15 releases (breaking)
0.10.0 | Mar 11, 2024 |
---|---|
0.9.0 | Dec 18, 2023 |
0.8.0 | Sep 26, 2023 |
0.7.2 | May 24, 2023 |
0.1.0 | Apr 13, 2020 |
#1700 in Web programming
12,028 downloads per month
Used in 9 crates
(6 directly)
44KB
708 lines
tracing-stackdriver
tracing
is a scoped, structured logging and diagnostic system based on emitting Event
s in the context of potentially-nested Span
s across asynchronous await
points. These properties make tracing
ideal for use with Google Cloud Operations Suite structured logging (formerly Stackdriver).
This crate provides a Layer
for use with a tracing
Registry
that formats tracing
Spans and Events into properly-structured JSON for consumption by Google Operations Logging through the jsonPayload
field. This includes the following behaviors and enhancements:
rfc3339
-formatted timestamps for all Eventsseverity
(inLogSeverity
format) derived fromtracing
Level
target
derived from the Eventtarget
Metadata
- Span
name
and custom fields included under aspan
key - automatic nesting of
http_request.
-prefixed event fields - automatic nesting of
labels.
-prefixed event fields, re-written as a special field. - automatic re-writing of
insert_id
s as a special field. - automatic camelCase-ing of all field keys (e.g.
field_name
->fieldName
, orfield.name
->fieldName
) valuable
support, including anHttpRequest
helperstruct
- Cloud Trace support derived from OpenTelemetry Span and Trace IDs.
Examples
Basic setup:
use tracing_subscriber::{layer::SubscriberExt, Registry};
fn main() {
let stackdriver = tracing_stackdriver::layer(); // writes to std::io::Stdout
let subscriber = Registry::default().with(stackdriver);
tracing::subscriber::set_global_default(subscriber).expect("Could not set up global logger");
}
Custom write location:
use tracing_subscriber::{layer::SubscriberExt, Registry};
fn main() {
let make_writer = || std::io::Stderr;
let stackdriver = tracing_stackdriver::layer().with_writer(make_writer); // writes to std::io::Stderr
let subscriber = Registry::default().with(stackdriver);
tracing::subscriber::set_global_default(subscriber).expect("Could not set up global logger");
}
With httpRequest
fields:
See all available fields here.
// requires working global setup (see above examples)
use hyper::Request;
fn handle_request(request: Request) {
let method = &request.method();
let uri = &request.uri();
tracing::info!(
http_request.request_method = %method,
http_request.request_url = %uri,
"Request received"
);
// jsonPayload formatted as:
// {
// "time": "some-timestamp"
// "severity": "INFO",
// "httpRequest": {
// "requestMethod": "GET",
// "requestUrl": "/some/url/from/request"
// },
// "message": "Request received"
// }
}
With labels
fields:
A key/value map of stringified labels mapped to the logging.googleapis.com/labels
special field. More information about labels
can be found here.
// requires working global setup (see above examples)
fn main() {
tracing::info!(
labels.thread_count = 3,
labels.is_production = true,
labels.note = "A short note",
"Application starting"
);
// jsonPayload formatted as:
// {
// "time": "some-timestamp"
// "message": "Application starting",
// "logging.googleapis.com/labels": {
// "threadCount": "3",
// "isProduction": "true",
// "note": "A short note",
// }
// }
}
With insert_id
field:
A stringified insert_id
mapped to the logging.googleapis.com/insertId
special field. More information about insertId
can be found here. This is an optional field, as the Logging API assigns its own unique identifier to this field if insert_id
is omitted.
