Logging in .NET Core and ASP.NET Core

Note

This isn't the latest version of this article. For the current release, see the .NET 9 version of this article.

Warning

This version of ASP.NET Core is no longer supported. For more information, see the .NET and .NET Core Support Policy. For the current release, see the .NET 9 version of this article.

Important

This information relates to a pre-release product that may be substantially modified before it's commercially released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.

For the current release, see the .NET 9 version of this article.

By Kirk Larkin, Juergen Gutsch, and Rick Anderson

This article describes logging in .NET as it applies to ASP.NET Core apps. For detailed information on logging in .NET, see Logging in .NET.

For Blazor logging guidance, which adds to or supersedes the guidance in this node, see ASP.NET Core Blazor logging.

Logging providers

Logging providers store logs, except for the Console provider which displays logs. For example, the Azure Application Insights provider stores logs in Azure Application Insights. Multiple providers can be enabled.

The default ASP.NET Core web app templates call WebApplication.CreateBuilder, which adds the following logging providers:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

builder.Services.AddRazorPages();

var app = builder.Build();

if (!app.Environment.IsDevelopment())
{
    app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
    app.UseHsts();
}

app.UseHttpsRedirection();
app.UseStaticFiles();

app.UseRouting();

app.UseAuthorization();

app.MapRazorPages();

app.Run();

The preceding code shows the Program.cs file created with the ASP.NET Core web app templates. The next several sections provide samples based on the ASP.NET Core web app templates.

The following code overrides the default set of logging providers added by WebApplication.CreateBuilder:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
builder.Logging.ClearProviders();
builder.Logging.AddConsole();

builder.Services.AddRazorPages();

var app = builder.Build();

if (!app.Environment.IsDevelopment())
{
    app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
    app.UseHsts();
}

app.UseHttpsRedirection();
app.UseStaticFiles();

app.UseRouting();

app.UseAuthorization();

app.MapRazorPages();

app.Run();

Alternatively, the preceding logging code can be written as follows:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder();
builder.Host.ConfigureLogging(logging =>
{
    logging.ClearProviders();
    logging.AddConsole();
});

For additional providers, see:

Create logs

To create logs, use an ILogger<TCategoryName> object from dependency injection (DI).

The following example:

  • Creates a logger, ILogger<AboutModel>, which uses a log category of the fully qualified name of the type AboutModel. The log category is a string that is associated with each log.
  • Calls LogInformation to log at the Information level. The Log level indicates the severity of the logged event.
public class AboutModel : PageModel
{
    private readonly ILogger _logger;

    public AboutModel(ILogger<AboutModel> logger)
    {
        _logger = logger;
    }

    public void OnGet()
    {
        _logger.LogInformation("About page visited at {DT}", 
            DateTime.UtcNow.ToLongTimeString());
    }
}

Levels and categories are explained in more detail later in this document.

For information on Blazor, see ASP.NET Core Blazor logging.

Configure logging

Logging configuration is commonly provided by the Logging section of appsettings.{ENVIRONMENT}.json files, where the {ENVIRONMENT} placeholder is the environment. The following appsettings.Development.json file is generated by the ASP.NET Core web app templates:

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": {
      "Default": "Information",
      "Microsoft.AspNetCore": "Warning"
    }
  }
}

In the preceding JSON:

  • The "Default" and "Microsoft.AspNetCore" categories are specified.
  • The "Microsoft.AspNetCore" category applies to all categories that start with "Microsoft.AspNetCore". For example, this setting applies to the "Microsoft.AspNetCore.Routing.EndpointMiddleware" category.
  • The "Microsoft.AspNetCore" category logs at log level Warning and higher.
  • A specific log provider is not specified, so LogLevel applies to all the enabled logging providers except for the Windows EventLog.

The Logging property can have LogLevel and log provider properties. The LogLevel specifies the minimum level to log for selected categories. In the preceding JSON, Information and Warning log levels are specified. LogLevel indicates the severity of the log and ranges from 0 to 6:

Trace = 0, Debug = 1, Information = 2, Warning = 3, Error = 4, Critical = 5, and None = 6.

