pub struct LogEntry {
Show 15 fields pub log_name: String, pub resource: Option<MonitoredResource>, pub timestamp: Option<Timestamp>, pub receive_timestamp: Option<Timestamp>, pub severity: i32, pub insert_id: String, pub http_request: Option<HttpRequest>, pub labels: HashMap<String, String>, pub operation: Option<LogEntryOperation>, pub trace: String, pub span_id: String, pub trace_sampled: bool, pub source_location: Option<LogEntrySourceLocation>, pub split: Option<LogSplit>, pub payload: Option<Payload>,
}
Expand description

An individual entry in a log.

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§log_name: String

Required. The resource name of the log to which this log entry belongs:

 "projects/\[PROJECT_ID\]/logs/\[LOG_ID\]"
 "organizations/\[ORGANIZATION_ID\]/logs/\[LOG_ID\]"
 "billingAccounts/\[BILLING_ACCOUNT_ID\]/logs/\[LOG_ID\]"
 "folders/\[FOLDER_ID\]/logs/\[LOG_ID\]"

A project number may be used in place of PROJECT_ID. The project number is translated to its corresponding PROJECT_ID internally and the log_name field will contain PROJECT_ID in queries and exports.

\[LOG_ID\] must be URL-encoded within log_name. Example: "organizations/1234567890/logs/cloudresourcemanager.googleapis.com%2Factivity".

\[LOG_ID\] must be less than 512 characters long and can only include the following characters: upper and lower case alphanumeric characters, forward-slash, underscore, hyphen, and period.

For backward compatibility, if log_name begins with a forward-slash, such as /projects/..., then the log entry is ingested as usual, but the forward-slash is removed. Listing the log entry will not show the leading slash and filtering for a log name with a leading slash will never return any results.

§resource: Option<MonitoredResource>

Required. The monitored resource that produced this log entry.

Example: a log entry that reports a database error would be associated with the monitored resource designating the particular database that reported the error.

§timestamp: Option<Timestamp>

Optional. The time the event described by the log entry occurred. This time is used to compute the log entry’s age and to enforce the logs retention period. If this field is omitted in a new log entry, then Logging assigns it the current time. Timestamps have nanosecond accuracy, but trailing zeros in the fractional seconds might be omitted when the timestamp is displayed.

Incoming log entries must have timestamps that don’t exceed the logs retention period in the past, and that don’t exceed 24 hours in the future. Log entries outside those time boundaries aren’t ingested by Logging.

§receive_timestamp: Option<Timestamp>

Output only. The time the log entry was received by Logging.

§severity: i32

Optional. The severity of the log entry. The default value is LogSeverity.DEFAULT.

§insert_id: String

Optional. A unique identifier for the log entry. If you provide a value, then Logging considers other log entries in the same project, with the same timestamp, and with the same insert_id to be duplicates which are removed in a single query result. However, there are no guarantees of de-duplication in the export of logs.

If the insert_id is omitted when writing a log entry, the Logging API assigns its own unique identifier in this field.

In queries, the insert_id is also used to order log entries that have the same log_name and timestamp values.

§http_request: Option<HttpRequest>

Optional. Information about the HTTP request associated with this log entry, if applicable.

§labels: HashMap<String, String>

Optional. A map of key, value pairs that provides additional information about the log entry. The labels can be user-defined or system-defined.

User-defined labels are arbitrary key, value pairs that you can use to classify logs.

System-defined labels are defined by GCP services for platform logs. They have two components - a service namespace component and the attribute name. For example: compute.googleapis.com/resource_name.

Cloud Logging truncates label keys that exceed 512 B and label values that exceed 64 KB upon their associated log entry being written. The truncation is indicated by an ellipsis at the end of the character string.

§operation: Option<LogEntryOperation>

Optional. Information about an operation associated with the log entry, if applicable.

§trace: String

Optional. The REST resource name of the trace being written to Cloud Trace in association with this log entry. For example, if your trace data is stored in the Cloud project “my-trace-project” and if the service that is creating the log entry receives a trace header that includes the trace ID “12345”, then the service should use “projects/my-tracing-project/traces/12345”.

The trace field provides the link between logs and traces. By using this field, you can navigate from a log entry to a trace.

§span_id: String

Optional. The ID of the Cloud Trace span associated with the current operation in which the log is being written. For example, if a span has the REST resource name of “projects/some-project/traces/some-trace/spans/some-span-id”, then the span_id field is “some-span-id”.

A Span represents a single operation within a trace. Whereas a trace may involve multiple different microservices running on multiple different machines, a span generally corresponds to a single logical operation being performed in a single instance of a microservice on one specific machine. Spans are the nodes within the tree that is a trace.

Applications that are instrumented for tracing will generally assign a new, unique span ID on each incoming request. It is also common to create and record additional spans corresponding to internal processing elements as well as issuing requests to dependencies.

