAppObject(logger)
- app.Run()
-```
-
-Outside of this early setup, no other packages need to know about the choice of
-implementation. They write logs in terms of the `logr.Logger` that they
-received:
-
-```
- type appObject struct {
- // ... other fields ...
- logger logr.Logger
- // ... other fields ...
- }
-
- func (app *appObject) Run() {
- app.logger.Info("starting up", "timestamp", time.Now())
-
- // ... app code ...
-```
-
-## Background
-
-If the Go standard library had defined an interface for logging, this project
-probably would not be needed. Alas, here we are.
-
-### Inspiration
-
-Before you consider this package, please read [this blog post by the
-inimitable Dave Cheney][warning-makes-no-sense]. We really appreciate what
-he has to say, and it largely aligns with our own experiences.
-
-### Differences from Dave's ideas
-
-The main differences are:
-
-1. Dave basically proposes doing away with the notion of a logging API in favor
-of `fmt.Printf()`. We disagree, especially when you consider things like output
-locations, timestamps, file and line decorations, and structured logging. This
-package restricts the logging API to just 2 types of logs: info and error.
-
-Info logs are things you want to tell the user which are not errors. Error
-logs are, well, errors. If your code receives an `error` from a subordinate
-function call and is logging that `error` *and not returning it*, use error
-logs.
-
-2. Verbosity-levels on info logs. This gives developers a chance to indicate
-arbitrary grades of importance for info logs, without assigning names with
-semantic meaning such as "warning", "trace", and "debug." Superficially this
-may feel very similar, but the primary difference is the lack of semantics.
-Because verbosity is a numerical value, it's safe to assume that an app running
-with higher verbosity means more (and less important) logs will be generated.
-
-## Implementations (non-exhaustive)
-
-There are implementations for the following logging libraries:
-
-- **a function** (can bridge to non-structured libraries): [funcr](https://github.com/go-logr/logr/tree/master/funcr)
-- **github.com/google/glog**: [glogr](https://github.com/go-logr/glogr)
-- **k8s.io/klog** (for Kubernetes): [klogr](https://git.k8s.io/klog/klogr)
-- **go.uber.org/zap**: [zapr](https://github.com/go-logr/zapr)
-- **log** (the Go standard library logger): [stdr](https://github.com/go-logr/stdr)
-- **github.com/sirupsen/logrus**: [logrusr](https://github.com/bombsimon/logrusr)
-- **github.com/wojas/genericr**: [genericr](https://github.com/wojas/genericr) (makes it easy to implement your own backend)
-- **logfmt** (Heroku style [logging](https://www.brandur.org/logfmt)): [logfmtr](https://github.com/iand/logfmtr)
-- **github.com/rs/zerolog**: [zerologr](https://github.com/go-logr/zerologr)
-
-## FAQ
-
-### Conceptual
-
-#### Why structured logging?
-
-- **Structured logs are more easily queryable**: Since you've got
- key-value pairs, it's much easier to query your structured logs for
- particular values by filtering on the contents of a particular key --
- think searching request logs for error codes, Kubernetes reconcilers for
- the name and namespace of the reconciled object, etc.
-
-- **Structured logging makes it easier to have cross-referenceable logs**:
- Similarly to searchability, if you maintain conventions around your
- keys, it becomes easy to gather all log lines related to a particular
- concept.
-
-- **Structured logs allow better dimensions of filtering**: if you have
- structure to your logs, you've got more precise control over how much
- information is logged -- you might choose in a particular configuration
- to log certain keys but not others, only log lines where a certain key
- matches a certain value, etc., instead of just having v-levels and names
- to key off of.
-
-- **Structured logs better represent structured data**: sometimes, the
- data that you want to log is inherently structured (think tuple-link
- objects.) Structured logs allow you to preserve that structure when
- outputting.
-
-#### Why V-levels?
-
-**V-levels give operators an easy way to control the chattiness of log
-operations**. V-levels provide a way for a given package to distinguish
-the relative importance or verbosity of a given log message. Then, if
-a particular logger or package is logging too many messages, the user
-of the package can simply change the v-levels for that library.
-
-#### Why not named levels, like Info/Warning/Error?
-
-Read [Dave Cheney's post][warning-makes-no-sense]. Then read [Differences
-from Dave's ideas](#differences-from-daves-ideas).
-
-#### Why not allow format strings, too?
