Logger
Gorm has a default logger implementation, it will print Slow SQL and happening errors by default
The logger accepts few options, you can customize it during initialization, for example:
newLogger := logger.New(
log.New(os.Stdout, "\r\n", log.LstdFlags), // io writer
logger.Config{
SlowThreshold: time.Second, // Slow SQL threshold
LogLevel: logger.Silent, // Log level
IgnoreRecordNotFoundError: true, // Ignore ErrRecordNotFound error for logger
Colorful: false, // Disable color
},
)
// Globally mode
db, err := gorm.Open(sqlite.Open("test.db"), &gorm.Config{
Logger: newLogger,
})
// Continuous session mode
tx := db.Session(&Session{Logger: newLogger})
tx.First(&user)
tx.Model(&user).Update("Age", 18)
Log Levels
GORM defined log levels: Silent
, Error
, Warn
, Info
db, err := gorm.Open(sqlite.Open("test.db"), &gorm.Config{
Logger: logger.Default.LogMode(logger.Silent),
})
Debug
Debug a single operation, change current operation’s log level to logger.Info
db.Debug().Where("name = ?", "jinzhu").First(&User{})
Customize Logger
Refer to GORM’s default logger for how to define your own one
The logger needs to implement the following interface, it accepts context
, so you can use it for log tracing
type Interface interface {
LogMode(LogLevel) Interface
Info(context.Context, string, ...interface{})
Warn(context.Context, string, ...interface{})
Error(context.Context, string, ...interface{})
Trace(ctx context.Context, begin time.Time, fc func() (sql string, rowsAffected int64), err error)
}