logit is a CLI tool that consumes logs in JSON and feeds them into a logs storage like file, Amazon CloudWatch, or Slack.
Why it is important:
- Your application will contain only bussiness logic. Don't write your own logging library.
- Your application will not send secondary network requests.
- Your application will be faster. It's easy to make a JSON entry and feed it into stdout, and logit will take care of the rest.
- Your application will be more environment-agnostic. Here you run it on your machine, production runs on AWS, tomorrow you migrate on GCP. And in all cases, only the logit config is different, application is the same.
Supported handlers:
- console and files:
json
logfmt
rolling
text
zalgo
- databases:
elastic
influxdb
mongodb
redis
- messengers:
discord
slack
- log collectors:
aws
fluentd
gcloud
graylog
sentry
syslog
loggly
logstash
The project is "go gettable":
go get github.com/life4/logit
The best practice for your production is to build a minimal binary with only handlers you need:
git clone https://github.com/life4/logit.git
cd logit
go build -tags 'h_clean,h_aws,h_gcloud' -o logit.bin .
Handlers json
, logfmt
, and text
are always included. All other can be disabled by h_clean
build tag and then individually enabled with h_{HANDLER}
build tags.
First of all, you need a config. Let's make the following logit.toml
:
[[handler]]
format = "text"
And now, pipe some JSON into stdin of logit:
$ export text='{"animal":"walrus","level":"fatal","msg":"A huge walrus appears","time":"2020-12-29 15:09:21"}'
$ echo $text | logit
FATAL [2020-12-29 15:09:21] A huge walrus appears animal=walrus
Or just a plain text, why not:
$ echo 'hi' | logit
INFO [2021-01-04 14:48:50] hi
Easy!
See documentation for more details.
There are some good libraries that you can use in your application to produce JSON logs: