1# Structured Logging 2 3There are currently two APIs for structured logging: 4[log](../lib/include/phosphor-logging/log.hpp) and 5[lg2](../lib/include/phosphor-logging/lg2.hpp). If your code is C++20 (or later) 6it is preferred to use `lg2`. 7 8## Why structured logging? 9 10Structured logging is a method of logging where every variable piece of data is 11tagged with some identifier for the data. This is opposite of unstructured 12logging where logged events are free-form strings. 13 14The principal logging daemon in OpenBMC (systemd-journald) natively supports 15structured logging. As a result, there are some designs in place where specific 16structured events are added to the journal and downstream these events can be 17consumed. For example, one implementation of the IPMI SEL utilizes specific 18journal structured data to stored and later retrieve SEL events. 19 20Even if an argument might be made against the merits of using the journal as a 21form of IPC, the value of structured logging persists. It is very common as part 22of various failure-analysis operations, either on the part of a system 23manufacturer or an end-user, to need to interrogate the system logs to determine 24when/where/why a situation degraded. With unstructured logging, the 25implementation is left chasing message format and data changes, where as with 26structured logging the format is somewhat static and easily parsed. 27 28A specific example of where structured logging is beneficial is a service which 29gathers `error` or higher log reports and creates issues when a new or unknown 30signature is discovered. If the only information available is an unstructured 31string, any kind of signature identification requires creating a regular 32expression (likely). With structured log, specific identifiers can be used as 33the error signature while others are ignored. For instance, maybe a specific 34`ERROR_RC` is critical to identifying the scenario but `FILE_PATH` is variable 35and ignored. 36 37For deeper understanding of the OpenBMC logging subsystem, it may be useful to 38read the manpages for `man 1 journalctl` and `man 3 sd_journal_send`. Generally 39accepted log-levels and their definition is historically documented in 40`man 3 syslog`. 41 42## log 43 44The pre-C++20 logging APIs presented by phosphor-logging are 45`phosphor::logging::log`. The basic format of a log call is: 46 47``` 48 log<level>("A message", entry("TAG0=%s", "value"), entry("TAG1=%x", 2)); 49``` 50 51Each log call has a level or priority, which corresponds to syslog priorities, 52such as 'debug', 'info', 'emergency', a free-form message string, and any number 53of entries, which are key-value pairs of data. 54 55The 'key' of an entry is an upper-case tag for the data along with a 56printf-style format string for the data. Journald imposes some restrictions on 57the tag: it must be all capital letters, numbers, or underscores and must not 58start with an underscore. Unfortunately, if these restrictions are not followed 59or the printf string is invalid for the data, the code will compile but journald 60may silently drop the log request (or pieces of it). 61 62It is highly discouraged to dynamically create the free-form message string 63because the contents are then, effectively, unstructured. 64 65## lg2 66 67The post-C++20 logging APIs presented by phosphor-logging are `lg2::log`. The 68basic format of a log call is: 69 70``` 71 lg2::level("A {TAG0} occured.", "TAG0", "foo"s, "TAG1", lg2::hex, 2); 72``` 73 74Each log call has a level or priority, but the level is indicated by the 75function call name (such as `lg2::debug(...)`). The log call also has a 76free-form message string and any number of entries indicated by 2 or 3 argument 77sets: 78 79- key name (with the same `[_A-Z0-9]` requirements imposed by journald). 80- [optional] set of format flags 81- data value 82 83The free-form message may also optionally contain brace-wrapped key names, for 84which the message will be dynamically modified to contain the formatted value in 85place of the `{KEY}`. This enables human-friendly message strings to be formed 86without relying on verbose journald output modes. 87 88Note: Since a free-form message with data can be created using the `{KEY}` 89mechanism, no other string formatting libraries are necessary or should be used. 90Avoiding the `{KEY}` feature causes the journal messages to become unstructured. 91Do not use `sstream` or `{fmt}` to format the message! 92 93The supported format flags are: 94 95- `bin`, `dec`, `hex` 96 - The [integer] data should be formatted in the requested manner. 97 - Decimal is the default. 98 - Examples: 99 - `bin, 0xabcd` -> `0b1010101111001101` 100 - `hex, 1234` -> `0x4d2` 101- `field8`, `field16`, `field32`, `field64` 102 - The [integer] data should be padded as if it were a field of specified 103 bit-length (useful only for `bin` or `hex` data). 104 - Examples: 105 - `(bin | field8), 0xff` -> `0b11111111` 106 - `(hex | field16), 10` -> `0x000a` 107 108Format flags can be OR'd together as necessary: `hex | field32`. 