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							| @ -0,0 +1,520 @@ | ||||
| /* | ||||
| 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. | ||||
| */ | ||||
|  | ||||
| // This design derives from Dave Cheney's blog: | ||||
| //     http://dave.cheney.net/2015/11/05/lets-talk-about-logging | ||||
|  | ||||
| // Package logr defines a general-purpose logging API and abstract interfaces | ||||
| // to back that API.  Packages in the Go ecosystem can depend on this package, | ||||
| // while callers can implement logging with whatever backend is appropriate. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // # Usage | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Logging is done using a Logger instance.  Logger is a concrete type with | ||||
| // methods, which defers the actual logging to a LogSink interface.  The main | ||||
| // methods of Logger are Info() and Error().  Arguments to Info() and Error() | ||||
| // are key/value pairs rather than printf-style formatted strings, emphasizing | ||||
| // "structured logging". | ||||
| // | ||||
| // With Go's standard log package, we might write: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	log.Printf("setting target value %s", targetValue) | ||||
| // | ||||
| // With logr's structured logging, we'd write: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	logger.Info("setting target", "value", targetValue) | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Errors are much the same.  Instead of: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	log.Printf("failed to open the pod bay door for user %s: %v", user, err) | ||||
| // | ||||
| // We'd write: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	logger.Error(err, "failed to open the pod bay door", "user", user) | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Info() and Error() are very similar, but they are separate methods so that | ||||
| // LogSink implementations can choose to do things like attach additional | ||||
| // information (such as stack traces) on calls to Error(). Error() messages are | ||||
| // always logged, regardless of the current verbosity.  If there is no error | ||||
| // instance available, passing nil is valid. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // # Verbosity | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Often we want to log information only when the application in "verbose | ||||
| // mode".  To write log lines that are more verbose, Logger has a V() method. | ||||
| // The higher the V-level of a log line, the less critical it is considered. | ||||
| // Log-lines with V-levels that are not enabled (as per the LogSink) will not | ||||
| // be written.  Level V(0) is the default, and logger.V(0).Info() has the same | ||||
| // meaning as logger.Info().  Negative V-levels have the same meaning as V(0). | ||||
| // Error messages do not have a verbosity level and are always logged. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Where we might have written: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	if flVerbose >= 2 { | ||||
| //	    log.Printf("an unusual thing happened") | ||||
| //	} | ||||
| // | ||||
| // We can write: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	logger.V(2).Info("an unusual thing happened") | ||||
| // | ||||
| // # Logger Names | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Logger instances can have name strings so that all messages logged through | ||||
| // that instance have additional context.  For example, you might want to add | ||||
| // a subsystem name: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	logger.WithName("compactor").Info("started", "time", time.Now()) | ||||
| // | ||||
| // The WithName() method returns a new Logger, which can be passed to | ||||
| // constructors or other functions for further use.  Repeated use of WithName() | ||||
| // will accumulate name "segments".  These name segments will be joined in some | ||||
| // way by the LogSink implementation.  It is strongly recommended that name | ||||
| // segments 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). | ||||
| // | ||||
| // # Saved Values | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Logger instances can store any number of key/value pairs, which will be | ||||
| // logged alongside all messages logged through that instance.  For example, | ||||
| // you might want to create a Logger instance per managed object: | ||||
| // | ||||
| // With the standard 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 we'd write: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	// Elsewhere: set up the logger to log the object name. | ||||
| //	obj.logger = mainLogger.WithValues( | ||||
| //	    "name", obj.name, "namespace", obj.namespace) | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	// later on... | ||||
| //	obj.logger.Info("setting foo", "value", targetValue) | ||||
| // | ||||
