co-log-polysemy

Composable Contravariant Comonadic Logging Library

https://github.com/kowainik/co-log

Version on this page:0.0.1.2
LTS Haskell 22.14:0.0.1.4
Stackage Nightly 2024-03-28:0.0.1.4
Latest on Hackage:0.0.1.4

See all snapshots co-log-polysemy appears in

MPL-2.0 licensed by Dmitrii Kovanikov
Maintained by Kowainik
This version can be pinned in stack with:co-log-polysemy-0.0.1.2@sha256:a6ea6103f5ca806dc16bcdbb666ee2ebafdbbf36a9626f33103105a41a55d561,3645

Module documentation for 0.0.1.2

Used by 1 package in nightly-2020-10-29(full list with versions):

co-log

GitHub CI Build status Windows build MPL-2.0 license

co-log-core Hackage Stackage LTS Stackage Nightly
co-log Hackage Stackage LTS Stackage Nightly
co-log-polysemy Hackage Stackage LTS Stackage Nightly

co-log is a composable and configurable logging framework. It combines all the benefits of Haskell idioms to provide a reasonable and convenient interface. Though it uses some advanced concepts in its core, we are striving to provide beginner-friendly API. The library also contains complete documentation with a lot of beginner-friendly examples, explanations and tutorials to guide users. The combination of a pragmatic approach to logging and fundamental Haskell abstractions allows us to create a highly composable and configurable logging framework.

If you’re interested in how different Haskell typeclasses are used to implement core functions of co-log, you can read the following blog post which goes into detail about internal implementation specifics:

co-log is also modular on the level of packages. We care a lot about a low dependency footprint so you can build your logging only on top of the minimal required interface for your use-case. This repository contains the following packages:

  • co-log-core: lightweight package with basic data types and general idea which depends only on base.
  • co-log: taggless final implementation of logging library based on co-log-core.
  • co-log-polysemy: implementation of logging library based on co-log-core and the polysemy extensible effects library.
  • co-log-benchmark: benchmarks of the co-log library.

To provide a more user-friendly introduction to the library, we’ve created the tutorial series which introduces the main concepts behind co-log smoothly:

co-log also cares about concurrent logging. For this purpose we have the concurrent-playground executable where we experiment with different multithreading scenarios to test the library’s behavior. You can find it here:

Benchmarks

co-log is compared with basic functions like putStrLn. Since IO overhead is big enough, every benchmark dumps 10K messages to output. If a benchmark’s name doesn’t contain Message then this benchmark simply dumps the string "message" to output, otherwise it works with the Message data type from the co-log library.

To run benchmarks, use the following command:

cabal v2-run co-log-bench
Benchmarks Time for 10K messages
Prelude.putStrLn 5.117ms
Text.putStrLn 9.220ms
ByteString.putStrLn 2.971ms
mempty 1.181ms
logStringStdout 5.107ms
logPrint 5.248ms
logTextStdout 5.351ms
logByteStringStdout 2.933ms
logByteStringStderr 17.482ms
ByteString > (stdout <> stderr) 17.715ms
Message > format > stdout 9.188ms
Message > format > ByteString > stdout 3.524ms
Message{callstack} > format > stdout 9.139ms
Message{callstack:5} > format > stdout 9.464ms
Message{callstack:50} > format > stdout 9.439ms
Message{Time,ThreadId} > format > stdout 54.160ms
Message{Time,ThreadId} > format > ByteString > stdout 54.137ms

Changes

Changelog

co-log-polysemy uses PVP Versioning. The changelog is available on GitHub.

0.0.1.2 — Apr 18, 2020

  • #186: Support GHC-8.10.1.

0.0.1.1 — Feb 17, 2020

0.0.1.0 — Jan 19, 2020

  • #121: Add LogAction and interpreter that works directly with the Sem monad. (by @chshersh)
  • #148: Support GHC-8.8.2. (by @chshersh)
  • Bump up polysemy to the latest version. (by @Avi-D-coder)

0.0.0.0 — May 5, 2019

  • Initially created.