109 110The APIs can handle (and format appropriately) any data of the following types: 111signed or unsigned integers, floating point numbers, booleans, strings 112(C-strings, std::strings, or std::string_views), sdbusplus enums, exceptions, 113and pointers. 114 115The APIs also perform compile-time analysis of the arguments to give descriptive 116error messages for incorrect parameters or format flags. Some examples are: 117 118- `(dec | hex)` yields: 119 - `error: static assertion failed: Conflicting flags found for value type.` 120- `dec` applied to a string yields: 121 - `error: static assertion failed: Prohibited flag found for value type.` 122- Missing a key yields: 123 - `error: static assertion failed: Found value without expected header field.` 124- Missing data yields: 125 - `error: static assertion failed: Found header field without expected data.` 126- Missing a message yields: 127 - `error: use of deleted function ‘lg2::debug<>::debug()’` 128 129### LOG2_FMTMSG key 130 131The API adds an extra journald key to represent the original message prior to 132`{KEY}` replacement, which is saved with the `LOG2_FMTMSG` key. This is done to 133facilitate searching the journal with a known fixed version of the message 134(prior to the dynamic replacement). 135 136### Key format checking 137 138The journald APIs require that keys (also called data 'headers') may only 139contain underscore, uppercase letters, or numbers (`[_A-Z0-9]`) and may not 140start with underscores. If these requirements are ignored, the journal API 141silently drops journal requests. In order to prevent silent bugs, the code 142performs compile-time checking of these requirements. 143 144The code that enables compile-time header checking imposes two constraints: 145 1461. Keys / headers must be passed as constant C-string values. 147 - `"KEY"` is valid; `"KEY"s` or `variable_key` is not. 1482. Any constant C-string may be interpreted as a key and give non-obvious 149 compile warnings about format violations. 150 - Constant C-strings (`"a string"`) should be passed as a C++ literal 151 (`"a string"s`) instead. 152 153### stderr output 154 155When running an application or daemon on a console or SSH session, it might not 156be obvious that the application is writing to the journal. The `lg2` APIs detect 157if the application is running on a TTY and additionally log to the TTY. 158 159Output to stderr can also be forced by setting the `LG2_FORCE_STDERR` 160environment variable to any value. This is especially useful to see log output 161in OpenBMC CI test verfication. 162 163The format of information sent to the TTY can be adjusted by setting the desired 164format string in the `LG2_FORMAT` environment variable. Supported fields are: 165 166- `%%` : a `'%'` literal 167- `%f` : the logging function's name 168- `%F` : the logging function's file 169- `%l` : the log level as an integer 170- `%L` : the logging function's line number 171- `%m` : the lg2 message 172 173The default format is `"<%l> %m"`. 174 175### Why a new API? 176 177There were a number of issues raised by `logging::log` which are not easily 178fixed with the existing API. 179 1801. The mixture of template and temporary-constructed `entry` parameters is 181 verbose and clumsy. `lg2` is far more succinct in this regard. 1822. The printf format-strings were error prone and potentially missed in code 183 reviews. `lg2` eliminates the need for printf strings by generating the 184 formatting internally. 1853. `logging::log` generates incorrect code location information (see 186 openbmc/openbmc#2297). `lg2` uses C++20's `source_location` to, by default, 187 generate correct code location info and can optionally be passed a 188 non-defaulted `source_location` for rare but appropriate cases. 1894. The previous APIs had no mechanism to generate dynamic user-friendly strings 190 which caused some developers to rely on external formatting libraries such as 191 `{fmt}`. `{KEY}` replacement is now a core feature of the new API. 1925. When running on a TTY, `logging::log` sent data to journal and the TTY was 193 silent. This resulted in some applications creating custom code to write some 194 data to `stdout` and some to `logging::log` APIs. `lg2` automatically detects 195 if it is running on a TTY and duplicates logging data to the console and the 196 journal. 197 198It is possible #3 and #5 could be fixed with the existing APIs, but the 199remainder are only possible to be resolved with changes to the API syntax. 200 201### Why C++20? 202 203Solving issue openbmc/openbmc#2297 requires C++20's `source_location` feature. 204It is possible that this could be solved in the `logging::log` APIs by utilizing 205`#ifdef` detection of the `source_location` feature so that C++20 applications 206gain this support. 207 208Implementing much of the syntactic improvements of the `lg2` API is made 209possible by leveraging C++20's Concepts feature. Experts in C++ may argue that 210this could be implemented in earlier revisions of C++ using complex SFINAE 211techniques with templated-class partial-specialization and overloading. Those 212experts are more than welcome to implement the `lg2` API in C++17 on their own. 213 214### Why didn't you do ...? 215 216> Why didn't you just use `{fmt}`? 