graylog2/gelf-php

A php implementation to send log-messages to a GELF compatible backend like Graylog2.

Installs: 30 577 264

Dependents: 145

Suggesters: 29

Security: 0

Stars: 410

Watchers: 15

Forks: 86

Open Issues: 12

2.0.1 2023-05-23 14:45 UTC

README

Build Status Code Coverage Scrutinizer Quality Score

A php implementation to send log-files to a gelf compatible backend like Graylog2. This library conforms to the PSR standards in regards to structure (4), coding-style (1, 2) and logging (3).

It's a loosely based on the original Graylog2 gelf-php and mlehner's fork.

Stable release and deprecation of the original graylog2/gelf-php

This implementation became the official PHP GELF library on 2013-12-19 and is now released as graylog2/gelf-php. The old library became deprecated at the same time and it's recommended to upgrade.

Since the deprecated library never got a stable release, we decided keep it available as v0.1. This means: If you have a project based on the deprecated library but no time to upgrade to version 1.0, we recommend to change your composer.json as following:

    "require": {
       // ...
       "graylog2/gelf-php": "0.1.*"
       // ...
    }

After running an additional composer update everything should work as expected.

A note on PHP versions before 5.6

I tried to keep backwards compatibility alive as long as possible, but it 2021 it's not feasible anymore to deal with the pain of dependency management for PHP 5.3.3 - 5.5.latest. They are EOL for many years anyway.

If you are somehow stuck on <5.6, you can use gelf-php up to version 1.6.5.

I decided against a semver-compliant increase from 1.x to 2.x on purpose.

Usage

Recommended installation via composer:

Add gelf-php to composer.json either by running composer require graylog2/gelf-php or by defining it manually:

"require": {
   // ...
   "graylog2/gelf-php": "~1.5"
   // ...
}

Reinstall dependencies: composer install

Examples

For usage examples, go to /examples.

Muting connection and transport errors

Oftentimes projects run into the situation where they don't want to raise exceptions for logging-errors. Since the standard transports like Udp, Tcp and Http can be kind of noise for fwrite/fopen errors, gelf-php provides a IgnoreErrorTransportWrapper. This class can decorate any AbstractTransport and will mute all exceptions.

How this applies in practice can be seen in the advanced-example.

If you use gelf-php in conjunction with monolog/symfony, the following snippet should help you with properly setting up your logging backend.

Assuming you have a typical monolog config:

monolog:
  handlers:
    graylog:
      type: service
      id: monolog.gelf_handler
      level: debug

You only need to properly define the symfony-service gelf-handler:

services:
  monolog.gelf_handler:
    class: Monolog\Handler\GelfHandler
    arguments:
        - @gelf.publisher
        - 'warning' #monolog config is ignored with custom service level has to be redefined here (default : debug), you should probably use parameters eg: '%gelf_level%'
    
  gelf.publisher:
    class: Gelf\Publisher
    arguments: [@gelf.ignore_error_transport]
    
  gelf.ignore_error_transport:
    class: Gelf\Transport\IgnoreErrorTransportWrapper
    arguments: [@gelf.transport]
    
  gelf.transport:
    class: Gelf\Transport\UdpTransport # or Tcp, Amp, Http,...
    arguments: [] # ... whatever is required

HHVM

While HHVM is supported/tested, there are some restrictions to look out for:

  • Stream-context support is very limited (as of 2014) - especially regarding SSL - many use-cases might not work as expected (or not at all...)
  • fwrite does behave a little different

The failing unit-tests are skipped by default when running on HHVM. They are also all annotated with @group hhvm-failures. You can force to run those failures by setting FORCE_HHVM_TESTS=1 in the environment. Therefore you can specifically check the state of HHVM failures by running:

FORCE_HHVM_TESTS=1 hhvm vendor/bin/phpunit --group hhvm-failures

License

The library is licensed under the MIT license. For details check out the LICENSE file.

Development & Contributing

You are welcome to modify, extend and bugfix all you like. :-) If you have any questions/proposals/etc. you can contact me on Twitter (@bzikarsky) or message me on freenode#graylog2.

Tools

  1. composer, preferably a system-wide installation as composer
  2. PHPUnit
  3. Optional: PHP_CodeSniffer for PSR-X-compatibility checks

Steps

  1. Clone repository and cd into it: git clone git@github.com:bzikarsky/gelf-php && cd gelf-php
  2. Install dependencies: composer install
  3. Run unit-tests: vendor/bin/phpunit
  4. Check PSR compatibility: vendor/bin/phpcs --standard=PSR2 src tests examples