A Logging API package for Swift 5.
First things first: This is the beginning of a community-driven open-source project actively seeking contributions, be it code, documentation, or ideas. Apart from contributing to swift-log
itself, there's another huge gap at the moment: swift-log
is an API package which tries to establish a common API the ecosystem can use. To make logging really work for real-world workloads, we need swift-log
-compatible logging backends which then either persist the log messages in files, render them in nicer colors on the terminal, or send them over to Splunk or ELK.
What swift-log
provides today can be found in the API docs. At this moment, we have not tagged a version for swift-log
, but we will do so soon after Swift 5 gets released.
NOTE: You will need Xcode 10.2 beta 4 or a recent Swift 5.0 development snapshot to try out swift-log
.
If you have a server-side Swift application, or maybe a cross-platform (for example Linux & macOS) app/library, and you would like to log, we think targeting this logging API package is a great idea. Below you'll find all you need to know to get started.
To depend on the logging API package, you need to declare your dependency in your Package.swift
:
// it's early days here so we haven't tagged a version yet, but will soon
.package(url: "https://github.com/apple/swift-log.git", .branch("master")),
and to your application/library target, add "Logging"
to your dependencies
.
// 1) let's import the logging API package
import Logging
// 2) we need to create a logger, the label works similarly to a DispatchQueue label
let logger = Logger(label: "com.example.BestExampleApp.main")
// 3) we're now ready to use it
logger.info("Hello World!")
2019-03-13T15:46:38+0000 info: Hello World!
For further information, please check the API documentation.
Glad you asked. We believe that for the Swift on Server ecosystem, it's crucial to have a logging API that can be adopted by anybody so a multitude of libraries from different parties can all log to a shared destination. More concretely this means that we believe all the log messages from all libraries end up in the same file, database, Elastic Stack/Splunk instance, or whatever you may choose.
In the real-world however, there are so many opinions over how exactly a logging system should behave, what a log message should be formatted like, and where/how it should be persisted. We think it's not feasible to wait for one logging package to support everything that a specific deployment needs whilst still being easy enough to use and remain performant. That's why we decided to cut the problem in half:
- a logging API
- a logging backend implementation
This package only provides the logging API itself and therefore swift-log
is a 'logging API package'. swift-log
(using LoggingSystem.bootstrap
) can be configured to choose any compatible logging backend implementation. This way packages can adopt the API and the application can choose any compatible logging backend implementation without requiring any changes from any of the libraries.
Just for completeness sake: This API package does actually include an overly simplistic and non-configurable logging backend implementation which simply writes all log messages to stdout
. The reason to include this overly simplistic logging backend implementation is to improve the first-time usage experience. Let's assume you start a project and try out swift-log
for the first time, it's just a whole lot better to see something you logged appear on stdout
in a simplistic format rather than nothing happening at all. For any real-world application, we advise configuring another logging backend implementation that logs in the style you like.
Logger
s are used to emit log messages and therefore the most important type in swift-log
. Using Logger
s is very straightforward. Most commonly, they are used to emit log messages in a certain log level. For example
// logging an informational message
logger.info("Hello World!")
// ouch, something went wrong
logger.error("Houston, we have a problem: \(problem)")
The following log levels are supported, the match the syslog severity levels:
debug
info
notice
warning
error
critical
alert
emergency
The log level of a given logger can be changed, but the change will only affect the very logger you changed it on. You could say the Logger
is a value type regarding the log level.
Logging metadata is metadata that can be attached to loggers to add information that is crucial when debugging a problem. In servers, the usual example is attaching a request UUID to a logger that will then be present on all log messages logged with that logger. Example:
var logger = logger
logger[metadataKey: "request-uuid"] = "\(UUID())"
logger.info("hello world")
will print
2019-03-13T18:30:02+0000 info: request-uuid=F8633013-3DD8-481C-9256-B296E43443ED hello world
with the default logging backend implementation that ships with swift-log
. Needless to say, the format is fully defined by the logging backend you choose.
Note: If you don't want to implement a custom logging backend, everything in this section is probably not very relevant, so please feel free to skip.
To become a compatible logging backend that all swift-log
consumers can use, you need to do two things: 1) Implement a type (usually a struct
) that implements LogHandler
, a protocol provided by swift-log
and 2) instruct swift-log
to use your logging backend implementation.
A LogHandler
or logging backend implementation is anything that conforms to the following protocol
public protocol LogHandler {
func log(level: Logger.Level, message: Logger.Message, metadata: Logger.Metadata?, file: String, function: String, line: UInt)
subscript(metadataKey _: String) -> Logger.Metadata.Value? { get set }
var metadata: Logger.Metadata { get set }
var logLevel: Logger.Level { get set }
}
Instructing swift-log
to use your logging backend as the one the whole application (including all libraries) should use is very simple:
LoggingSystem.bootstrap(MyLogHandler.init)
LogHandler
s control most parts of the logging system:
LogHandler
s control the two crucial pieces of Logger
configuration, namely
- log level (
logger.logLevel
property) - logging metadata (
logger[metadataKey:]
andlogger.metadata
)
For the system to work, however, it is important that LogHandler
treat the configuration as value types. This means that LogHandler
s should be struct
s and a change in log level or logging metadata should only affect the very LogHandler
it was changed on.
However, in special cases, it is acceptable that a LogHandler
provides some global log level override that may affect all LogHandler
s created.
- emitting the log message itself
LogHandler
s do not control if a message should be logged or not. Logger
will only invoke the log
function of a LogHandler
if Logger
determines that a log message should be emitted given the configured log level.
This logging API was designed with the contributors to the Swift on Server community and approved by the SSWG (Swift Server Work Group) to the 'sandbox level' of the SSWG's incubation process.