When a LogLevel is specified, logging is enabled for messages at the specified level and higher. In the preceding JSON, the Default category is logged for Information and higher. For example, Information, Warning, Error, and Critical messages are logged. If no LogLevel is specified, logging defaults to the Information level. For more information, see Log levels.

A provider property can specify a LogLevel property. LogLevel under a provider specifies levels to log for that provider, and overrides the non-provider log settings. Consider the following appsettings.json file:

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": { // All providers, LogLevel applies to all the enabled providers.
      "Default": "Error", // Default logging, Error and higher.
      "Microsoft": "Warning" // All Microsoft* categories, Warning and higher.
    },
    "Debug": { // Debug provider.
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Information", // Overrides preceding LogLevel:Default setting.
        "Microsoft.Hosting": "Trace" // Debug:Microsoft.Hosting category.
      }
    },
    "EventSource": { // EventSource provider
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Warning" // All categories of EventSource provider.
      }
    }
  }
}

Settings in Logging.{PROVIDER NAME}.LogLevel override settings in Logging.LogLevel, where the {PROVIDER NAME} placeholder is the provider name. In the preceding JSON, the Debug provider's default log level is set to Information:

Logging:Debug:LogLevel:Default:Information

The preceding setting specifies the Information log level for every Logging:Debug: category except Microsoft.Hosting. When a specific category is listed, the specific category overrides the default category. In the preceding JSON, the Logging:Debug:LogLevel categories "Microsoft.Hosting" and "Default" override the settings in Logging:LogLevel.

The minimum log level can be specified for any of:

  • Specific providers: For example, Logging:EventSource:LogLevel:Default:Information
  • Specific categories: For example, Logging:LogLevel:Microsoft:Warning
  • All providers and all categories: Logging:LogLevel:Default:Warning

Any logs below the minimum level are not:

  • Passed to the provider.
  • Logged or displayed.

To suppress all logs, specify LogLevel.None. LogLevel.None has a value of 6, which is higher than LogLevel.Critical (5).

If a provider supports log scopes, IncludeScopes indicates whether they're enabled. For more information, see log scopes.

The following appsettings.json file contains all the providers enabled by default:

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": { // No provider, LogLevel applies to all the enabled providers.
      "Default": "Error",
      "Microsoft": "Warning",
      "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime": "Warning"
    },
    "Debug": { // Debug provider.
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Information" // Overrides preceding LogLevel:Default setting.
      }
    },
    "Console": {
      "IncludeScopes": true,
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Razor.Internal": "Warning",
        "Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Razor.Razor": "Debug",
        "Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Razor": "Error",
        "Default": "Information"
      }
    },
    "EventSource": {
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft": "Information"
      }
    },
    "EventLog": {
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft": "Information"
      }
    },
    "AzureAppServicesFile": {
      "IncludeScopes": true,
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Warning"
      }
    },
    "AzureAppServicesBlob": {
      "IncludeScopes": true,
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft": "Information"
      }
    },
    "ApplicationInsights": {
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Information"
      }
    }
  }
}

In the preceding sample:

  • The categories and levels aren't suggested values. The sample is provided to show all of the default providers.
  • Settings in Logging.{PROVIDER NAME}.LogLevel override settings in Logging.LogLevel, where the {PROVIDER NAME} placeholder is the provider name. For example, the level in Debug.LogLevel.Default overrides the level in LogLevel.Default.
  • Each default provider alias is used. Each provider defines an alias that can be used in configuration in place of the fully qualified type name. The built-in providers aliases are:
    • Console
    • Debug
    • EventSource
    • EventLog
    • AzureAppServicesFile
    • AzureAppServicesBlob
    • ApplicationInsights

Log in Program.cs

The following example calls Builder.WebApplication.Logger in Program.cs and logs informational messages:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
var app = builder.Build();
app.Logger.LogInformation("Adding Routes");
app.MapGet("/", () => "Hello World!");
app.Logger.LogInformation("Starting the app");
app.Run();