| // # Best Practices | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Logger has very few hard rules, with the goal that LogSink implementations | ||||
| // might have a lot of freedom to differentiate.  There are, however, some | ||||
| // things to consider. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // The log message consists of a constant message attached to the log line. | ||||
| // This should generally be a simple description of what's occurring, and should | ||||
| // never be a format string.  Variable information can then be attached using | ||||
| // named values. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Keys are arbitrary strings, but should generally be constant values.  Values | ||||
| // may be any Go value, but how the value is formatted is determined by the | ||||
| // LogSink implementation. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Logger instances are meant to be passed around by value. Code that receives | ||||
| // such a value can call its methods without having to check whether the | ||||
| // instance is ready for use. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // The zero logger (= Logger{}) is identical to Discard() and discards all log | ||||
| // entries. Code that receives a Logger by value can simply call it, the methods | ||||
| // will never crash. For cases where passing a logger is optional, a pointer to Logger | ||||
| // should be used. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // # 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 | ||||
| //   - use lower case for simple keys and lowerCamelCase for more complex ones | ||||
| // | ||||
| // 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 necessary (for example, in a pure-JSON output form, it | ||||
| // would be necessary to represent at least message and timestamp as ordinary | ||||
| // named values). | ||||
| // | ||||
| // # Break Glass | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Implementations may choose to give callers access to the underlying | ||||
| // logging implementation.  The recommended pattern for this is: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	// Underlier exposes access to the underlying logging implementation. | ||||
| //	// Since callers only have a logr.Logger, they have to know which | ||||
| //	// implementation is in use, so this interface is less of an abstraction | ||||
| //	// and more of way to test type conversion. | ||||
| //	type Underlier interface { | ||||
| //	    GetUnderlying() <underlying-type> | ||||
| //	} | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Logger grants access to the sink to enable type assertions like this: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	func DoSomethingWithImpl(log logr.Logger) { | ||||
| //	    if underlier, ok := log.GetSink().(impl.Underlier); ok { | ||||
| //	       implLogger := underlier.GetUnderlying() | ||||
| //	       ... | ||||
| //	    } | ||||
| //	} | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Custom `With*` functions can be implemented by copying the complete | ||||
| // Logger struct and replacing the sink in the copy: | ||||
| // | ||||
| //	// WithFooBar changes the foobar parameter in the log sink and returns a | ||||
| //	// new logger with that modified sink.  It does nothing for loggers where | ||||
| //	// the sink doesn't support that parameter. | ||||
| //	func WithFoobar(log logr.Logger, foobar int) logr.Logger { | ||||
| //	   if foobarLogSink, ok := log.GetSink().(FoobarSink); ok { | ||||
| //	      log = log.WithSink(foobarLogSink.WithFooBar(foobar)) | ||||
| //	   } | ||||
| //	   return log | ||||
| //	} | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Don't use New to construct a new Logger with a LogSink retrieved from an | ||||
| // existing Logger. Source code attribution might not work correctly and | ||||
| // unexported fields in Logger get lost. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // Beware that the same LogSink instance may be shared by different logger | ||||
| // instances. Calling functions that modify the LogSink will affect all of | ||||
| // those. | ||||
| package logr | ||||
|  | ||||
| // New returns a new Logger instance.  This is primarily used by libraries | ||||
| // implementing LogSink, rather than end users.  Passing a nil sink will create | ||||
| // a Logger which discards all log lines. | ||||
| func New(sink LogSink) Logger { | ||||
| 	logger := Logger{} | ||||
| 	logger.setSink(sink) | ||||
| 	if sink != nil { | ||||
| 		sink.Init(runtimeInfo) | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	return logger | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // setSink stores the sink and updates any related fields. It mutates the | ||||
| // logger and thus is only safe to use for loggers that are not currently being | ||||
| // used concurrently. | ||||
| func (l *Logger) setSink(sink LogSink) { | ||||
| 	l.sink = sink | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // GetSink returns the stored sink. | ||||
