SLF4J
loglayer
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SLF4J | loglayer | |
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23 | 4 | |
2,255 | 58 | |
1.0% | - | |
7.8 | 4.2 | |
11 days ago | 13 days ago | |
Java | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
SLF4J
- Slf4j.org TLS Certificate Expired
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dazl — a facade for configurable/pluggable Go logging
A few years ago, my team moved from Java to Go. Working on Go projects, we encountered a wide variety of logging frameworks with different APIs, configuration, and formatting. We soon found ourselves longing for a logging abstraction layer like Java’s slf4j, which had proven invaluable for use in reusable libraries or configuring and debugging production systems. So, not long after moving to Go, we began working toward replacing what we had lost in slf4j.
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Fargate logging thru console awslogs or directly to Cloudwatch?
I'm not familiar with Serilog as I code mostly in Java, use slf4j (logs to stdout) and our apps send logs to Cloudwatch using the task definition's awslogs configuration. I prefer it this way because I can customize the log configurations in my task definitions. Also the default stream name has this format prefix-name/container-name/ecs-task-id so I can easily identify the logs of the task I want to look at. I haven't experienced any downsides with this approach and our apps publish a shit ton of logs. Cloudwatch approach looks like you can customize the stream name?
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How does Loggers get multiple parameters in functions
slf4j is open source. You can look at the code.
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Logging in your API
Java -> Logback, Log4j2, JDK (Java Util Logging), Slf4j, e.t.c.
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Primeiros passos no desenvolvimento Java em 2023: um guia particular
slf4j para padronização dos logs;
- What are some of the biggest problems you personally face in Java?
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must known frameworks/libs/tech, every senior java developer must know(?)
SLF4J
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Go standard library: structured, leveled logging
> My God. Logging in protobuf?
Yes, or any other data format and/or transport protocol.
I'm surprised this is up for debate.
> Logging is the lowest of all debugging utilities - its the first thing you ever do writing software - “hello world”. And, while I admire structural logging, the truth is printing strings remains (truly) the lowest common denominator across software developers.
This sort of comment is terribly miopic. You can have a logging API, and then configure your logging to transport the events anywhere, any way. This is a terribly basic feature and requirement, and one that comes out of the box with some systems. Check how SLF4J[1] is pervasive in Java, and how any SLF4J implementation offers logging to stdout or a local file as a very specific and basic usecase.
It turns out that nowadays most developers write software that runs on many computers that aren't stashed over or under their desks, and thus they need efficient and convenient ways to check what's happening either in a node or in all deployments.
[1] https://www.slf4j.org/
- Logback en Springboot
loglayer
- One logging API to rule them all
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Help I have a JavaScript Lib that blows away competition but nobody knows of it
- is meant to be used with your existing loggers
https://github.com/theogravity/loglayer
- I wrote an abstraction layer that lets you write logs with any logging library you want to use
- I created LogLayer, a library to standardize how logs are written in code and wraps around the popular logging libraries out there, allowing you to swap out logging libraries seamlessly
What are some alternatives?
Apache Log4j 2 - Apache Log4j 2 is a versatile, feature-rich, efficient logging API and backend for Java.
EntityStore.TS - Manage any kind of backend API or other datasource through the model reflection.
Logbook - An extensible Java library for HTTP request and response logging
logger - Pretty-print utility logger for JS/TS
tinylog - tinylog is a lightweight logging framework for Java, Kotlin, Scala, and Android
ts-standard - Typescript style guide, linter, and formatter using StandardJS
kibana - Your window into the Elastic Stack
logger - Zero dependency, light-weight, blazing fast customizable logging library
graylog - Free and open log management
debug - A tiny JavaScript debugging utility modelled after Node.js core's debugging technique. Works in Node.js and web browsers
Logback - The reliable, generic, fast and flexible logging framework for Java.
diary - 📑 Zero-dependency, fast logging library for Node, Browser and Workers