The decision to create klog was one that wasn’t made lightly, but it was necessary due to some
drawbacks that are present in glog. Ultimately, the fork was created due to glog not being under active development; this can be seen in the glog README:
The code in this repo […] is not itself under development
This makes us unable to solve many use cases without a fork. The factors that contributed to needing feature development are listed below:
glogpresents a lot “gotchas” and introduces challenges in containerized environments, all of which aren’t well documented.
glog doesn’t provide an easy way to test logs, which detracts from the stability of software using it
A long term goal is to implement a logging interface that allows us to add context, change output format, etc.
Semantic versioning is used in this repository. It contains several Go modules
with different levels of stability:
k8s.io/klog/v2 - stable API, vX.Y.Z tags
examples - no stable API, no tags, no intention to ever stabilize
Exempt from the API stability guarantee are items (packages, functions, etc.)
which are marked explicitly as EXPERIMENTAL in their docs comment. Those
may still change in incompatible ways or get removed entirely. This can only
be used for code that is used in tests to avoid situations where non-test
code from two different Kubernetes dependencies depends on incompatible
releases of klog because an experimental API was changed.
How to use klog
Replace imports for "github.com/golang/glog" with "k8s.io/klog/v2"
Use klog.InitFlags(nil) explicitly for initializing global flags as we no longer use init() method to register the flags
You can now use log_file instead of log_dir for logging to a single file (See examples/log_file/usage_log_file.go)
If you want to redirect everything logged using klog somewhere else (say syslog!), you can use klog.SetOutput() method and supply a io.Writer. (See examples/set_output/usage_set_output.go)
See this example to see how to coexist with both klog/v1 and klog/v2.
Coexisting with glog
This package can be used side by side with glog. This example shows how to initialize and synchronize flags from the global flag.CommandLine FlagSet. In addition, the example makes use of stderr as combined output by setting alsologtostderr (or logtostderr) to true.
Community, discussion, contribution, and support
Learn how to engage with the Kubernetes community on the community page.
This is an efficient pure Go implementation of leveled logs in the
manner of the open source C++ package
https://github.com/google/glog
By binding methods to booleans it is possible to use the log package
without paying the expense of evaluating the arguments to the log.
Through the -vmodule flag, the package also provides fine-grained
control over logging at the file level.
The comment from glog.go introduces the ideas:
Package glog implements logging analogous to the Google-internal
C++ INFO/ERROR/V setup. It provides functions Info, Warning,
Error, Fatal, plus formatting variants such as Infof. It
also provides V-style logging controlled by the -v and
-vmodule=file=2 flags.
Basic examples:
glog.Info("Prepare to repel boarders")
glog.Fatalf("Initialization failed: %s", err)
See the documentation of the V function for an explanation
of these examples:
if glog.V(2) {
glog.Info("Starting transaction...")
}
glog.V(2).Infoln("Processed", nItems, "elements")
The repository contains an open source version of the log package
used inside Google. The master copy of the source lives inside
Google, not here. The code in this repo is for export only and is not itself
under development. Feature requests will be ignored.
klog
klog is a permanent fork of https://github.com/golang/glog.
Why was klog created?
The decision to create klog was one that wasn’t made lightly, but it was necessary due to some drawbacks that are present in glog. Ultimately, the fork was created due to glog not being under active development; this can be seen in the glog README:
This makes us unable to solve many use cases without a fork. The factors that contributed to needing feature development are listed below:
glogpresents a lot “gotchas” and introduces challenges in containerized environments, all of which aren’t well documented.glogdoesn’t provide an easy way to test logs, which detracts from the stability of software using itHistorical context is available here:
Release versioning
Semantic versioning is used in this repository. It contains several Go modules with different levels of stability:
k8s.io/klog/v2- stable API,vX.Y.Ztagsexamples- no stable API, no tags, no intention to ever stabilizeExempt from the API stability guarantee are items (packages, functions, etc.) which are marked explicitly as
EXPERIMENTALin their docs comment. Those may still change in incompatible ways or get removed entirely. This can only be used for code that is used in tests to avoid situations where non-test code from two different Kubernetes dependencies depends on incompatible releases of klog because an experimental API was changed.How to use klog
"github.com/golang/glog"with"k8s.io/klog/v2"klog.InitFlags(nil)explicitly for initializing global flags as we no longer useinit()method to register the flagslog_fileinstead oflog_dirfor logging to a single file (Seeexamples/log_file/usage_log_file.go)klog.SetOutput()method and supply aio.Writer. (Seeexamples/set_output/usage_set_output.go)Coexisting with klog/v2
See this example to see how to coexist with both klog/v1 and klog/v2.
Coexisting with glog
This package can be used side by side with glog. This example shows how to initialize and synchronize flags from the global
flag.CommandLineFlagSet. In addition, the example makes use of stderr as combined output by settingalsologtostderr(orlogtostderr) totrue.Community, discussion, contribution, and support
Learn how to engage with the Kubernetes community on the community page.
You can reach the maintainers of this project at:
Code of conduct
Participation in the Kubernetes community is governed by the Kubernetes Code of Conduct.
glog
Leveled execution logs for Go.
This is an efficient pure Go implementation of leveled logs in the manner of the open source C++ package https://github.com/google/glog
By binding methods to booleans it is possible to use the log package without paying the expense of evaluating the arguments to the log. Through the -vmodule flag, the package also provides fine-grained control over logging at the file level.
The comment from glog.go introduces the ideas:
The repository contains an open source version of the log package used inside Google. The master copy of the source lives inside Google, not here. The code in this repo is for export only and is not itself under development. Feature requests will be ignored.
Send bug reports to golang-nuts@googlegroups.com.