| func (l Logger) GetSink() LogSink { | ||||
| 	return l.sink | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // WithSink returns a copy of the logger with the new sink. | ||||
| func (l Logger) WithSink(sink LogSink) Logger { | ||||
| 	l.setSink(sink) | ||||
| 	return l | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // Logger is an interface to an abstract logging implementation.  This is a | ||||
| // concrete type for performance reasons, but all the real work is passed on to | ||||
| // a LogSink.  Implementations of LogSink should provide their own constructors | ||||
| // that return Logger, not LogSink. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // The underlying sink can be accessed through GetSink and be modified through | ||||
| // WithSink. This enables the implementation of custom extensions (see "Break | ||||
| // Glass" in the package documentation). Normally the sink should be used only | ||||
| // indirectly. | ||||
| type Logger struct { | ||||
| 	sink  LogSink | ||||
| 	level int | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // Enabled tests whether this Logger is enabled.  For example, commandline | ||||
| // flags might be used to set the logging verbosity and disable some info logs. | ||||
| func (l Logger) Enabled() bool { | ||||
| 	// Some implementations of LogSink look at the caller in Enabled (e.g. | ||||
| 	// different verbosity levels per package or file), but we only pass one | ||||
| 	// CallDepth in (via Init).  This means that all calls from Logger to the | ||||
| 	// LogSink's Enabled, Info, and Error methods must have the same number of | ||||
| 	// frames.  In other words, Logger methods can't call other Logger methods | ||||
| 	// which call these LogSink methods unless we do it the same in all paths. | ||||
| 	return l.sink != nil && l.sink.Enabled(l.level) | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // 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 must alternate string keys and arbitrary | ||||
| // values. | ||||
| func (l Logger) Info(msg string, keysAndValues ...any) { | ||||
| 	if l.sink == nil { | ||||
| 		return | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	if l.sink.Enabled(l.level) { // see comment in Enabled | ||||
| 		if withHelper, ok := l.sink.(CallStackHelperLogSink); ok { | ||||
| 			withHelper.GetCallStackHelper()() | ||||
| 		} | ||||
| 		l.sink.Info(l.level, msg, keysAndValues...) | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // Error logs an error, with the given message and key/value pairs as context. | ||||
| // It functions similarly to Info, but may have unique behavior, and should be | ||||
| // preferred for logging errors (see the package documentations for more | ||||
| // information). The log message will always be emitted, regardless of | ||||
| // verbosity level. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // The msg argument should be used to add context to any underlying error, | ||||
| // while the err argument should be used to attach the actual error that | ||||
| // triggered this log line, if present. The err parameter is optional | ||||
| // and nil may be passed instead of an error instance. | ||||
| func (l Logger) Error(err error, msg string, keysAndValues ...any) { | ||||
| 	if l.sink == nil { | ||||
| 		return | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	if withHelper, ok := l.sink.(CallStackHelperLogSink); ok { | ||||
| 		withHelper.GetCallStackHelper()() | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	l.sink.Error(err, msg, keysAndValues...) | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // V returns a new Logger instance for a specific verbosity level, relative to | ||||
| // this Logger.  In other words, V-levels are additive.  A higher verbosity | ||||
| // level means a log message is less important.  Negative V-levels are treated | ||||
| // as 0. | ||||
| func (l Logger) V(level int) Logger { | ||||
| 	if l.sink == nil { | ||||
| 		return l | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	if level < 0 { | ||||
| 		level = 0 | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	l.level += level | ||||
| 	return l | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // GetV returns the verbosity level of the logger. If the logger's LogSink is | ||||
| // nil as in the Discard logger, this will always return 0. | ||||
| func (l Logger) GetV() int { | ||||
| 	// 0 if l.sink nil because of the if check in V above. | ||||
| 	return l.level | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // WithValues returns a new Logger instance with additional key/value pairs. | ||||
| // See Info for documentation on how key/value pairs work. | ||||
| func (l Logger) WithValues(keysAndValues ...any) Logger { | ||||
| 	if l.sink == nil { | ||||
| 		return l | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	l.setSink(l.sink.WithValues(keysAndValues...)) | ||||
