Essential.Diagnostics.Structured

Provides a templated interface and implementation that makes tracing structured data easy via System.Diagnostics, using a fluent interface. Information is traced as StructuredData, with a message template, template values, and additional properties. Structured trace information is forwarded to an underlying TraceSource, which then sends to any configured TraceListeners, e.q. a Seq server. The interface can be used for easy integration with a dependency injection framework. Other Essential.Diagnostics packages extend the .NET Framework System.Diagnostics trace logging with additional trace listeners. Included are colored console (that allows custom formats), SQL database (including a tool to create tables), rolling file (with custom formats), rolling XML, email (per trace or batched), and an in-memory trace listener. The Essential.Diagnostics project also publishes structured data (semantic) tracing extensions and a fluent client library that includes easy encapsulation of activity and logical operation scopes, as well as abstractions and templated classes for a simpler logging API and support for dependency injection frameworks. See the project site on GitHub for examples and documentation.


Keywords
Tracing, TraceListener, Semantic, Diagnostics, Log, Logging, Structured, Trace, dot-net, tracesource
License
MS-RL
Install
Install-Package Essential.Diagnostics.Structured -Version 2.2.0

Documentation

Essential Diagnostics

Using and extending System.Diagnostics trace logging

Docs | Examples | Guidance | FAQ | Listeners | Fluent | Core

Essential.Diagnostics contains additional trace listeners, filters and utility classes for the .NET Framework System.Diagnostics trace logging. Included are colored console (that allows custom formats), SQL database (including a tool to create tables), formatted rolling file trace listener, rolling XML trace listener, Seq logging server listener, and in-memory trace listeners, simple property and expression filters, activity and logical operation scopes, and configuration file monitoring.

Installing

Listeners (various output locations)

Install the Essential.Diagnostics packages for just the trace listeners you need via NuGet. Using these classes requires no change to existing System.Diagnostics tracing code, only config changes (which are included in the packages):

Core

The trace listener packages depend on the Core package, which has a base listener class, as well as the expression filter and file configuration watcher. Usually it is installed automatically with one of the above listeners, but it can also be installed separately if needed:

Fluent extensions (application-side, to improve tracing)

There is also a separate package that has the scope utility classes, abstractions, and templated classes for easy use with dependency injection. This package makes using System.Diagnotics trace sources easier, and can be used either separately (with system trace listeners), or in conjunction with the extended trace listeners above.

Examples

Source code and examples are available here on GitHub.

Background

The .NET Framework System.Diagnostics provides powerful, flexible, high performance logging for applications -- and the core capabilities are already built into the .NET Framework!

This project uses the inbuilt features of the System.Diagnostics namespace, and shows how logging and tracing can be integrated into a client application by taking advantage of existing .NET Framework features.

This project also provides a library that enhances System.Diagnostics through it's numerous built-in extension points, but shouldn't require any changes to existing code (that uses the .NET Framework logging) to use some or all of the features.

Extension features provided by this project are marked EX -- other features are already provided by the .NET Framework you are using right now.

To see how you can use System.Diagnostics and the Essential.Diagnostics extensions see Getting Started and the Logging Primer.

Features

The .NET Framework System.Diagnostics, along with the extensions here, provides the following key features, or see a comparison with other logging frameworks.

  • Multiple logging sources.
  • Output to multiple trace listeners with different filtering.
  • Logical operation context and activity correlation.
  • Multiple levels of event types including activity tracing.
  • Integration with existing .NET Framework tracing (such as WCF).
  • Proven architecture.
  • Flexible and extensible design.
  • High performance.
  • No change required to existing .NET Framework trace statements.

The Framework and extensions can be used to write information to any of the following Listeners:

Log information can be custom formatted and include context information such as:

  • Event id, type, and message
  • Source - allows you to partition your logs
  • Event time and date
  • Thread id, process id and call stack
  • Correlation, activity ID, and logical operation stack
  • Machine name, user name and Windows Identity EX