The following example calls AddConsole in Program.cs and logs the /Test endpoint:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

builder.Logging.AddConsole();

var app = builder.Build();

app.MapGet("/", () => "Hello World!");

app.MapGet("/Test", async (ILogger<Program> logger, HttpResponse response) =>
{
    logger.LogInformation("Testing logging in Program.cs");
    await response.WriteAsync("Testing");
});

app.Run();

The following example calls AddSimpleConsole in Program.cs, disables color output, and logs the /Test endpoint:

using Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.Console;

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

builder.Logging.AddSimpleConsole(i => i.ColorBehavior = LoggerColorBehavior.Disabled);

var app = builder.Build();

app.MapGet("/", () => "Hello World!");

app.MapGet("/Test", async (ILogger<Program> logger, HttpResponse response) =>
{
    logger.LogInformation("Testing logging in Program.cs");
    await response.WriteAsync("Testing");
});

app.Run();

Set log level by command line, environment variables, and other configuration

Log level can be set by any of the configuration providers.

The : separator doesn't work with environment variable hierarchical keys on all platforms. For example, the : separator is not supported by Bash. The double underscore, __, is:

  • Supported by all platforms.
  • Automatically replaced by a colon, :.

The following commands:

  • Set the environment key Logging:LogLevel:Microsoft to a value of Information on Windows.
  • Test the settings when using an app created with the ASP.NET Core web application templates. The dotnet run command must be run in the project directory after using set.
set Logging__LogLevel__Microsoft=Information
dotnet run

The preceding environment setting:

  • Is only set in processes launched from the command window they were set in.
  • Isn't read by browsers launched with Visual Studio.

The following setx command also sets the environment key and value on Windows. Unlike set, setx settings are persisted. The /M switch sets the variable in the system environment. If /M isn't used, a user environment variable is set.

setx Logging__LogLevel__Microsoft Information /M

Consider the following appsettings.json file:

"Logging": {
  "Console": {
    "LogLevel": {
      "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime": "Trace"
    }
  }
}

The following command sets the preceding configuration in the environment:

setx Logging__Console__LogLevel__Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime Trace /M

Note

When configuring environment variables with names that contain . (periods) in macOS and Linux, consider the "Exporting a variable with a dot (.) in it" question on Stack Exchange and its corresponding accepted answer.

On Azure App Service, select New application setting on the Settings > Configuration page. Azure App Service application settings are:

  • Encrypted at rest and transmitted over an encrypted channel.
  • Exposed as environment variables.

For more information, see Azure Apps: Override app configuration using the Azure portal.

For more information on setting ASP.NET Core configuration values using environment variables, see environment variables. For information on using other configuration sources, including the command line, Azure Key Vault, Azure App Configuration, other file formats, and more, see Configuration in ASP.NET Core.

How filtering rules are applied

When an ILogger<TCategoryName> object is created, the ILoggerFactory object selects a single rule per provider to apply to that logger. All messages written by an ILogger instance are filtered based on the selected rules. The most specific rule for each provider and category pair is selected from the available rules.

The following algorithm is used for each provider when an ILogger is created for a given category:

  • Select all rules that match the provider or its alias. If no match is found, select all rules with an empty provider.
  • From the result of the preceding step, select rules with longest matching category prefix. If no match is found, select all rules that don't specify a category.
  • If multiple rules are selected, take the last one.
  • If no rules are selected, use MinimumLevel.

Logging output from dotnet run and Visual Studio

Logs created with the default logging providers are displayed:

  • In Visual Studio
    • In the Debug output window when debugging.
    • In the ASP.NET Core Web Server window.
  • In the console window when the app is run with dotnet run.

Logs that begin with "Microsoft" categories are from .NET. .NET and application code use the same logging API and providers.

