Documentation
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Overview ¶
Package logr defines abstract interfaces for logging. Packages can depend on these interfaces and callers can implement logging in whatever way is appropriate.
This design derives from Dave Cheney's blog:
http://dave.cheney.net/2015/11/05/lets-talk-about-logging
This is a BETA grade API. Until there is a significant 2nd implementation, I don't really know how it will change.
Index ¶
Constants ¶
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Variables ¶
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Functions ¶
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Types ¶
type InfoLogger ¶
type InfoLogger interface {
// Info logs a non-error message. This is behaviorally akin to fmt.Print.
Info(args ...interface{})
// Infof logs a formatted non-error message.
Infof(format string, args ...interface{})
// Enabled test whether this InfoLogger is enabled. For example,
// commandline flags might be used to set the logging verbosity and disable
// some info logs.
Enabled() bool
}
InfoLogger represents the ability to log non-error messages.
type Logger ¶
type Logger interface {
// All Loggers implement InfoLogger. Calling InfoLogger methods directly on
// a Logger value is equivalent to calling them on a V(0) InfoLogger. For
// example, logger.Info() produces the same result as logger.V(0).Info.
InfoLogger
// Error logs a error message. This is behaviorally akin to fmt.Print.
Error(args ...interface{})
// Errorf logs a formatted error message.
Errorf(format string, args ...interface{})
// V returns an InfoLogger value for a specific verbosity level. A higher
// verbosity level means a log message is less important.
V(level int) InfoLogger
// NewWithPrefix returns a Logger which prefixes all messages.
NewWithPrefix(prefix string) Logger
}
Logger represents the ability to log messages, both errors and not.
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