Blindsight is a logging library written in Scala that wraps SLF4J. The name is taken from Peter Watts' excellent first contact novel, Blindsight.
The core feature of Blindsight is that it is "type safe" -- rather than passing in arguments of type java.lang.Object
, the API accepts only objects that can be converted into an Argument
through the ToArgument
type class.
val str: String = "string arg"
val number: Int = 1
val arg: Person = Person(name, age) // has a ToArgument[Person] type class instance
logger.info("{} {} {}", bool, number, person) // compiles fine
logger.info("{}", new Object()) // WILL NOT COMPILE
By adding type safety, Blindsight gives the application more control over how data is logged, rather than implicitly relying on the toString
method to render data for logging purposes.
Blindsight adds useful features that solve several outstanding problems with logging:
- Rendering structured logs in multiple formats through an AST, along with an optional format-independent DSL.
- Providing thread-safe context to logs through context aware logging.
- Time-based and targeted logging through conditional logging.
- Dynamic targeted logging through scripting.
- Easier "printf debugging" through macro based inspections.
Using Scala to break apart the SLF4J API also makes constructing new logging APIs much easier. You have the option of creating your own, depending on your use case:
- Building up complex logging statements through fluent logging.
- Enforcing user supplied type constraints through semantic logging.
- Minimal-overhead tracing and causality tracking through flow logging.
- Managing complex relationships and schema through JSON-LD.
Finally, there's also more advanced functionality to transform arguments and statements before entering SLF4J:
- Resolving operation-specific loggers through logger resolvers.
- Hooks into logging entries through entry transformation
- Application accessible debug and trace logs through event buffers
See the documentation for more details.
If you are looking for a strict structured logging solution in Scala, please checkout echopraxia-plusscala.
Structured logging is optional in Blindsight, and it's possible to mix structured and "flat" arguments and markers into a logging statement. In contrast, echopraxia-plusscala requires structured logging and does not allow unstructured data as input.
You can check out a "starter project" at https://github.com/tersesystems/blindsight-starter.
There's an example application at https://github.com/tersesystems/play-blindsight that integrates with Honeycomb Tracing using the flow logger:
The only hard dependency is the SLF4J API. Structured logging is implemented for Logback with logstash-logback-encoder, but this is only a requirement if you are using structured logging.
Blindsight is a pure SLF4J wrapper: it delegates all logging through to the SLF4J API and does not configure or manage the SLF4J implementation at all.
Versions are published for Scala 2.11, 2.12, 2.13, and 3.0.0.
See Setup for how to install Blindsight.
You can check out a "starter project" at https://github.com/tersesystems/blindsight-starter.
Because Blindsight uses a very recent version of Logstash that depends on Jackson 2.11.0, you may need to update your dependencies for the jackson-scala-module
if you're using Play or Akka.
libraryDependencies += "com.fasterxml.jackson.module" %% "jackson-module-scala" % "2.11.0"
The easiest way to use Blindsight is to import the base package and the DSL:
import com.tersesystems.blindsight._
import com.tersesystems.blindsight.DSL._
To use a Blindsight Logger:
val logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger
logger.info("I am an SLF4J-like logger")
or in block form for diagnostic logging:
logger.debug { debug => debug("I am an SLF4J-like logger") }
import com.tersesystems.blindsight._
import com.tersesystems.blindsight.DSL._
logger.info("Logs with argument {}", bobj("array" -> Seq("one", "two", "three")))
val dayOfWeek = "Monday"
val temp = 72
// macro expands this to:
// Statement("It is {} and the temperature is {} degrees.", Arguments(dayOfWeek, temp))
val statement: Statement = st"It is ${dayOfWeek} and the temperature is ${temp} degrees."
