Example #1
0
func testHandler() (log.Handler, *log.Record) {
	rec := new(log.Record)
	return log.FuncHandler(func(r *log.Record) error {
		*rec = *r
		return nil
	}), rec
}
Example #2
0
// FatalHandler makes critical errors exit the program
// immediately, much like the log.Fatal* methods from the
// standard log package
func FatalHandler(h log.Handler) log.Handler {
	return log.FuncHandler(func(r *log.Record) error {
		err := h.Log(r)
		if r.Lvl == log.LvlCrit {
			os.Exit(1)
		}
		return err
	})
}
Example #3
0
// EscalateErrHandler wraps another handler and passes all records through
// unchanged except if the logged context contains a non-nil error
// value in its context. In that case, the record's level is raised
// to LvlError unless it was already more serious (LvlCrit).
//
// This allows you to log the result of all functions for debugging
// and still capture error conditions when in production with a single
// log line. As an example, the following the log record will be written
// out only if there was an error writing a value to redis:
//
//     logger := logext.EscalateErrHandler(
//         log.LvlFilterHandler(log.LvlInfo, log.StdoutHandler))
//
//     reply, err := redisConn.Do("SET", "foo", "bar")
//     logger.Debug("Wrote value to redis", "reply", reply, "err", err)
//     if err != nil {
//         return err
//     }
//
func EscalateErrHandler(h log.Handler) log.Handler {
	return log.FuncHandler(func(r *log.Record) error {
		if r.Lvl > log.LvlError {
			for i := 1; i < len(r.Ctx); i++ {
				if v, ok := r.Ctx[i].(error); ok && v != nil {
					r.Lvl = log.LvlError
					break
				}
			}
		}
		return h.Log(r)
	})
}