/file-rotatelogs

Port of perl5 File::RotateLogs to Go

Primary LanguageGoMIT LicenseMIT

file-rotatelogs

Provide an io.Writer that periodically rotates log files from within the application. Port of File::RotateLogs from Perl to Go.

Build Status

GoDoc

WARNINGS

THIS PROJECT HAS BEEN ARCHIVED. IT WILL NOT RECEIVE UPDATES, THE AUTHOR DOES NOT WISH TO MAINTAIN OR SUPPORT IT. IN SHORT, DO NOT USE THIS PROJECT.

SYNOPSIS

import (
  "log"
  "net/http"

  apachelog "github.com/lestrrat-go/apache-logformat"
  rotatelogs "github.com/lestrrat-go/file-rotatelogs"
)

func main() {
  mux := http.NewServeMux()
  mux.HandleFunc("/", func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { ... })

  logf, err := rotatelogs.New(
    "/path/to/access_log.%Y%m%d%H%M",
    rotatelogs.WithLinkName("/path/to/access_log"),
    rotatelogs.WithMaxAge(24 * time.Hour),
    rotatelogs.WithRotationTime(time.Hour),
  )
  if err != nil {
    log.Printf("failed to create rotatelogs: %s", err)
    return
  }

  // Now you must write to logf. apache-logformat library can create
  // a http.Handler that only writes the approriate logs for the request
  // to the given handle
  http.ListenAndServe(":8080", apachelog.CombinedLog.Wrap(mux, logf))
}

DESCRIPTION

When you integrate this to into your app, it automatically write to logs that are rotated from within the app: No more disk-full alerts because you forgot to setup logrotate!

To install, simply issue a go get:

go get github.com/lestrrat-go/file-rotatelogs

It's normally expected that this library is used with some other logging service, such as the built-in log library, or loggers such as github.com/lestrrat-go/apache-logformat.

import(
  "log"
  "github.com/lestrrat-go/file-rotatelogs"
)

func main() {
  rl, _ := rotatelogs.New("/path/to/access_log.%Y%m%d%H%M")

  log.SetOutput(rl)

  /* elsewhere ... */
  log.Printf("Hello, World!")
}

OPTIONS

Pattern (Required)

The pattern used to generate actual log file names. You should use patterns using the strftime (3) format. For example:

  rotatelogs.New("/var/log/myapp/log.%Y%m%d")

Clock (default: rotatelogs.Local)

You may specify an object that implements the roatatelogs.Clock interface. When this option is supplied, it's used to determine the current time to base all of the calculations on. For example, if you want to base your calculations in UTC, you may specify rotatelogs.UTC

  rotatelogs.New(
    "/var/log/myapp/log.%Y%m%d",
    rotatelogs.WithClock(rotatelogs.UTC),
  )

Location

This is an alternative to the WithClock option. Instead of providing an explicit clock, you can provide a location for you times. We will create a Clock object that produces times in your specified location, and configure the rotatelog to respect it.

LinkName (default: "")

Path where a symlink for the actual log file is placed. This allows you to always check at the same location for log files even if the logs were rotated

  rotatelogs.New(
    "/var/log/myapp/log.%Y%m%d",
    rotatelogs.WithLinkName("/var/log/myapp/current"),
  )
  // Else where
  $ tail -f /var/log/myapp/current

Links that share the same parent directory with the main log path will get a special treatment: namely, linked paths will be RELATIVE to the main log file.

Main log file name Link name Linked path
/path/to/log.%Y%m%d /path/to/log log.YYYYMMDD
/path/to/log.%Y%m%d /path/to/nested/log ../log.YYYYMMDD
/path/to/log.%Y%m%d /foo/bar/baz/log /path/to/log.YYYYMMDD

If not provided, no link will be written.

RotationTime (default: 86400 sec)

Interval between file rotation. By default logs are rotated every 86400 seconds. Note: Remember to use time.Duration values.

  // Rotate every hour
  rotatelogs.New(
    "/var/log/myapp/log.%Y%m%d",
    rotatelogs.WithRotationTime(time.Hour),
  )

MaxAge (default: 7 days)

Time to wait until old logs are purged. By default no logs are purged, which certainly isn't what you want. Note: Remember to use time.Duration values.

  // Purge logs older than 1 hour
  rotatelogs.New(
    "/var/log/myapp/log.%Y%m%d",
    rotatelogs.WithMaxAge(time.Hour),
  )

RotationCount (default: -1)

The number of files should be kept. By default, this option is disabled.

Note: MaxAge should be disabled by specifing WithMaxAge(-1) explicitly.

  // Purge logs except latest 7 files
  rotatelogs.New(
    "/var/log/myapp/log.%Y%m%d",
    rotatelogs.WithMaxAge(-1),
    rotatelogs.WithRotationCount(7),
  )

Handler (default: nil)

Sets the event handler to receive event notifications from the RotateLogs object. Currently only supported event type is FiledRotated

  rotatelogs.New(
    "/var/log/myapp/log.%Y%m%d",
    rotatelogs.WithHandler(rotatelogs.HandlerFunc(func(e rotatelogs.Event) {
      if e.Type() != rotatelogs.FileRotatedEventType {
        return
      }

      // Do what you want with the data. This is just an idea:
      storeLogFileToRemoteStorage(e.(*rotatelogs.FileRotatedEvent).PreviousFile())
    })),
  )

ForceNewFile

Ensure a new file is created every time New() is called. If the base file name already exists, an implicit rotation is performed.

  rotatelogs.New(
    "/var/log/myapp/log.%Y%m%d",
    rotatelogs.ForceNewFile(),
  )

Rotating files forcefully

If you want to rotate files forcefully before the actual rotation time has reached, you may use the Rotate() method. This method forcefully rotates the logs, but if the generated file name clashes, then a numeric suffix is added so that the new file will forcefully appear on disk.

For example, suppose you had a pattern of '%Y.log' with a rotation time of 86400 so that it only gets rotated every year, but for whatever reason you wanted to rotate the logs now, you could install a signal handler to trigger this rotation:

rl := rotatelogs.New(...)

signal.Notify(ch, syscall.SIGHUP)

go func(ch chan os.Signal) {
  <-ch
  rl.Rotate()
}()

And you will get a log file name in like 2018.log.1, 2018.log.2, etc.