pekko/akka-docs/rst/scala/logging.rst

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.. _logging-scala:
#################
Logging
#################
Logging in Akka is not tied to a specific logging backend. By default
log messages are printed to STDOUT, but you can plug-in a SLF4J logger or
your own logger. Logging is performed asynchronously to ensure that logging
has minimal performance impact. Logging generally means IO and locks,
which can slow down the operations of your code if it was performed
synchronously.
How to Log
==========
Create a ``LoggingAdapter`` and use the ``error``, ``warning``, ``info``, or ``debug`` methods,
as illustrated in this example:
.. includecode:: code/docs/event/LoggingDocSpec.scala
:include: my-actor
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For convenience you can mixin the ``log`` member into actors, instead of defining it as above.
.. code-block:: scala
class MyActor extends Actor with akka.actor.ActorLogging {
...
}
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The second parameter to the ``Logging`` is the source of this logging channel.
The source object is translated to a String according to the following rules:
* if it is an Actor or ActorRef, its path is used
* in case of a String it is used as is
* in case of a class an approximation of its simpleName
* and in all other cases a compile error occurs unless and implicit
:class:`LogSource[T]` is in scope for the type in question.
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The log message may contain argument placeholders ``{}``, which will be
substituted if the log level is enabled. Giving more arguments as there are
placeholders results in a warning being appended to the log statement (i.e. on
the same line with the same severity). You may pass a Java array as the only
substitution argument to have its elements be treated individually:
.. includecode:: code/docs/event/LoggingDocSpec.scala#array
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The Java :class:`Class` of the log source is also included in the generated
:class:`LogEvent`. In case of a simple string this is replaced with a “marker”
class :class:`akka.event.DummyClassForStringSources` in order to allow special
treatment of this case, e.g. in the SLF4J event listener which will then use
the string instead of the class name for looking up the logger instance to
use.
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Auxiliary logging options
-------------------------
Akka has a couple of configuration options for very low level debugging, that makes most sense in
for developers and not for operations.
You almost definitely need to have logging set to DEBUG to use any of the options below:
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
loglevel = "DEBUG"
}
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This config option is very good if you want to know what config settings are loaded by Akka:
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
# Log the complete configuration at INFO level when the actor system is started.
# This is useful when you are uncertain of what configuration is used.
log-config-on-start = on
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}
If you want very detailed logging of user-level messages then wrap your actors' behaviors with
``akka.event.LoggingReceive`` and enable the ``receive`` option:
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.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
actor {
debug {
# enable function of LoggingReceive, which is to log any received message at
# DEBUG level
receive = on
}
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}
}
If you want very detailed logging of all automatically received messages that are processed
by Actors:
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
actor {
debug {
# enable DEBUG logging of all AutoReceiveMessages (Kill, PoisonPill et.c.)
autoreceive = on
}
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}
}
If you want very detailed logging of all lifecycle changes of Actors (restarts, deaths etc):
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
actor {
debug {
# enable DEBUG logging of actor lifecycle changes
lifecycle = on
}
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}
}
If you want very detailed logging of all events, transitions and timers of FSM Actors that extend LoggingFSM:
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
actor {
debug {
# enable DEBUG logging of all LoggingFSMs for events, transitions and timers
fsm = on
}
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}
}
If you want to monitor subscriptions (subscribe/unsubscribe) on the ActorSystem.eventStream:
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
actor {
debug {
# enable DEBUG logging of subscription changes on the eventStream
event-stream = on
}
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}
}
Auxiliary remote logging options
--------------------------------
If you want to see all messages that are sent through remoting at DEBUG log level:
(This is logged as they are sent by the transport layer, not by the Actor)
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
remote {
# If this is "on", Akka will log all outbound messages at DEBUG level,
# if off then they are not logged
log-sent-messages = on
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}
}
If you want to see all messages that are received through remoting at DEBUG log level:
(This is logged as they are received by the transport layer, not by any Actor)
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
remote {
# If this is "on", Akka will log all inbound messages at DEBUG level,
# if off then they are not logged
log-received-messages = on
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}
}
Also see the logging options for TestKit: :ref:`actor.logging-scala`.
Translating Log Source to String and Class
------------------------------------------
The rules for translating the source object to the source string and class
which are inserted into the :class:`LogEvent` during runtime are implemented
using implicit parameters and thus fully customizable: simply create your own
instance of :class:`LogSource[T]` and have it in scope when creating the
logger.