Log category

When an ILogger object is created, a category is specified. That category is included with each log message created by that instance of ILogger. The category string is arbitrary, but the convention is to use the fully qualified class name. For example, in a controller the name might be "TodoApi.Controllers.TodoController". The ASP.NET Core web apps use ILogger<T> to automatically get an ILogger instance that uses the fully qualified type name of T as the category:

public class PrivacyModel : PageModel
{
    private readonly ILogger<PrivacyModel> _logger;

    public PrivacyModel(ILogger<PrivacyModel> logger)
    {
        _logger = logger;
    }

    public void OnGet()
    {
        _logger.LogInformation("GET Pages.PrivacyModel called.");
    }
}

If further categorization is desired, the convention is to use a hierarchical name by appending a subcategory to the fully qualified class name, and explicitly specify the category using ILoggerFactory.CreateLogger:

public class ContactModel : PageModel
{
    private readonly ILogger _logger;

    public ContactModel(ILoggerFactory logger)
    {
        _logger = logger.CreateLogger("TodoApi.Pages.ContactModel.MyCategory");
    }

    public void OnGet()
    {
        _logger.LogInformation("GET Pages.ContactModel called.");
    }

Calling CreateLogger with a fixed name can be useful when used in multiple methods so the events can be organized by category.

ILogger<T> is equivalent to calling CreateLogger with the fully qualified type name of T.

Log level

The following table lists the LogLevel values, the convenience Log{LogLevel} extension method, and the suggested usage:

LogLevel Value Method Description
Trace 0 LogTrace Contain the most detailed messages. These messages may contain sensitive app data. These messages are disabled by default and should not be enabled in production.
Debug 1 LogDebug For debugging and development. Use with caution in production due to the high volume.
Information 2 LogInformation Tracks the general flow of the app. May have long-term value.
Warning 3 LogWarning For abnormal or unexpected events. Typically includes errors or conditions that don't cause the app to fail.
Error 4 LogError For errors and exceptions that cannot be handled. These messages indicate a failure in the current operation or request, not an app-wide failure.
Critical 5 LogCritical For failures that require immediate attention. Examples: data loss scenarios, out of disk space.
None 6 Specifies that a logging category shouldn't write messages.

In the previous table, the LogLevel is listed from lowest to highest severity.

The Log method's first parameter, LogLevel, indicates the severity of the log. Rather than calling Log(LogLevel, ...), most developers call the Log{LOG LEVEL} extension methods, where the {LOG LEVEL} placeholder is the log level. For example, the following two logging calls are functionally equivalent and produce the same log:

[HttpGet]
public IActionResult Test1(int id)
{
    var routeInfo = ControllerContext.ToCtxString(id);

    _logger.Log(LogLevel.Information, MyLogEvents.TestItem, routeInfo);
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.TestItem, routeInfo);

    return ControllerContext.MyDisplayRouteInfo();
}

MyLogEvents.TestItem is the event ID. MyLogEvents is part of the sample app and is displayed in the Log event ID section.

MyDisplayRouteInfo and ToCtxString are provided by the Rick.Docs.Samples.RouteInfo NuGet package. The methods display Controller and Razor Page route information.

The following code creates Information and Warning logs:

[HttpGet("{id}")]
public async Task<ActionResult<TodoItemDTO>> GetTodoItem(long id)
{
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.GetItem, "Getting item {Id}", id);

    var todoItem = await _context.TodoItems.FindAsync(id);

    if (todoItem == null)
    {
        _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, "Get({Id}) NOT FOUND", id);
        return NotFound();
    }

    return ItemToDTO(todoItem);
}

In the preceding code, the first Log{LOG LEVEL} parameter,MyLogEvents.GetItem, is the Log event ID. The second parameter is a message template with placeholders for argument values provided by the remaining method parameters. The method parameters are explained in the message template section later in this document.

Call the appropriate Log{LOG LEVEL} method to control how much log output is written to a particular storage medium. For example:

  • In production:
    • Logging at the Trace, Debug, or Information levels produces a high-volume of detailed log messages. To control costs and not exceed data storage limits, log Trace, Debug, or Information level messages to a high-volume, low-cost data store. Consider limiting Trace, Debug, or Information to specific categories.
    • Logging at Warning through Critical levels should produce few log messages.
      • Costs and storage limits usually aren't a concern.
      • Few logs allow more flexibility in data store choices.
  • In development:
    • Set to Warning.
    • Add Trace, Debug, or Information messages when troubleshooting. To limit output, set Trace, Debug, or Information only for the categories under investigation.