The span ID is expected to be a 16-character, hexadecimal encoding of an 8-byte array and should not be zero. It should be unique within the trace and should, ideally, be generated in a manner that is uniformly random.

Example values:

  • 000000000000004a
  • 7a2190356c3fc94b
  • 0000f00300090021
  • d39223e101960076
§trace_sampled: bool

Optional. The sampling decision of the trace associated with the log entry.

True means that the trace resource name in the trace field was sampled for storage in a trace backend. False means that the trace was not sampled for storage when this log entry was written, or the sampling decision was unknown at the time. A non-sampled trace value is still useful as a request correlation identifier. The default is False.

§source_location: Option<LogEntrySourceLocation>

Optional. Source code location information associated with the log entry, if any.

§split: Option<LogSplit>

Optional. Information indicating this LogEntry is part of a sequence of multiple log entries split from a single LogEntry.

§payload: Option<Payload>

The log entry payload, which can be one of multiple types.

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impl LogEntry

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pub fn severity(&self) -> LogSeverity

Returns the enum value of severity, or the default if the field is set to an invalid enum value.

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pub fn set_severity(&mut self, value: LogSeverity)

Sets severity to the provided enum value.

Trait Implementations§

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impl Clone for LogEntry

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fn clone(&self) -> LogEntry

Returns a copy of the value. Read more
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fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)

Performs copy-assignment from source. Read more
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impl Debug for LogEntry

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fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more
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impl Default for LogEntry

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fn default() -> Self

Returns the “default value” for a type. Read more
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impl Message for LogEntry

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fn encoded_len(&self) -> usize

Returns the encoded length of the message without a length delimiter.
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fn clear(&mut self)

Clears the message, resetting all fields to their default.
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fn encode(&self, buf: &mut impl BufMut) -> Result<(), EncodeError>
where Self: Sized,

Encodes the message to a buffer. Read more
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fn encode_to_vec(&self) -> Vec<u8>
where Self: Sized,

Encodes the message to a newly allocated buffer.
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fn encode_length_delimited( &self, buf: &mut impl BufMut, ) -> Result<(), EncodeError>
where Self: Sized,

Encodes the message with a length-delimiter to a buffer. Read more
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fn encode_length_delimited_to_vec(&self) -> Vec<u8>
where Self: Sized,

Encodes the message with a length-delimiter to a newly allocated buffer.
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fn decode(buf: impl Buf) -> Result<Self, DecodeError>
where Self: Default,

Decodes an instance of the message from a buffer. Read more
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fn decode_length_delimited(buf: impl Buf) -> Result<Self, DecodeError>
where Self: Default,

Decodes a length-delimited instance of the message from the buffer.
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fn merge(&mut self, buf: impl Buf) -> Result<(), DecodeError>
where Self: Sized,

Decodes an instance of the message from a buffer, and merges it into self. Read more
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fn merge_length_delimited(&mut self, buf: impl Buf) -> Result<(), DecodeError>
where Self: Sized,

Decodes a length-delimited instance of the message from buffer, and merges it into self.
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impl PartialEq for LogEntry

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fn eq(&self, other: &LogEntry) -> bool

Tests for self and other values to be equal, and is used by ==.
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fn ne(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool

Tests for !=. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
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impl StructuralPartialEq for LogEntry

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impl<T> Any for T
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fn type_id(&self) -> TypeId

Gets the TypeId of self. Read more
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where T: ?Sized,

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fn borrow(&self) -> &T

Immutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
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fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T

Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
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impl<T> CloneToUninit for T
where T: Clone,

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unsafe fn clone_to_uninit(&self, dst: *mut u8)

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (clone_to_uninit)
Performs copy-assignment from self to dst. Read more
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impl<T> From<T> for T

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fn from(t: T) -> T

Returns the argument unchanged.

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impl<T> Instrument for T

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fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>

Instruments this type with the provided Span, returning an Instrumented wrapper. Read more
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fn in_current_span(self) -> Instrumented<Self>

Instruments this type with the current Span, returning an Instrumented wrapper. Read more
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impl<T, U> Into<U> for T
where U: From<T>,

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fn into(self) -> U

Calls U::from(self).

That is, this conversion is whatever the implementation of From<T> for U chooses to do.

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impl<T> IntoRequest<T> for T

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fn into_request(self) -> Request<T>

Wrap the input message T in a tonic::Request
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impl<T> ToOwned for T
where T: Clone,

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type Owned = T

The resulting type after obtaining ownership.
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fn to_owned(&self) -> T

Creates owned data from borrowed data, usually by cloning. Read more
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impl<T, U> TryFrom<U> for T
where U: Into<T>,

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type Error = Infallible

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
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Performs the conversion.
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impl<T, U> TryInto<U> for T
where U: TryFrom<T>,

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type Error = <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error

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