// requires working global setup (see above examples)
fn main() {
tracing::info!(
insert_id = 1234,
"Application starting"
);
// jsonPayload formatted as:
// {
// "time": "some-timestamp"
// "message": "Application starting",
// "logging.googleapis.com/insertId": "1234"
// }
}
With more specific LogSeverity
levels:
Google supports a slightly different set of severity levels than tracing
. tracing
levels are automatically mapped to LogSeverity
levels, but you can customize the level beyond the intersection of tracing
levels and LogSeverity
levels by using the provided LogSeverity
level with a severity
key.
use tracing_stackdriver::LogSeverity;
fn main() {
// requires working global setup (see above examples)
tracing::info!(severity = %LogSeverity::Notice, "Application starting");
// jsonPayload formatted as:
// {
// "time": "some-timestamp"
// "severity": "NOTICE",
// "message": "Application starting"
// }
}
With valuable
support:
tracing_stackdriver
supports deeply-nested structured logging through tracing
's unstable valuable
support. In addition, httpRequest
fields can be generated with the HttpRequest
helper struct exported from this library for better compile-time checking of fields.
To enable valuable
support, use the valuable
feature flag and compile your project with RUSTFLAGS="--cfg tracing_unstable"
.
// requires working global setup (see above examples)
use hyper::Request;
use tracing_stackdriver::HttpRequest;
use valuable::Valuable;
#[derive(Valuable)]
struct StructuredLog {
service: &'static str,
handler: &'static str
}
fn handle_request(request: Request) {
let http_request = HttpRequest {
request_method: request.method().into(),
request_url: request.uri().into(),
..Default::default()
};
let structured_log = StructuredLog {
service: "request_handlers",
handler: "handle_request",
};
tracing::info!(
http_request = http_request.as_value(),
structured_log = structured_log.as_value(),
"Request received"
);
// jsonPayload formatted as:
// {
// "time": "some-timestamp"
// "severity": "INFO",
// "httpRequest": {
// "requestMethod": "GET",
// "requestUrl": "/some/url/from/request"
// },
// "structuredLog": {
// "service": "request_handlers",
// "handler": "handle_request"
// },
// "message": "Request received"
// }
}
With Cloud Trace support:
tracing_stackdriver
supports integration with Cloud Trace and OpenTelemetry via tracing_opentelemetry and outputs special Cloud Trace LogEntry
fields for trace sampling and log correlation.
To enable Cloud Trace support, you need to enable the opentelemetry
feature flag and provide a CloudTraceConfiguration
to the with_cloud_trace
method of the layer.
use tracing_stackdriver::CloudTraceConfiguration;
fn main() {
// You may want to configure the `tracing_opentelemetry` layer to suit your needs,
// including the use of an additional tracer or exporter.
// See `tracing_opentelemetry`'s doc for details.
let opentelemetry = tracing_opentelemetry::layer();
let stackdriver = tracing_stackdriver::layer()
.with_cloud_trace(CloudTraceConfiguration { project_id: "my-project-id" });
let subscriber = tracing_subscriber::Registry::default()
.with(opentelemetry)
.with(stackdriver);
// set up the root span to trigger Span/Trace ID generation
let root = tracing::info_span!("root");
let _root = root.enter();
tracing::info!("Application starting");
// jsonPayload formatted as:
// {
// "time": "some-timestamp"
// "severity": "INFO",
// "message": "Application starting",
// "logging.googleapis.com/spanId": "0000000000000000",
// "logging.googleapis.com/trace":"projects/my-project-id/traces/0679686673a"
// }
}
With Source Locations:
By default, tracing_stackdriver
includes the source location of tracing
events in a special SourceLocation
composite field on the emitted LogEntry
. This behavior can be configured with the with_source_location
method of the layer.
fn main() {
// Source Locations are enabled by default, so they must be disabled by setting the configuration
// to "false" using with_source_location()
let stackdriver = tracing_stackdriver::layer().with_source_location(false);
let subscriber = tracing_subscriber::Registry::default().with(stackdriver);
tracing::subscriber::set_global_default(subscriber).expect("Could not set up global logger");
// tracing events from this point on will have their source location omitted
}
Dependencies
~2.5–5.5MB
~95K SLoC