Module log
Tarantool provides a set of options used to configure
logging in various ways: you can set a level of logging, specify where
to send the log's output, configure a log format, and so on. The log
module allows you to configure logging in your application and provides
additional capabilities, for example, logging custom messages and
rotating log files.
Below is a list of all log functions.
Name | Use |
|---|---|
Configure a logger | |
Log a message with the specified level | |
Get the PID of a logger | |
Rotate a log file | |
Create a new logger with the specified name |
log.cfg({})
Configure logging options. The following options are available:
-
level: Specify the level of detail the log has.The example below shows how to set the log level to
verbose:See also: log.level.
-
log: Specify where to send the log's output, for example, to a file, pipe, or system logger.Example 1: sending the log to the tarantool.log file
log.cfg { log = 'tarantool.log' }Example 2: sending the log to a pipe
log.cfg { log = '| cronolog tarantool.log' }Example 3: sending the log to syslog
log.cfg { log = 'syslog:server=unix:/dev/log' }See also: log.to.
-
nonblock: If true, Tarantool does not block during logging when the system is not ready for writing, and drops the message instead.See also: log.nonblock.
-
format: Specify the log format: 'plain' or 'json'.See also: log.format.
-
modules: Configure the specified log levels for different modules.See also: log.modules.
debug(message)
Log a message with the specified logging level. You can learn more about the available levels from the log.level option description.
Example
The example below shows how to log a message with the warn level:
log.warn('Warning message')log.info('Tarantool version: %s', box.info.version)log.error({ 500, 'Internal error' })log.debug('Debug message')end)end)g.after_each(function(cg)cg.server:drop()fio.rmtree(cg.server.workdir)end)local function find_in_log(cg, str, must_be_present)t.helpers.retrying({ timeout = 0.3, delay = 0.1 }, function()local found = cg.server:grep_log(str) ~= nilt.assert(found == must_be_present)end)endg.test_log_contains_messages = function(cg)find_in_log(cg, 'Warning message', true)find_in_log(cg, 'Tarantool version:', true)find_in_log(cg, 'Internal error', true)find_in_log(cg, 'Debug message', false)end
Parameters:
-
message(any) — A log message. -
A message can be a string.
-
A message may contain C-style format specifiers
%dor%s. Example:
/code_snippets/test/logging/log_test.lua
- A message may be a scalar data type or a table. Example:
/code_snippets/test/logging/log_test.lua
Returns
nil
The actual output will be a line in the log, containing:
- the current timestamp
- a module name
- 'E', 'W', 'I', 'V' or 'D' depending on the called function
message
Note that the message will not be logged if the severity level corresponding to the called function is less than log.level.
Returns
A PID of a logger. You can use this PID to send a signal to a log rotation program, so it can rotate logs.
Rotate the log. For example, you need to call this function to continue logging after a log rotation program renames or moves a file with the latest logs.
Returns
nil
Since: 2.11.0
Create a new logger with the specified name. You can configure a specific log level for a new logger using the log.modules configuration property.
Parameters:
name(string) — a logger name
Returns
a logger instance
Example
This example shows how to set the verbose level for module1 and the
error level for module2 in a configuration file:
log:modules:module1: 'verbose'module2: 'error'app:file: 'app.lua'
To create the module1 and module2 loggers in your application
(app.lua), call the new() function:
Then, you can call functions corresponding to different logging levels to make sure that events with severities above or equal to the given levels are shown:
At the same time, the events with severities below the specified levels are swallowed.
Example on GitHub: log_new_modules.