| 	return l | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // WithName returns a new Logger instance with the specified name element added | ||||
| // to the Logger's name.  Successive calls with WithName append additional | ||||
| // suffixes to the Logger's name.  It's strongly recommended that name segments | ||||
| // contain only letters, digits, and hyphens (see the package documentation for | ||||
| // more information). | ||||
| func (l Logger) WithName(name string) Logger { | ||||
| 	if l.sink == nil { | ||||
| 		return l | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	l.setSink(l.sink.WithName(name)) | ||||
| 	return l | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // WithCallDepth returns a Logger instance that offsets the call stack by the | ||||
| // specified number of frames when logging call site information, if possible. | ||||
| // This is useful for users who have helper functions between the "real" call | ||||
| // site and the actual calls to Logger methods.  If depth is 0 the attribution | ||||
| // should be to the direct caller of this function.  If depth is 1 the | ||||
| // attribution should skip 1 call frame, and so on.  Successive calls to this | ||||
| // are additive. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // If the underlying log implementation supports a WithCallDepth(int) method, | ||||
| // it will be called and the result returned.  If the implementation does not | ||||
| // support CallDepthLogSink, the original Logger will be returned. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // To skip one level, WithCallStackHelper() should be used instead of | ||||
| // WithCallDepth(1) because it works with implementions that support the | ||||
| // CallDepthLogSink and/or CallStackHelperLogSink interfaces. | ||||
| func (l Logger) WithCallDepth(depth int) Logger { | ||||
| 	if l.sink == nil { | ||||
| 		return l | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	if withCallDepth, ok := l.sink.(CallDepthLogSink); ok { | ||||
| 		l.setSink(withCallDepth.WithCallDepth(depth)) | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	return l | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // WithCallStackHelper returns a new Logger instance that skips the direct | ||||
| // caller when logging call site information, if possible.  This is useful for | ||||
| // users who have helper functions between the "real" call site and the actual | ||||
| // calls to Logger methods and want to support loggers which depend on marking | ||||
| // each individual helper function, like loggers based on testing.T. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // In addition to using that new logger instance, callers also must call the | ||||
| // returned function. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // If the underlying log implementation supports a WithCallDepth(int) method, | ||||
| // WithCallDepth(1) will be called to produce a new logger. If it supports a | ||||
| // WithCallStackHelper() method, that will be also called. If the | ||||
| // implementation does not support either of these, the original Logger will be | ||||
| // returned. | ||||
| func (l Logger) WithCallStackHelper() (func(), Logger) { | ||||
| 	if l.sink == nil { | ||||
| 		return func() {}, l | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	var helper func() | ||||
| 	if withCallDepth, ok := l.sink.(CallDepthLogSink); ok { | ||||
| 		l.setSink(withCallDepth.WithCallDepth(1)) | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	if withHelper, ok := l.sink.(CallStackHelperLogSink); ok { | ||||
| 		helper = withHelper.GetCallStackHelper() | ||||
| 	} else { | ||||
| 		helper = func() {} | ||||
| 	} | ||||
| 	return helper, l | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // IsZero returns true if this logger is an uninitialized zero value | ||||
| func (l Logger) IsZero() bool { | ||||
| 	return l.sink == nil | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // RuntimeInfo holds information that the logr "core" library knows which | ||||
| // LogSinks might want to know. | ||||
| type RuntimeInfo struct { | ||||
| 	// CallDepth is the number of call frames the logr library adds between the | ||||
| 	// end-user and the LogSink.  LogSink implementations which choose to print | ||||
| 	// the original logging site (e.g. file & line) should climb this many | ||||
| 	// additional frames to find it. | ||||
| 	CallDepth int | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // runtimeInfo is a static global.  It must not be changed at run time. | ||||
| var runtimeInfo = RuntimeInfo{ | ||||
| 	CallDepth: 1, | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // LogSink represents a logging implementation.  End-users will generally not | ||||
| // interact with this type. | ||||
| type LogSink interface { | ||||
| 	// Init receives optional information about the logr library for LogSink | ||||
| 	// implementations that need it. | ||||