217 218`{fmt}` is a great API for creating unstructured logging strings, but we are 219trying to create structured logging. `{fmt}` doesn't address that problem 220domain. 221 222> Why invent your own formatting and not use `{fmt}`? 223 224The formatting performed by this API is purposefully minimal. `{fmt}` is very 225capable and especially apt for human-facing string formatting. That is not the 226typical use-case for our logging. Instead we prioritized the following: 227 2281. Reasonable syntactic ergonomics so that the API can easily be adopted. 2292. Simple, consistent, machine parse-able data contents. 2303. Sufficient human-facing messages for developer-level debug. 2314. Very tight code generation at logging call sites and reasonably performant 232 code. 233 234(1) The lg2 API is roughly equivalent to `printf`, `{fmt}`, `cout` in terms of 235ergonomics, but significantly better compile-time error proofing than the others 236(except on par with `{fmt}` for errors). 237 238(2) Adding robust formatting would lead to less consistent structured data with 239essentially no additional benefit. Detailed field specifiers like `{.4f}` do not 240serve any purpose when the consumer is another computer program, and only 241minimal enhancement for developers. The typical utility formatting for 242hardware-facing usage is implemented (hex, binary, field-size). 243 244(3) The `{HEADER}` placeholders allow data to be placed in a human-friendly 245manner on par with `{fmt}`. 246 247(4) The call-site code generated by this API is almost identical to a `printf` 248and the journal-facing code is on similar performance footing to the 249journal_send APIs. We save some processing by using `iovec` interfaces and 250providing the source-code information, compared to the older `logging` APIs and 251have similar formatting performance to the printf-style formatting that 252journal_send used. The only difference is that this is done in our library 253rather than in `libsystemd`. 254 255 Utilizing `{fmt}` for each structured data element would impose much greater 256 overheads. Either we insert the `{fmt}` calls at the call-site (N calls 257 plus N string objects for N structured data elements), or we do them in the 258 library side where we lose the compile-time format checking. Also, the 259 performance of the more robust formatting would almost certainly be worse, 260 especially if we do the formatting library-side. 261 262 Logging is done often. Shifting a few values onto the stack for a 263 printf-type call compared to a kilobyte+ of generated code for inline 264 `{fmt}` calls is a significant trade-off. And one with the only major 265 advantage being more universally standardized API. The `lg2` API seems 266 obvious enough in ergonomics such that this should not be an impediment to 267 our community of developers. 268 269If it is later decided that we need more robust formatting or the `lg2::format` 270flags were a bad idea they could be deprecated and replaced. The format flags 271are a unique C++ type, which makes syntax parsing easier. As long as they are 272replaced with a similar unique C++ type both syntaxes could be supported for a 273time. Thus enhancing to support something like `fmt::arg` in the future could be 274done without impacting existing code usage. Also, an ambitious developer could 275write a Clang-Tidy code upgrader to transition from format flags to something 276else, like Abseil provides for API changes. 277 278> Doesn't duplicating the structured data in the message decrease the available 279> journal space? 280 281Far less than you might imagine. Journald keeps the messages in a compressed 282binary format. Since the data embedded in the message and the structured data 283are identical in content, and very near each other in the on-disk format, they 284compress exceptionally well. Likely on the order of 1-2 bytes per structured 285data element. 286 287The lack of data in the default `journalctl` output was a serious impediment to 288adoption of the `logging` API by some members of the development community. 289Unless we dispense with structured logging entirely, this duplication seems like 290a reasonable compromise. 291 292> Doesn't the `{HEADER}` syntax needlessly lengthen the message strings? 293 294Lengthen, yes. Needlessly, no? 295 296An earlier `lg2` proposal had a format flag that appended data to the message 297string instead of putting it in-place. The consensus was that this did not 298create as human-friendly messages as developers desired so the placeholder 299syntax was implemented instead. 300 301`{fmt}` can use shorter placeholders of `{}` or `{3}`. The non-indexed syntax 302would require structured data elements be in specific order and could be error 303prone with code maintenance. The indexed syntax is similarly error prone and 304harder to review. Both of them are more work for string formatting on the 305library. 306 307The `{HEADER}` syntax is identical to `{fmt}`'s "Named Argument" syntax but 308actually with better parameter ergonomics as `{fmt}` would require wrapping the 309named argument with a `fmt::arg` call, which is similar to `logging`'s `entry`. 310