hyperf/docs/en/logger.md
millet109 ca8ca583b2
Fixed multiple handlers description error for logger.
Co-authored-by: 李铭昕 <715557344@qq.com>
2021-07-06 18:50:01 +08:00

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Logger

The hyperf/logger component is implemented based on psr/logger, and monolog/monolog is used by default as a driver. Some log configurations are provided by default in the hyperf-skeleton project, and Monolog\Handler\StreamHandler is used by default. Since Swoole has already coroutineized functions such as fopen, fwrite, so long as the useLocking parameter is not set to true, the coroutine is safe.

Installation

composer require hyperf/logger

Configuration

Some log configurations are provided by default in the hyperf-skeleton project. By default, the log configuration file is config/autoload/logger.php. An example is as follows:

<?php

return [
    'default' => [
        'handler' => [
            'class' => \Monolog\Handler\StreamHandler::class,
            'constructor' => [
                'stream' => BASE_PATH . '/runtime/logs/hyperf.log',
                'level' => \Monolog\Logger::DEBUG,
            ],
        ],
        'formatter' => [
            'class' => \Monolog\Formatter\LineFormatter::class,
            'constructor' => [
                'format' => null,
                'dateFormat' => null,
                'allowInlineLineBreaks' => true,
            ]
        ],
    ],
];

Instruction for use

<?php

declare(strict_types=1);

namespace App\Service;

use Psr\Container\ContainerInterface;
use Hyperf\Logger\LoggerFactory;

class DemoService
{
    
    /**
     * @var \Psr\Log\LoggerInterface
     */
    protected $logger;

    public function __construct(LoggerFactory $loggerFactory)
    {
        // The first parameter corresponds to the name of the log, and the second parameter corresponds to the key in config/autoload/logger.php
        $this->logger = $loggerFactory->get('log', 'default');
    }

    public function method()
    {
        // Do something.
        $this->logger->info("Your log message.");
    }
}

Basic knowledge about monolog

Let's take a look at some of the basic concepts involved in monolog with the following code:

use Monolog\Formatter\LineFormatter;
use Monolog\Handler\FirePHPHandler;
use Monolog\Handler\StreamHandler;
use Monolog\Logger;

// Create a Channel. The parameter log is the name of the Channel
$log = new Logger('log');

// Create two Handlers, corresponding to variables $stream and $fire
$stream = new StreamHandler('test.log', Logger::WARNING);
$fire = new FirePHPHandler();

// Define the time format as "Y-m-d H:i:s"
$dateFormat = "Y n j, g:i a";
// Define the log format as "[%datetime%] %channel%.%level_name%: %message% %context% %extra%\n"
$output = "%datetime%||%channel||%level_name%||%message%||%context%||%extra%\n";
// Create a Formatter based on the time format and log format
$formatter = new LineFormatter($output, $dateFormat);

// Set Formatter to Handler
$stream->setFormatter($formatter);

// Push the Handler into the Handler queue of the Channel
$log->pushHandler($stream);
$log->pushHandler($fire);

// Clone new log channel
$log2 = $log->withName('log2');

// Add records to the log
$log->warning('Foo');

// Add extra data to record
// 1. log context
$log->error('a new user', ['username' => 'daydaygo']);
// 2. processor
$log->pushProcessor(function ($record) {
    $record['extra']['dummy'] = 'hello';
    return $record;
});
$log->pushProcessor(new \Monolog\Processor\MemoryPeakUsageProcessor());
$log->alert('czl');
  • Firstly, instantiate a Logger and take a name which corresponds to channel
  • You can bind multiple Handler to Logger. Logger performs log, and hand it over to Handler for processing
  • Handler can specify which log level logs need to be processed, such as Logger::WARNING or only process logs with log level >=Logger::WARNING
  • Who will format the log? The Formatter will. Just set the Formatter and bind it to the corresponding Handler
  • What parts of the log included: "%datetime%||%channel||%level_name%||%message%||%context%||%extra%\n"
  • Distinguish the extra information added in the log context and extra: The context is additionally specified by the user when logging, which is more flexible; And the extra is fixedly added by the Processor bound to the Logger, which is more suitable for collecting some common information

More usage

Encapsulate the Log class

Sometimes, you may wish to keep the habit of logging in most frameworks. Then you can create a Log class under App, and call the magic static method __callStatic to access to Logger and each Level of logging. Lets demonstrate through code:

namespace App;

use Hyperf\Logger\Logger;
use Hyperf\Utils\ApplicationContext;


class Log
{
    public static function get(string $name = 'app')
    {
        return ApplicationContext::getContainer()->get(\Hyperf\Logger\LoggerFactory::class)->get($name);
    }
}

By default, a Channel named app is used to record logs. You can also use the Log::get($name) method to obtain the Logger of different Channels. The powerful Container can help you to solve it all

stdout log

By default, the log output by the framework components is supported by the implementation class of the interface Hyperf\Contract\StdoutLoggerInterface, the Hyperf\Framework\Logger\StdoutLogger. This implementation class is just to output the relevant information on the stdout through print_r(), which is the terminal that starts Hyperf. In this case, monolog is not actually used. What if you want to use monolog to be consistent?

