Expand description
Utilities for implementing and composing tracing subscribers.
tracing is a framework for instrumenting Rust programs to collect
scoped, structured, and async-aware diagnostics. The Subscriber trait
represents the functionality necessary to collect this trace data. This
crate contains tools for composing subscribers out of smaller units of
behaviour, and batteries-included implementations of common subscriber
functionality.
tracing-subscriber is intended for use by both Subscriber authors and
application authors using tracing to instrument their applications.
Compiler support: requires rustc 1.65+
§Layers and Filters
The most important component of the tracing-subscriber API is the
Layer trait, which provides a composable abstraction for building
Subscribers. Like the Subscriber trait, a Layer defines a
particular behavior for collecting trace data. Unlike Subscribers,
which implement a complete strategy for how trace data is collected,
Layers provide modular implementations of specific behaviors.
Therefore, they can be composed together to form a Subscriber which is
capable of recording traces in a variety of ways. See the layer module’s
documentation for details on using Layers.
In addition, the Filter trait defines an interface for filtering what
spans and events are recorded by a particular layer. This allows different
Layers to handle separate subsets of the trace data emitted by a
program. See the documentation on per-layer filtering for more
information on using Filters.
§Included Subscribers
The following Subscribers are provided for application authors:
fmt- Formats and logs tracing data (requires thefmtfeature flag)
§Feature Flags
std: Enables APIs that depend on the Rust standard library (enabled by default).alloc: Depend onliballoc(enabled by “std”).env-filter: Enables theEnvFiltertype, which implements filtering similar to theenv_loggercrate. Requires “std”.fmt: Enables thefmtmodule, which provides a subscriber implementation for printing formatted representations of trace events. Enabled by default. Requires “registry” and “std”.ansi: Enablesfmtsupport for ANSI terminal colors. Enabled by default.registry: enables theregistrymodule. Enabled by default. Requires “std”.json: Enablesfmtsupport for JSON output. In JSON output, the ANSI feature does nothing. Requires “fmt” and “std”.local-time: Enables local time formatting when using thetimecrate’s timestamp formatters with thefmtsubscriber.
§Optional Dependencies
tracing-log: Enables better formatting for events emitted bylogmacros in thefmtsubscriber. Enabled by default.time: Enables support for using thetimecrate for timestamp formatting in thefmtsubscriber.smallvec: Causes theEnvFiltertype to use thesmallveccrate (rather thanVec) as a performance optimization. Enabled by default.parking_lot: Use theparking_lotcrate’sRwLockimplementation rather than the Rust standard library’s implementation.
§no_std Support
In embedded systems and other bare-metal applications, tracing can be
used without requiring the Rust standard library, although some features are
disabled. Although most of the APIs provided by tracing-subscriber, such
as fmt and EnvFilter, require the standard library, some
functionality, such as the Layer trait, can still be used in
no_std environments.
The dependency on the standard library is controlled by two crate feature
flags, “std”, which enables the dependency on libstd, and “alloc”, which
enables the dependency on liballoc (and is enabled by the “std”
feature). These features are enabled by default, but no_std users can
disable them using:
# Cargo.toml
tracing-subscriber = { version = "0.3", default-features = false }Additional APIs are available when liballoc is available. To enable
liballoc but not std, use:
# Cargo.toml
tracing-subscriber = { version = "0.3", default-features = false, features = ["alloc"] }§Unstable Features
These feature flags enable unstable features. The public API may break in 0.1.x
releases. To enable these features, the --cfg tracing_unstable must be passed to
rustc when compiling.
The following unstable feature flags are currently available:
valuable: Enables support for serializing values recorded using thevaluablecrate as structured JSON in theformat::Jsonformatter.
§Enabling Unstable Features
The easiest way to set the tracing_unstable cfg is to use the RUSTFLAGS
env variable when running cargo commands:
RUSTFLAGS="--cfg tracing_unstable" cargo buildAlternatively, the following can be added to the .cargo/config file in a
project to automatically enable the cfg flag for that project:
[build]
rustflags = ["--cfg", "tracing_unstable"]§Supported Rust Versions
Tracing is built against the latest stable release. The minimum supported version is 1.65. The current Tracing version is not guaranteed to build on Rust versions earlier than the minimum supported version.
Tracing follows the same compiler support policies as the rest of the Tokio project. The current stable Rust compiler and the three most recent minor versions before it will always be supported. For example, if the current stable compiler version is 1.69, the minimum supported version will not be increased past 1.66, three minor versions prior. Increasing the minimum supported compiler version is not considered a semver breaking change as long as doing so complies with this policy.
Re-exports§
pub use fmt::fmt;pub use fmt::Subscriber as FmtSubscriber;pub use filter::EnvFilter;pub use layer::Layer;pub use registry::Registry;
Modules§
- field
- Utilities for working with fields and field visitors.
- filter
Layers that control which spans and events are enabled by the wrapped subscriber.- fmt
- A
Subscriberfor formatting and loggingtracingdata. - layer
- The
Layertrait, a composable abstraction for buildingSubscribers. - prelude
- The
tracing-subscriberprelude. - registry
- Storage for span data shared by multiple
Layers. - reload
- Wrapper for a
Layerto allow it to be dynamically reloaded. - util
- Extension traits and other utilities to make working with subscribers more ergonomic.