-
-**Format strings negate many of the benefits of structured logs**:
-
-- They're not easily searchable without resorting to fuzzy searching,
- regular expressions, etc.
-
-- They don't store structured data well, since contents are flattened into
- a string.
-
-- They're not cross-referenceable.
-
-- They don't compress easily, since the message is not constant.
-
-(Unless you turn positional parameters into key-value pairs with numerical
-keys, at which point you've gotten key-value logging with meaningless
-keys.)
-
-### Practical
-
-#### Why key-value pairs, and not a map?
-
-Key-value pairs are *much* easier to optimize, especially around
-allocations. Zap (a structured logger that inspired logr's interface) has
-[performance measurements](https://github.com/uber-go/zap#performance)
-that show this quite nicely.
-
-While the interface ends up being a little less obvious, you get
-potentially better performance, plus avoid making users type
-`map[string]string{}` every time they want to log.
-
-#### What if my V-levels differ between libraries?
-
-That's fine. Control your V-levels on a per-logger basis, and use the
-`WithName` method to pass different loggers to different libraries.
-
-Generally, you should take care to ensure that you have relatively
-consistent V-levels within a given logger, however, as this makes deciding
-on what verbosity of logs to request easier.
-
-#### But I really want to use a format string!
-
-That's not actually a question. Assuming your question is "how do
-I convert my mental model of logging with format strings to logging with
-constant messages":
-
-1. Figure out what the error actually is, as you'd write in a TL;DR style,
- and use that as a message.
-
-2. For every place you'd write a format specifier, look to the word before
- it, and add that as a key value pair.
-
-For instance, consider the following examples (all taken from spots in the
-Kubernetes codebase):
-
-- `klog.V(4).Infof("Client is returning errors: code %v, error %v",
- responseCode, err)` becomes `logger.Error(err, "client returned an
- error", "code", responseCode)`
-
-- `klog.V(4).Infof("Got a Retry-After %ds response for attempt %d to %v",
- seconds, retries, url)` becomes `logger.V(4).Info("got a retry-after
- response when requesting url", "attempt", retries, "after
- seconds", seconds, "url", url)`
-
-If you *really* must use a format string, use it in a key's value, and
-call `fmt.Sprintf` yourself. For instance: `log.Printf("unable to
-reflect over type %T")` becomes `logger.Info("unable to reflect over
-type", "type", fmt.Sprintf("%T"))`. In general though, the cases where
-this is necessary should be few and far between.
-
-#### How do I choose my V-levels?
-
-This is basically the only hard constraint: increase V-levels to denote
-more verbose or more debug-y logs.
-
-Otherwise, you can start out with `0` as "you always want to see this",
-`1` as "common logging that you might *possibly* want to turn off", and
-`10` as "I would like to performance-test your log collection stack."
-
-Then gradually choose levels in between as you need them, working your way
-down from 10 (for debug and trace style logs) and up from 1 (for chattier
-info-type logs.)
-
-#### How do I choose my keys?
-
-Keys are fairly flexible, and can hold more or less any string
-value. For best compatibility with implementations and consistency
-with existing code in other projects, there are a few conventions you
-should consider.
-
-- Make your keys human-readable.
-- Constant keys are generally a good idea.
-- Be consistent across your codebase.
-- Keys should naturally match parts of the message string.
-- Use lower case for simple keys and
- [lowerCamelCase](https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/lowerCamelCase) for
- more complex ones. Kubernetes is one example of a project that has
- [adopted that
- convention](https://github.com/kubernetes/community/blob/HEAD/contributors/devel/sig-instrumentation/migration-to-structured-logging.md#name-arguments).
-
-While key names are mostly unrestricted (and spaces are acceptable),
-it's generally a good idea to stick to printable ascii characters, or at
-least match the general character set of your log lines.
-
-#### Why should keys be constant values?
-
-The point of structured logging is to make later log processing easier. Your
-keys are, effectively, the schema of each log message. If you use different
-keys across instances of the same log line, you will make your structured logs
-much harder to use. `Sprintf()` is for values, not for keys!
-
-#### Why is this not a pure interface?
-
-The Logger type is implemented as a struct in order to allow the Go compiler to
-optimize things like high-V `Info` logs that are not triggered. Not all of
-these implementations are implemented yet, but this structure was suggested as
-a way to ensure they *can* be implemented. All of the real work is behind the
-`LogSink` interface.
-
-[warning-makes-no-sense]: http://dave.cheney.net/2015/11/05/lets-talk-about-logging