logger.info(statement)
case class Lotto(
id: Long,
winningNumbers: List[Int],
winners: List[Winner],
drawDate: Option[java.util.Date]
) {
lazy val asBObject: BObject = "lotto" ->
("lotto-id" -> id) ~
("winning-numbers" -> winningNumbers) ~
("draw-date" -> drawDate.map(_.toString)) ~
("winners" -> winners.map(w => w.asBObject))
}
object Lotto {
implicit val toArgument: ToArgument[Lotto] = ToArgument { lotto => Argument(lotto.asBObject) }
}
val winners =
List(Winner(23, List(2, 45, 34, 23, 3, 5)), Winner(54, List(52, 3, 12, 11, 18, 22)))
val lotto = Lotto(5, List(2, 45, 34, 23, 7, 5, 3), winners, None)
logger.info("message {}", lotto) // auto-converted to structured output
implicit val nodeObjectToArgument: ToArgument[NodeObject] = ToArgument[NodeObject] { nodeObject =>
Argument(BlindsightASTMapping.toBObject(nodeObject))
}
implicit val nodeObjectToMarkers: ToMarkers[NodeObject] = ToMarkers { nodeObject =>
Markers(BlindsightASTMapping.toBObject(nodeObject))
}
implicit val nodeObjectToStatement: ToStatement[NodeObject] = ...
class Foo extends LDContext { // LDContext contains all the type safe bindings
def sayHello(): Unit = {
val willPerson = NodeObject(
`@type` -> "Person",
`@id` -> willId,
givenName -> "Will",
familyName -> "Sargent",
parent -> parentId,
occupation -> Occupation(
estimatedSalary = MonetaryAmount(Currency.getInstance("USD"), 1),
name = "Code Monkey"
)
)
logger.info("as an argument {}", willPerson) // as an argument
logger.info(Markers(willPerson), "as a marker") // as a marker
logger.semantic[NodeObject].info(willPerson) // or as a statement
}
}
logger.fluent.info
.message("The Magic Words are")
.argument(Arguments("Squeamish", "Ossifrage"))
.logWithPlaceholders()
// log only user events
logger.semantic[UserEvent].info(userEvent)
// Works well with refinement types
import eu.timepit.refined.api.Refined
import eu.timepit.refined.string._
import eu.timepit.refined._
logger.semantic[String Refined Url].info(refineMV(Url)("https://tersesystems.com"))
import com.tersesystems.blindsight.flow._
implicit def flowBehavior[B]: FlowBehavior[B] = new SimpleFlowBehavior
val arg1: Int = 1
val arg2: Int = 2
val result:Int = logger.flow.trace(arg1 + arg2)
logger.withCondition(booleanCondition).info("Only logs when condition is true")
logger.info.when(booleanCondition) { info => info("when true") }
import DSL._
// Add key/value pairs with DSL and return a logger
val markerLogger = logger.withMarker(bobj("userId" -> userId))
// log with generated logger
markerLogger.info("Logging with user id added as a context marker!")
// can retrieve state markers
val contextMarkers: Markers = markerLogger.markers
val logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger
.withEntryTransform(e => e.copy(message = e.message + " IN BED"))
logger.info("You will discover your hidden talents")
val queueBuffer = EventBuffer(1)
val logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger.withEventBuffer(queueBuffer)
logger.info("Hello world")
val event = queueBuffer.head
val scriptHandle = new ScriptHandle {
override def isInvalid: Boolean = false // on file modification, etc
override val script: String =
"""import strings as s from 'std.tf';
|alias s.ends_with? as ends_with?;
|
|library blindsight {
| function evaluate: (long level, string enc, long line, string file) ->
| if (ends_with?(enc, "specialMethodName")) then true
| else false;
|}
|""".stripMargin
override def report(e: Throwable): Unit = e.printStackTrace()
}
val scriptManager = new ScriptManager(scriptHandle)
val location = new ScriptAwareLocation(scriptManager)
def specialMethodName = {
// inside the specialMethodName method here :-)
logger.debug.when(location.here) { log =>
log("script allows selective logging by method or by line")
}
}
import com.tersesystems.blindsight.inspection.InspectionMacros._
decorateIfs(dif => logger.debug(s"${dif.code} = ${dif.result}")) {
if (System.currentTimeMillis() % 17 == 0) {
println("branch 1")
} else if (System.getProperty("derp") == null) {
println("branch 2")
} else {
println("else branch")
}
}
Benchmarks are available here.
Blindsight is released under the "Apache 2" license. See LICENSE for specifics and copyright declaration.