diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 6731d50..a8c29bf 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ logr design but also left out some parts and changed others: The high-level slog API is explicitly meant to be one of many different APIs that can be layered on top of a shared `slog.Handler`. logr is one such -alternative API, with interoperability provided by the [`slogr`](slogr) +alternative API, with [interoperability](#slog-interoperability) provided by the [`slogr`](slogr) package. ### Inspiration @@ -142,6 +142,91 @@ There are implementations for the following logging libraries: - **github.com/go-kit/log**: [gokitlogr](https://github.com/tonglil/gokitlogr) (also compatible with github.com/go-kit/kit/log since v0.12.0) - **bytes.Buffer** (writing to a buffer): [bufrlogr](https://github.com/tonglil/buflogr) (useful for ensuring values were logged, like during testing) +## slog interoperability + +Interoperability goes both ways, using the `logr.Logger` API with a `slog.Handler` +and using the `slog.Logger` API with a `logr.LogSink`. [slogr](./slogr) provides `NewLogr` and +`NewSlogHandler` API calls to convert between a `logr.Logger` and a `slog.Handler`. +As usual, `slog.New` can be used to wrap such a `slog.Handler` in the high-level +slog API. `slogr` itself leaves that to the caller. + +## Using a `logr.Sink` as backend for slog + +Ideally, a logr sink implementation should support both logr and slog by +implementing both the normal logr interface(s) and `slogr.SlogSink`. Because +of a conflict in the parameters of the common `Enabled` method, it is [not +possible to implement both slog.Handler and logr.Sink in the same +type](https://github.com/golang/go/issues/59110). + +If both are supported, log calls can go from the high-level APIs to the backend +without the need to convert parameters. `NewLogr` and `NewSlogHandler` can +convert back and forth without adding additional wrappers, with one exception: +when `Logger.V` was used to adjust the verbosity for a `slog.Handler`, then +`NewSlogHandler` has to use a wrapper which adjusts the verbosity for future +log calls. + +Such an implementation should also support values that implement specific +interfaces from both packages for logging (`logr.Marshaler`, `slog.LogValuer`, +`slog.GroupValue`). logr does not convert those. + +Not supporting slog has several drawbacks: +- Recording source code locations works correctly if the handler gets called + through `slog.Logger`, but may be wrong in other cases. That's because a + `logr.Sink` does its own stack unwinding instead of using the program counter + provided by the high-level API. +- slog levels <= 0 can be mapped to logr levels by negating the level without a + loss of information. But all slog levels > 0 (e.g. `slog.LevelWarning` as + used by `slog.Logger.Warn`) must be mapped to 0 before calling the sink + because logr does not support "more important than info" levels. +- The slog group concept is supported by prefixing each key in a key/value + pair with the group names, separated by a dot. For structured output like + JSON it would be better to group the key/value pairs inside an object. +- Special slog values and interfaces don't work as expected. +- The overhead is likely to be higher. + +These drawbacks are severe enough that applications using a mixture of slog and +logr should switch to a different backend. + +## Using a `slog.Handler` as backend for logr + +Using a plain `slog.Handler` without support for logr works better than the +other direction: +- All logr verbosity levels can be mapped 1:1 to their corresponding slog level + by negating them. +- Stack unwinding is done by the `slogr.SlogSink` and the resulting program + counter is passed to the `slog.Handler`. +- Names added via `Logger.WithName` are gathered and recorded in an additional + attribute with `logger` as key and the names separated by slash as value. +- `Logger.Error` is turned into a log record with `slog.LevelError` as level + and an additional attribute with `err` as key, if an error was provided. + +The main drawback is that `logr.Marshaler` will not be supported. Types should +ideally support both `logr.Marshaler` and `slog.Valuer`. If compatibility +with logr implementations without slog support is not important, then +`slog.Valuer` is sufficient. + +## Context support for slog + +Storing a logger in a `context.Context` is not supported by +slog. `logr.NewContext` and `logr.FromContext` can be used with slog like this +to fill this gap: + + func HandlerFromContext(ctx context.Context) slog.Handler { + logger, err := logr.FromContext(ctx) + if err == nil { + return slogr.NewSlogHandler(logger) + } + return slog.Default().Handler() + } + + func ContextWithHandler(ctx context.Context, handler slog.Handler) context.Context { + return logr.NewContext(ctx, slogr.NewLogr(handler)) + } + +The downside is that storing and retrieving a `slog.Handler` needs more +allocations compared to using a `logr.Logger`. Therefore the recommendation is +to use the `logr.Logger` API in code which uses contextual logging. + ## FAQ ### Conceptual diff --git a/slogr/slogr.go b/slogr/slogr.go index 8828fd2..eb519ae 100644 --- a/slogr/slogr.go +++ b/slogr/slogr.go @@ -21,7 +21,8 @@ limitations under the License. // API and of a logr.LogSink through the slog.Handler and thus slog.Logger // APIs. // -// Both approaches are currently experimental and need further work. +// See the README in the top-level [./logr] package for a discussion of +// interoperability. package slogr import (