Absolutely, it is through the powerful Container.

  • First, implement a StdoutLoggerFactory class. The usage of Factory can be explained in more detail in the Dependency Injection chapter.
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);

namespace App;

use Psr\Container\ContainerInterface;

class StdoutLoggerFactory
{
    public function __invoke(ContainerInterface $container)
    {
        return Log::get('sys');
    }
}
  • Declare the dependency, the work of StdoutLoggerInterface is done by the class instantiated by the actual dependent StdoutLoggerFactory
// config/autoload/dependencies.php
return [
    \Hyperf\Contract\StdoutLoggerInterface::class => \App\StdoutLoggerFactory::class,
];

Output different format logs in different environments

So many uses of the above are only for the Logger in the monolog. Let's take a look at Handler and Formatter.

// config/autoload/logger.php
$appEnv = env('APP_ENV', 'dev');
if ($appEnv == 'dev') {
    $formatter = [
        'class' => \Monolog\Formatter\LineFormatter::class,
        'constructor' => [
            'format' => "||%datetime%||%channel%||%level_name%||%message%||%context%||%extra%\n",
            'allowInlineLineBreaks' => true,
            'includeStacktraces' => true,
        ],
    ];
} else {
    $formatter = [
        'class' => \Monolog\Formatter\JsonFormatter::class,
        'constructor' => [],
    ];
}

return [
    'default' => [
        'handler' => [
            'class' => \Monolog\Handler\StreamHandler::class,
            'constructor' => [
                'stream' => 'php://stdout',
                'level' => \Monolog\Logger::INFO,
            ],
        ],
        'formatter' => $formatter,
    ],
]
  • A Handler named default is configured by default, and contains the information of this Handler and its Formatter
  • When obtaining the Logger, if the Handler is not specified, the bottom layer will automatically bind the default(Handler) to the Logger
  • dev (development) environment: Use php://stdout to output logs to stdout, and set allowInlineLineBreaks in Formatter, which is convenient for viewing multi-line logs
  • Non-dev environment: The log uses JsonFormatter, which will be formatted as json and is convenient for delivery to third-party log services

Rotate log files by date

If you want the log file to be rotated according to the date, you can use the Monolog\Handler\RotatingFileHandler provided by Mongolog. And the configuration is as follows:

Modify the config/autoload/logger.php configuration file, change Handler to Monolog\Handler\RotatingFileHandler::class and change the stream field to filename.

<?php

return [
    'default' => [
        'handler' => [
            'class' => Monolog\Handler\RotatingFileHandler::class,
            'constructor' => [
                'filename' => BASE_PATH . '/runtime/logs/hyperf.log',
                'level' => Monolog\Logger::DEBUG,
            ],
        ],
        'formatter' => [
            'class' => Monolog\Formatter\LineFormatter::class,
            'constructor' => [
                'format' => null,
                'dateFormat' => null,
                'allowInlineLineBreaks' => true,
            ],
        ],
    ],
];

If you want to perform more fine-grained log cutting, you can also extend the Monolog\Handler\RotatingFileHandler class and reimplement the rotate() method.

Configure multiple Handler

Users can modify handlers so that the corresponding log group can supports multiple handlers. For example, in the following configuration, when a user posts a log higher the level of INFO, it will be written in hyperf.log and hyperf-debug.log. When a user posts a DEBUG log, the log will be written only in hyperf-debug.log.

<?php

declare(strict_types=1);

use Monolog\Handler;
use Monolog\Formatter;
use Monolog\Logger;

return [
    'default' => [
        'handlers' => [
            [
                'class' => Handler\StreamHandler::class,
                'constructor' => [
                    'stream' => BASE_PATH . '/runtime/logs/hyperf.log',
                    'level' => Logger::INFO,
                ],
                'formatter' => [
                    'class' => Formatter\LineFormatter::class,
                    'constructor' => [
                        'format' => null,
                        'dateFormat' => null,
                        'allowInlineLineBreaks' => true,
                    ],
                ],
            ],
            [
                'class' => Handler\StreamHandler::class,
                'constructor' => [
                    'stream' => BASE_PATH . '/runtime/logs/hyperf-debug.log',
                    'level' => Logger::DEBUG,
                ],
                'formatter' => [
                    'class' => Formatter\JsonFormatter::class,
                    'constructor' => [
                        'batchMode' => Formatter\JsonFormatter::BATCH_MODE_JSON,
                        'appendNewline' => true,
                    ],
                ],
            ],
        ],
    ],
];

The result is as follows

==> runtime/logs/hyperf.log <==
[2019-11-08 11:11:35] hyperf.INFO: 5dc4dce791690 [] []

==> runtime/logs/hyperf-debug.log <==
{"message":"5dc4dce791690","context":[],"level":200,"level_name":"INFO","channel":"hyperf","datetime":{"date":"2019-11-08 11:11:35.597153","timezone_type":3,"timezone":"Asia/Shanghai"},"extra":[]}
{"message":"xxxx","context":[],"level":100,"level_name":"DEBUG","channel":"hyperf","datetime":{"date":"2019-11-08 11:11:35.597635","timezone_type":3,"timezone":"Asia/Shanghai"},"extra":[]}