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Diffstat (limited to 'vendor/github.com/go-logr/logr/logr.go')
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/github.com/go-logr/logr/logr.go | 178 |
1 files changed, 178 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/vendor/github.com/go-logr/logr/logr.go b/vendor/github.com/go-logr/logr/logr.go new file mode 100644 index 000000000..520c4fe55 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/github.com/go-logr/logr/logr.go @@ -0,0 +1,178 @@ +/* +Copyright 2019 The logr Authors. + +Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); +you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. +You may obtain a copy of the License at + + http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 + +Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software +distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, +WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. +See the License for the specific language governing permissions and +limitations under the License. +*/ + +// Package logr defines abstract interfaces for logging. Packages can depend on +// these interfaces and callers can implement logging in whatever way is +// appropriate. +// +// This design derives from Dave Cheney's blog: +// http://dave.cheney.net/2015/11/05/lets-talk-about-logging +// +// This is a BETA grade API. Until there is a significant 2nd implementation, +// I don't really know how it will change. +// +// The logging specifically makes it non-trivial to use format strings, to encourage +// attaching structured information instead of unstructured format strings. +// +// Usage +// +// Logging is done using a Logger. Loggers can have name prefixes and named +// values attached, so that all log messages logged with that Logger have some +// base context associated. +// +// The term "key" is used to refer to the name associated with a particular +// value, to disambiguate it from the general Logger name. +// +// For instance, suppose we're trying to reconcile the state of an object, and +// we want to log that we've made some decision. +// +// With the traditional log package, we might write: +// log.Printf( +// "decided to set field foo to value %q for object %s/%s", +// targetValue, object.Namespace, object.Name) +// +// With logr's structured logging, we'd write: +// // elsewhere in the file, set up the logger to log with the prefix of "reconcilers", +// // and the named value target-type=Foo, for extra context. +// log := mainLogger.WithName("reconcilers").WithValues("target-type", "Foo") +// +// // later on... +// log.Info("setting field foo on object", "value", targetValue, "object", object) +// +// Depending on our logging implementation, we could then make logging decisions +// based on field values (like only logging such events for objects in a certain +// namespace), or copy the structured information into a structured log store. +// +// For logging errors, Logger has a method called Error. Suppose we wanted to +// log an error while reconciling. With the traditional log package, we might +// write: +// log.Errorf("unable to reconcile object %s/%s: %v", object.Namespace, object.Name, err) +// +// With logr, we'd instead write: +// // assuming the above setup for log +// log.Error(err, "unable to reconcile object", "object", object) +// +// This functions similarly to: +// log.Info("unable to reconcile object", "error", err, "object", object) +// +// However, it ensures that a standard key for the error value ("error") is used +// across all error logging. Furthermore, certain implementations may choose to +// attach additional information (such as stack traces) on calls to Error, so +// it's preferred to use Error to log errors. +// +// Parts of a log line +// +// Each log message from a Logger has four types of context: +// logger name, log verbosity, log message, and the named values. +// +// The Logger name constists of a series of name "segments" added by successive +// calls to WithName. These name segments will be joined in some way by the +// underlying implementation. It is strongly reccomended that name segements +// contain simple identifiers (letters, digits, and hyphen), and do not contain +// characters that could muddle the log output or confuse the joining operation +// (e.g. whitespace, commas, periods, slashes, brackets, quotes, etc). +// +// Log verbosity represents how little a log matters. Level zero, the default, +// matters most. Increasing levels matter less and less. Try to avoid lots of +// different verbosity levels, and instead provide useful keys, logger names, +// and log messages for users to filter on. It's illegal to pass a log level +// below zero. +// +// The log message consists of a constant message attached to the the log line. +// This should generally be a simple description of what's occuring, and should +// never be a format string. +// +// Variable information can then be attached using named values (key/value +// pairs). Keys are arbitrary strings, while values may be any Go value. +// +// Key Naming Conventions +// +// Keys are not strictly required to conform to any specification or regex, but +// it is recommended that they: +// * be human-readable and meaningful (not auto-generated or simple ordinals) +// * be constant (not dependent on input data) +// * contain only printable characters +// * not contain whitespace or punctuation +// +// These guidelines help ensure that log data is processed properly regardless +// of the log implementation. For example, log implementations will try to +// output JSON data or will store data for later database (e.g. SQL) queries. +// +// While users are generally free to use key names of their choice, it's +// generally best to avoid using the following keys, as they're frequently used +// by implementations: +// +// - `"caller"`: the calling information (file/line) of a particular log line. +// - `"error"`: the underlying error value in the `Error` method. +// - `"level"`: the log level. +// - `"logger"`: the name of the associated logger. +// - `"msg"`: the log message. +// - `"stacktrace"`: the stack trace associated with a particular log line or +// error (often from the `Error` message). +// - `"ts"`: the timestamp for a log line. +// +// Implementations are encouraged to make use of these keys to represent the +// above concepts, when neccessary (for example, in a pure-JSON output form, it +// would be necessary to represent at least message and timestamp as ordinary +// named values). +package logr + +// TODO: consider adding back in format strings if they're really needed +// TODO: consider other bits of zap/zapcore functionality like ObjectMarshaller (for arbitrary objects) +// TODO: consider other bits of glog functionality like Flush, InfoDepth, OutputStats + +// Logger represents the ability to log messages, both errors and not. +type Logger interface { + // Enabled tests whether this Logger is enabled. For example, commandline + // flags might be used to set the logging verbosity and disable some info + // logs. + Enabled() bool + + // Info logs a non-error message with the given key/value pairs as context. + // + // The msg argument should be used to add some constant description to + // the log line. The key/value pairs can then be used to add additional + // variable information. The key/value pairs should alternate string + // keys and arbitrary values. + Info(msg string, keysAndValues ...interface{}) + + // Error logs an error, with the given message and key/value pairs as context. + // It functions similarly to calling Info with the "error" named value, but may + // have unique behavior, and should be preferred for logging errors (see the + // package documentations for more information). + // + // The msg field should be used to add context to any underlying error, + // while the err field should be used to attach the actual error that + // triggered this log line, if present. + Error(err error, msg string, keysAndValues ...interface{}) + + // V returns an Logger value for a specific verbosity level, relative to + // this Logger. In other words, V values are additive. V higher verbosity + // level means a log message is less important. It's illegal to pass a log + // level less than zero. + V(level int) Logger + + // WithValues adds some key-value pairs of context to a logger. + // See Info for documentation on how key/value pairs work. + WithValues(keysAndValues ...interface{}) Logger + + // WithName adds a new element to the logger's name. + // Successive calls with WithName continue to append + // suffixes to the logger's name. It's strongly reccomended + // that name segments contain only letters, digits, and hyphens + // (see the package documentation for more information). + WithName(name string) Logger +} |