A disk_log based handler for Logger
This is a handler for Logger that offers circular
(wrapped) logs by using disk_log.
Multiple instances of this handler can be added to Logger, and each instance
prints to its own disk log file, created with the name and settings specified
in the handler configuration.
The default standard handler,
logger_std_h, can be
replaced by a disk_log handler at startup of the Kernel application.
See an example of this below.
The handler has an overload protection mechanism that keeps the handler
process and the Kernel application alive during high loads of log
events. How overload protection works, and how to configure it, is
described in the
User's Guide
.
To add a new instance of the disk_log handler, use
logger:add_handler/3
. The handler configuration argument is a map which can contain
general configuration parameters, as documented in the
User's Guide
, and handler specific parameters. The specific data
is stored in a sub map with the key config, and can contain the
following parameters:
fileThis is the full name of the disk log file. The option
corresponds to the name property in the
dlog_option()
datatype.
The value is set when the handler is added, and it cannot be changed in runtime.
Defaults to the same name as the handler identity, in the current directory.
typeThis is the disk log type, wrap or halt. The option
corresponds to the type property in the
dlog_option()
datatype.
The value is set when the handler is added, and it cannot be changed in runtime.
Defaults to wrap.
max_no_filesThis is the maximum number of files that disk_log uses
for its circular logging. The option
corresponds to the MaxNoFiles element in the size property in the
dlog_option()
datatype.
The value is set when the handler is added, and it cannot be changed in runtime.
Defaults to 10.
The setting has no effect on a halt log.
max_no_bytesThis is the maximum number of bytes that is written to
a log file before disk_log proceeds with the next file in order, or
generates an error in case of a full halt log. The option
corresponds to the MaxNoBytes element in the size property in the
dlog_option()
datatype.
The value is set when the handler is added, and it cannot be changed in runtime.
Defaults to 1048576 bytes for a wrap log, and
infinity for a halt log.
filesync_repeat_intervalThis value, in milliseconds, specifies how often the handler does a disk_log sync operation to write buffered data to disk. The handler attempts the operation repeatedly, but only performs a new sync if something has actually been logged.
Defaults to 5000 milliseconds.
If no_repeat is set as value, the repeated sync operation
is disabled. The user can also call the
filesync/1
function to perform a disk_log sync.
Other configuration parameters exist, to be used for customizing
the overload protection behaviour. The same parameters are used both in the
standard handler and the disk_log handler, and are documented in the
User's Guide
.
Notice that when changing the configuration of the handler in runtime, the
disk_log options (file, type, max_no_files,
max_no_bytes) must not be modified.
Example of adding a disk_log handler:
logger:add_handler(my_disk_log_h, logger_disk_log_h, #{config => #{file => "./my_disk_log", type => wrap, max_no_files => 4, max_no_bytes => 10000}, filesync_repeat_interval => 1000}}).
To use the disk_log handler instead of the default standard
handler when starting an Erlang node, change the Kernel default logger to
use logger_disk_log_h. Example:
erl -kernel logger '[{handler,default,logger_disk_log_h, #{config => #{file => "./system_disk_log"}}}]'