ASP.NET Core writes logs for framework events. For example, consider the log output for:

  • A Razor Pages app created with the ASP.NET Core templates.
  • Logging set to Logging:Console:LogLevel:Microsoft:Information.
  • Navigation to the Privacy page:
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting.Diagnostics[1]
      Request starting HTTP/2 GET https://localhost:5001/Privacy
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Routing.EndpointMiddleware[0]
      Executing endpoint '/Privacy'
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[3]
      Route matched with {page = "/Privacy"}. Executing page /Privacy
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[101]
      Executing handler method DefaultRP.Pages.PrivacyModel.OnGet - ModelState is Valid
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[102]
      Executed handler method OnGet, returned result .
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[103]
      Executing an implicit handler method - ModelState is Valid
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[104]
      Executed an implicit handler method, returned result Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.PageResult.
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[4]
      Executed page /Privacy in 74.5188ms
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Routing.EndpointMiddleware[1]
      Executed endpoint '/Privacy'
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting.Diagnostics[2]
      Request finished in 149.3023ms 200 text/html; charset=utf-8

The following JSON sets Logging:Console:LogLevel:Microsoft:Information:

{
  "Logging": {      // Default, all providers.
    "LogLevel": {
      "Microsoft": "Warning"
    },
    "Console": { // Console provider.
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft": "Information"
      }
    }
  }
}

Log event ID

Each log can specify an event ID. The sample app uses the MyLogEvents class to define event IDs:

public class MyLogEvents
{
    public const int GenerateItems = 1000;
    public const int ListItems     = 1001;
    public const int GetItem       = 1002;
    public const int InsertItem    = 1003;
    public const int UpdateItem    = 1004;
    public const int DeleteItem    = 1005;

    public const int TestItem      = 3000;

    public const int GetItemNotFound    = 4000;
    public const int UpdateItemNotFound = 4001;
}
[HttpGet("{id}")]
public async Task<ActionResult<TodoItemDTO>> GetTodoItem(long id)
{
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.GetItem, "Getting item {Id}", id);

    var todoItem = await _context.TodoItems.FindAsync(id);

    if (todoItem == null)
    {
        _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, "Get({Id}) NOT FOUND", id);
        return NotFound();
    }

    return ItemToDTO(todoItem);
}

An event ID associates a set of events. For example, all logs related to displaying a list of items on a page might be 1001.

The logging provider may store the event ID in an ID field, in the logging message, or not at all. The Debug provider doesn't show event IDs. The console provider shows event IDs in brackets after the category:

info: TodoApi.Controllers.TodoItemsController[1002]
      Getting item 1
warn: TodoApi.Controllers.TodoItemsController[4000]
      Get(1) NOT FOUND

Some logging providers store the event ID in a field, which allows for filtering on the ID.

Log message template

Each log API uses a message template. The message template can contain placeholders for which arguments are provided. Use names for the placeholders, not numbers.

[HttpGet("{id}")]
public async Task<ActionResult<TodoItemDTO>> GetTodoItem(long id)
{
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.GetItem, "Getting item {Id}", id);

    var todoItem = await _context.TodoItems.FindAsync(id);

    if (todoItem == null)
    {
        _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, "Get({Id}) NOT FOUND", id);
        return NotFound();
    }

    return ItemToDTO(todoItem);
}

The order of the parameters, not their placeholder names, determines which parameters are used to provide placeholder values in log messages. In the following code, the parameter names are out of sequence in the placeholders of the message template:

var apples = 1;
var pears = 2;
var bananas = 3;

_logger.LogInformation("Parameters: {Pears}, {Bananas}, {Apples}", apples, pears, bananas);

However, the parameters are assigned to the placeholders in the order: apples, pears, bananas. The log message reflects the order of the parameters:

Parameters: 1, 2, 3

This approach allows logging providers to implement semantic or structured logging. The arguments themselves are passed to the logging system, not just the formatted message template. This enables logging providers to store the parameter values as fields. For example, consider the following logger method:

_logger.LogInformation("Getting item {Id} at {RequestTime}", id, DateTime.Now);

For example, when logging to Azure Table Storage:

  • Each Azure Table entity can have ID and RequestTime properties.
  • Tables with properties simplify queries on logged data. For example, a query can find all logs within a particular RequestTime range without having to parse the time out of the text message.

