Java idiomatic client for Stackdriver Logging.
Add this to your pom.xml file
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
<artifactId>google-cloud-logging</artifactId>
<version>1.12.0</version>
</dependency>
If you are using Gradle, add this to your dependencies
compile 'com.google.cloud:google-cloud-logging:1.12.0'
If you are using SBT, add this to your dependencies
libraryDependencies += "com.google.cloud" % "google-cloud-logging" % "1.12.0"
LoggingExample
is a simple command line interface that provides some of Stackdriver Logging's functionality. Read
more about using the application on the
LoggingExample
docs page.
See the Authentication section in the base directory's README.
Stackdriver Logging allows you to store, search, analyze, monitor, and alert on log data and events from Google Cloud Platform and Amazon Web Services (AWS). Logging is a fully-managed service that performs at scale and can ingest application and system log data from thousands of VMs. Even better, you can analyze all that log data in real-time.
See the Stackdriver Logging docs for more details on how to activate Logging for your project.
See the Logging client library docs to learn how to interact with the Stackdriver Logging using this Client Library.
For this tutorial, you will need a
Google Developers Console project with the Logging API
enabled. You will need to enable billing to
use Stackdriver Logging.
Follow these instructions to get your
project set up. You will also need to set up the local development environment by installing the
Google Cloud SDK and running the following commands in command line:
gcloud auth login
and gcloud config set project [YOUR PROJECT ID]
.
You'll need to obtain the google-cloud-logging
library. See the Quickstart section
to add google-cloud-logging
as a dependency in your code.
To make authenticated requests to Stackdriver Logging, you must create a service object with credentials. You can then make API calls by calling methods on the Logging service object. The simplest way to authenticate is to use Application Default Credentials. These credentials are automatically inferred from your environment, so you only need the following code to create your service object:
import com.google.cloud.logging.Logging;
import com.google.cloud.logging.LoggingOptions;
LoggingOptions options = LoggingOptions.getDefaultInstance();
try(Logging logging = options.getService()) {
// use logging here
}
For other authentication options, see the Authentication page.
With Logging you can create logs-based metrics. Logs-based metrics allow to keep track of the number of log messages associated to specific events. Add the following imports at the top of your file:
import com.google.cloud.logging.Metric;
import com.google.cloud.logging.MetricInfo;
Then, to create the metric, use the following code:
MetricInfo metricInfo = MetricInfo.newBuilder("test-metric", "severity >= ERROR")
.setDescription("Log entries with severity higher or equal to ERROR")
.build();
logging.create(metricInfo);
With Logging you can also write custom log entries. Add the following imports at the top of your file:
import com.google.cloud.MonitoredResource;
import com.google.cloud.logging.LogEntry;
import com.google.cloud.logging.Logging;
import com.google.cloud.logging.Payload.StringPayload;
import java.util.Collections;
Then, to write the log entries, use the following code:
LogEntry firstEntry = LogEntry.newBuilder(StringPayload.of("message"))
.setLogName("test-log")
.setResource(MonitoredResource.newBuilder("global")
.addLabel("project_id", options.getProjectId())
.build())
.build();
logging.write(Collections.singleton(firstEntry));
With Logging you can also list log entries that have been previously written. Add the following imports at the top of your file:
import com.google.cloud.Page;
import com.google.cloud.logging.LogEntry;
import com.google.cloud.logging.Logging.EntryListOption;
Then, to list the log entries, use the following code:
Page<LogEntry> entries = logging.listLogEntries(
EntryListOption.filter("logName=projects/" + options.getProjectId() + "/logs/test-log"));
Iterator<LogEntry> entryIterator = entries.iterateAll();
while (entryIterator.hasNext()) {
System.out.println(entryIterator.next());
}
You can also register a LoggingHandler
to a java.util.logging.Logger
that publishes log entries
to Stackdriver Logging. Given the following logger:
private final static Logger LOGGER = Logger.getLogger(MyClass.class.getName());
You can register a LoggingHandler
with the code:
LoggingHandler.addHandler(LOGGER, new LoggingHandler());
After that, logs generated using LOGGER
will be also directed to Stackdriver Logging.
Notice that you can also register a LoggingHandler
via the logging.properties
configuration
file. Adding, for instance, the following line:
com.google.cloud.examples.logging.snippets.AddLoggingHandler.handlers=com.google.cloud.logging.LoggingHandler
In CreateAndListMetrics.java, WriteAndListLogEntries.java and AddLoggingHandler.java we put together all the code shown above into three programs. The programs assume that you are running on Compute Engine or from your own desktop.
Logging uses gRPC for the transport layer.
Java 7 or above is required for using this client.
This library has tools to help make tests for code using Stackdriver Logging.
See TESTING to read more about testing.
This library follows Semantic Versioning.
It is currently in major version one (1.y.z
), which means that the public API should be considered stable.
Contributions to this library are always welcome and highly encouraged.
See google-cloud
's CONTRIBUTING documentation and the shared documentation for more information on how to get started.
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms. See Code of Conduct for more information.
Apache 2.0 - See LICENSE for more information.