Serilog's support for structured data makes it a great way to collect timing information. It's easy to get started with in development, because the timings are printed to the same output as other log messages (the console, files, etc.) so a metrics server doesn't have to be available all the time.
Serilog Timings is built with some specific requirements in mind:
- One operation produces exactly one log event (events are raised at the completion of an operation)
- Natural and fully-templated messages
- Events for a single operation have a single event type, across both success and failure cases (only the logging level and
Outcome
properties change)
This keeps noise in the log to a minimum, and makes it easy to extract and manipulate timing information on a per-operation basis.
Important
SerilogTimings is maintained, but "done". Its simple, lightweight, portable, opinionated API is considered a feature, and it's unlikely any further changes will
be made. For integration with .NET's tracing system, including out-of-the-box support for ASP.NET Core, HttpClient
, and SqlClient
tracing, check out
SerilogTracing, the logical successor to SerilogTimings, influenced strongly by the SerilogTimings API. Read
this migration guide if you're interested in porting an existing codebase to the new library.
The library is published as SerilogTimings on NuGet.
Install-Package SerilogTimings -DependencyVersion Highest
The package works on all currently-supported .NET versions.
Before your timings will go anywhere, install and configure Serilog.
Types are in the SerilogTimings
namespace.
using SerilogTimings;
The simplest use case is to time an operation, without explicitly recording success/failure:
using (Operation.Time("Submitting payment for {OrderId}", order.Id))
{
// Timed block of code goes here
}
At the completion of the using
block, a message will be written to the log like:
[INF] Submitting payment for order-12345 completed in 456.7 ms
The operation description passed to Time()
is a message template; the event written to the log
extends it with " {Outcome} in {Elapsed} ms"
.
- All events raised by SerilogTimings carry an
Elapsed
property in milliseconds Outcome
will always be"completed"
when theTime()
method is used
All of the properties from the description, plus the outcome and timing, will be recorded as first-class properties on the log event.
Operations that can either succeed or fail, or that produce a result, can be created with
Operation.Begin()
:
using (var op = Operation.Begin("Retrieving orders for {CustomerId}", customer.Id))
{
// Timed block of code goes here
op.Complete();
}
Using op.Complete()
will produce the same kind of result as in the first example:
[INF] Retrieving orders for customer-67890 completed in 7.8 ms
Additional methods on Operation
allow more detailed results to be captured:
op.Complete("Rows", orders.Rows.Length);
This will not change the text of the log message, but the property Rows
will be attached to it for
later filtering and analysis.
If the operation is not completed by calling Complete()
, it is assumed to have failed and a
warning-level event will be written to the log instead:
[WRN] Retrieving orders for customer-67890 abandoned in 1234.5 ms
In this case the Outcome
property will be "abandoned"
.
To suppress this message, for example when an operation turns out to be inapplicable, use
op.Cancel()
. Once Cancel()
has been called, no event will be written by the operation on
either completion or abandonment.
If a contextual ILogger
is available, the extensions methods TimeOperation()
and
BeginOperation()
can be used to write operation timings through it:
using (logger.TimeOperation("Submitting payment for {OrderId}", order.Id))
{
// Timed block of code goes here
}
These otherwise behave identically to Operation.Time()
and Operation.Begin()
.
If your application enables the Serilog LogContext
feature using Enrich.FromLogContext()
on
the LoggerConfiguration
, Serilog Timings will add an OperationId
property to all events inside
timing blocks automatically.
This is highly recommended, because it makes it much easier to trace from a timing result back through the operation that raised it.
Timings are most useful in production, so timing events are recorded at the Information
level and
higher, which should generally be collected all the time.
If you truly need Verbose
- or Debug
-level timings, you can trigger them with Operation.At()
or
the OperationAt()
extension method on ILogger
:
using (Operation.At(LogEventLevel.Debug).Time("Preparing zip archive"))
{
// ...
When a level is specified, both completion and abandonment events will use it. To configure a different
abandonment level, pass the second optional parameter to the At()
method.
One important usage note: because the event is not written until the completion of the using
block
(or call to Complete()
), arguments to Begin()
or Time()
are not captured until then; don't
pass parameters to these methods that mutate during the operation.
SerilogMetrics is a mature metrics solution for Serilog that includes timings as well as counters, gauges and more. Serilog Timings is an alternative implementation of timings only, designed with some different stylistic preferences and goals. You should definitely check out SerilogMetrics as well, to see if it's more to your tastes!