.. includecode:: code/docs/event/LoggingDocSpec.scala#my-source
This example creates a log source which mimics traditional usage of Java
loggers, which are based upon the originating objects class name as log
category. The override of :meth:`getClazz` is only included for demonstration
purposes as it contains exactly the default behavior.
.. note::
You may also create the string representation up front and pass that in as
the log source, but be aware that then the :class:`Class[_]` which will be
put in the :class:`LogEvent` is
:class:`akka.event.DummyClassForStringSources`.
The SLF4J event listener treats this case specially (using the actual string
to look up the logger instance to use instead of the class name), and you
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might want to do this also in case you implement your own logging adapter.
Turn Off Logging
----------------
To turn off logging you can configure the log levels to be ``OFF`` like this.
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
stdout-loglevel = "OFF"
loglevel = "OFF"
}
The ``stdout-loglevel`` is only in effect during system startup and shutdown, and setting
it to ``OFF`` as well, ensures that nothing gets logged during system startup or shutdown.
Loggers
=======
Logging is performed asynchronously through an event bus. Log events are processed by an event handler actor
and it will receive the log events in the same order as they were emitted.
One gotcha is that currently the timestamp is attributed in the event handler, not when actually doing the logging.
You can configure which event handlers are created at system start-up and listen to logging events. That is done using the
``loggers`` element in the :ref:`configuration`.
Here you can also define the log level.
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
# Loggers to register at boot time (akka.event.Logging$DefaultLogger logs
# to STDOUT)
loggers = ["akka.event.Logging$DefaultLogger"]
# Options: OFF, ERROR, WARNING, INFO, DEBUG
loglevel = "DEBUG"
}
The default one logs to STDOUT and is registered by default. It is not intended
to be used for production. There is also an :ref:`slf4j-scala`
logger available in the 'akka-slf4j' module.
Example of creating a listener:
.. includecode:: code/docs/event/LoggingDocSpec.scala
:include: my-event-listener
.. _slf4j-scala:
SLF4J
=====
Akka provides a logger for `SL4FJ <http://www.slf4j.org/>`_. This module is available in the 'akka-slf4j.jar'.
It has one single dependency; the slf4j-api jar. In runtime you also need a SLF4J backend, we recommend `Logback <http://logback.qos.ch/>`_:
.. code-block:: scala
lazy val logback = "ch.qos.logback" % "logback-classic" % "1.0.7"
You need to enable the Slf4jLogger in the 'loggers' element in
the :ref:`configuration`. Here you can also define the log level of the event bus.
More fine grained log levels can be defined in the configuration of the SLF4J backend
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(e.g. logback.xml).
.. code-block:: ruby
akka {
loggers = ["akka.event.slf4j.Slf4jLogger"]
loglevel = "DEBUG"
}
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The SLF4J logger selected for each log event is chosen based on the
:class:`Class[_]` of the log source specified when creating the
:class:`LoggingAdapter`, unless that was given directly as a string in which
case that string is used (i.e. ``LoggerFactory.getLogger(c: Class[_])`` is used in
the first case and ``LoggerFactory.getLogger(s: String)`` in the second).
.. note::
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Beware that the actor systems name is appended to a :class:`String` log
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source if the LoggingAdapter was created giving an :class:`ActorSystem` to
the factory. If this is not intended, give a :class:`LoggingBus` instead as
shown below:
.. code-block:: scala
val log = Logging(system.eventStream, "my.nice.string")
Logging Thread and Akka Source in MDC
-------------------------------------
Since the logging is done asynchronously the thread in which the logging was performed is captured in
Mapped Diagnostic Context (MDC) with attribute name ``sourceThread``.
With Logback the thread name is available with ``%X{sourceThread}`` specifier within the pattern layout configuration::
<appender name="STDOUT" class="ch.qos.logback.core.ConsoleAppender">
<encoder>
<pattern>%date{ISO8601} %-5level %logger{36} %X{sourceThread} - %msg%n</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
.. note::
It will probably be a good idea to use the ``sourceThread`` MDC value also in
non-Akka parts of the application in order to have this property consistently
available in the logs.
Another helpful facility is that Akka captures the actors address when
instantiating a logger within it, meaning that the full instance identification
is available for associating log messages e.g. with members of a router. This
information is available in the MDC with attribute name ``akkaSource``::
<appender name="STDOUT" class="ch.qos.logback.core.ConsoleAppender">
<encoder>
<pattern>%date{ISO8601} %-5level %logger{36} %X{akkaSource} - %msg%n</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
For more details on what this attribute contains—also for non-actors—please see
`How to Log`_.