A simple library for tracing in new-line delimited JSON format. This library is meant to be used with tracing as an alternative to the tracing_subscriber::fmt::json
formatter.
The goal of this crate is to provide a flattend JSON event, comprising of fields from the span attributes and event fields, with customizeable field names and timestamp formats.
- Configurable field names for
target
,message
,level
, andtimestamp
. - Configurable timestamp formats
- RFC3339 (
2023-10-08T03:30:52Z
), - RFC339Nanos (
2023-10-08T03:30:52.123456789Z
) - Unix timestamp (
1672535452
) - UnixMills (
1672535452123
)
- RFC3339 (
- Captures all span attributes and event fields in the root of the JSON object. Collisions will result in overwriting the existing field.
- When flattening span attributes and event fields, the library will overwrite any existing fields with the same name, including the built-in fields such as
target
,message
,level
,timestamp
,file
, andline
. - Non-determistic ordering of fields in the JSON object. (JSON objects are unordered)
- Currently only logs to stdout. (PRs welcome!)
Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
tracing = "0.1"
tracing-ndjson = "0.2"
use tracing_subscriber::prelude::*;
fn main() {
let subscriber = tracing_subscriber::registry().with(tracing_ndjson::layer());
tracing::subscriber::set_global_default(subscriber).unwrap();
tracing::info!(life = 42, "Hello, world!");
// {"level":"info","target":"default","life":42,"timestamp":"2023-10-20T21:17:49Z","message":"Hello, world!"}
let span = tracing::info_span!("hello", "request.uri" = "https://example.com");
span.in_scope(|| {
tracing::info!("Hello, world!");
// {"message":"Hello, world!","request.uri":"https://example.com","level":"info","target":"default","timestamp":"2023-10-20T21:17:49Z"}
});
}
See the examples directory for more examples.
Licensed under MIT license