| 	Init(info RuntimeInfo) | ||||
|  | ||||
| 	// Enabled tests whether this LogSink is enabled at the specified V-level. | ||||
| 	// For example, commandline flags might be used to set the logging | ||||
| 	// verbosity and disable some info logs. | ||||
| 	Enabled(level int) bool | ||||
|  | ||||
| 	// Info logs a non-error message with the given key/value pairs as context. | ||||
| 	// The level argument is provided for optional logging.  This method will | ||||
| 	// only be called when Enabled(level) is true. See Logger.Info for more | ||||
| 	// details. | ||||
| 	Info(level int, msg string, keysAndValues ...any) | ||||
|  | ||||
| 	// Error logs an error, with the given message and key/value pairs as | ||||
| 	// context.  See Logger.Error for more details. | ||||
| 	Error(err error, msg string, keysAndValues ...any) | ||||
|  | ||||
| 	// WithValues returns a new LogSink with additional key/value pairs.  See | ||||
| 	// Logger.WithValues for more details. | ||||
| 	WithValues(keysAndValues ...any) LogSink | ||||
|  | ||||
| 	// WithName returns a new LogSink with the specified name appended.  See | ||||
| 	// Logger.WithName for more details. | ||||
| 	WithName(name string) LogSink | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // CallDepthLogSink represents a LogSink that knows how to climb the call stack | ||||
| // to identify the original call site and can offset the depth by a specified | ||||
| // number of frames.  This is useful for users who have helper functions | ||||
| // between the "real" call site and the actual calls to Logger methods. | ||||
| // Implementations that log information about the call site (such as file, | ||||
| // function, or line) would otherwise log information about the intermediate | ||||
| // helper functions. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // This is an optional interface and implementations are not required to | ||||
| // support it. | ||||
| type CallDepthLogSink interface { | ||||
| 	// WithCallDepth returns a LogSink that will offset the call | ||||
| 	// stack by the specified number of frames when logging call | ||||
| 	// site information. | ||||
| 	// | ||||
| 	// If depth is 0, the LogSink should skip exactly the number | ||||
| 	// of call frames defined in RuntimeInfo.CallDepth when Info | ||||
| 	// or Error are called, i.e. the attribution should be to the | ||||
| 	// direct caller of Logger.Info or Logger.Error. | ||||
| 	// | ||||
| 	// If depth is 1 the attribution should skip 1 call frame, and so on. | ||||
| 	// Successive calls to this are additive. | ||||
| 	WithCallDepth(depth int) LogSink | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // CallStackHelperLogSink represents a LogSink that knows how to climb | ||||
| // the call stack to identify the original call site and can skip | ||||
| // intermediate helper functions if they mark themselves as | ||||
| // helper. Go's testing package uses that approach. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // This is useful for users who have helper functions between the | ||||
| // "real" call site and the actual calls to Logger methods. | ||||
| // Implementations that log information about the call site (such as | ||||
| // file, function, or line) would otherwise log information about the | ||||
| // intermediate helper functions. | ||||
| // | ||||
| // This is an optional interface and implementations are not required | ||||
| // to support it. Implementations that choose to support this must not | ||||
| // simply implement it as WithCallDepth(1), because | ||||
| // Logger.WithCallStackHelper will call both methods if they are | ||||
| // present. This should only be implemented for LogSinks that actually | ||||
| // need it, as with testing.T. | ||||
| type CallStackHelperLogSink interface { | ||||
| 	// GetCallStackHelper returns a function that must be called | ||||
| 	// to mark the direct caller as helper function when logging | ||||
| 	// call site information. | ||||
| 	GetCallStackHelper() func() | ||||
| } | ||||
|  | ||||
| // Marshaler is an optional interface that logged values may choose to | ||||
| // implement. Loggers with structured output, such as JSON, should | ||||
| // log the object return by the MarshalLog method instead of the | ||||
| // original value. | ||||
| type Marshaler interface { | ||||
| 	// MarshalLog can be used to: | ||||
| 	//   - ensure that structs are not logged as strings when the original | ||||
| 	//     value has a String method: return a different type without a | ||||
| 	//     String method | ||||
| 	//   - select which fields of a complex type should get logged: | ||||
| 	//     return a simpler struct with fewer fields | ||||
| 	//   - log unexported fields: return a different struct | ||||
| 	//     with exported fields | ||||
| 	// | ||||
| 	// It may return any value of any type. | ||||
| 	MarshalLog() any | ||||
| } | ||||
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