Log exceptions

The logger methods have overloads that take an exception parameter:

[HttpGet("{id}")]
public IActionResult TestExp(int id)
{
    var routeInfo = ControllerContext.ToCtxString(id);
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.TestItem, routeInfo);

    try
    {
        if (id == 3)
        {
            throw new Exception("Test exception");
        }
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, ex, "TestExp({Id})", id);
        return NotFound();
    }

    return ControllerContext.MyDisplayRouteInfo();
}

MyDisplayRouteInfo and ToCtxString are provided by the Rick.Docs.Samples.RouteInfo NuGet package. The methods display Controller and Razor Page route information.

Exception logging is provider-specific.

Default log level

If the default log level is not set, the default log level value is Information.

For example, consider the following web app:

  • Created with the ASP.NET web app templates.
  • appsettings.json and appsettings.Development.json deleted or renamed.

With the preceding setup, navigating to the privacy or home page produces many Trace, Debug, and Information messages with Microsoft in the category name.

The following code sets the default log level when the default log level is not set in configuration:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder();
builder.Logging.SetMinimumLevel(LogLevel.Warning);

Generally, log levels should be specified in configuration and not code.

Filter function

A filter function is invoked for all providers and categories that don't have rules assigned to them by configuration or code:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder();
builder.Logging.AddFilter((provider, category, logLevel) =>
{
    if (provider.Contains("ConsoleLoggerProvider")
        && category.Contains("Controller")
        && logLevel >= LogLevel.Information)
    {
        return true;
    }
    else if (provider.Contains("ConsoleLoggerProvider")
        && category.Contains("Microsoft")
        && logLevel >= LogLevel.Information)
    {
        return true;
    }
    else
    {
        return false;
    }
});

The preceding code displays console logs when the category contains Controller or Microsoft and the log level is Information or higher.

Generally, log levels should be specified in configuration and not code.

ASP.NET Core categories

The following table contains some categories used by ASP.NET Core.

Category Notes
Microsoft.AspNetCore General ASP.NET Core diagnostics.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.DataProtection Which keys were considered, found, and used.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.HostFiltering Hosts allowed.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting How long HTTP requests took to complete and what time they started. Which hosting startup assemblies were loaded.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc MVC and Razor diagnostics. Model binding, filter execution, view compilation, action selection.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Routing Route matching information.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Server Connection start, stop, and keep alive responses. HTTPS certificate information.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.StaticFiles Files served.

To view more categories in the console window, set appsettings.Development.json to the following:

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": {
      "Default": "Information",
      "Microsoft": "Trace",
      "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime": "Information"
    }
  }
}

For a list of Entity Framework categories, see EF Message categories.

Log scopes

A scope can group a set of logical operations. This grouping can be used to attach the same data to each log that's created as part of a set. For example, every log created as part of processing a transaction can include the transaction ID.

A scope:

The following providers support scopes:

Use a scope by wrapping logger calls in a using block:

[HttpGet("{id}")]
public async Task<ActionResult<TodoItemDTO>> GetTodoItem(long id)
{
    TodoItem todoItem;
    var transactionId = Guid.NewGuid().ToString();
    using (_logger.BeginScope(new List<KeyValuePair<string, object>>
        {
            new KeyValuePair<string, object>("TransactionId", transactionId),
        }))
    {
        _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.GetItem, "Getting item {Id}", id);

        todoItem = await _context.TodoItems.FindAsync(id);

        if (todoItem == null)
        {
            _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, 
                "Get({Id}) NOT FOUND", id);
            return NotFound();
        }
    }

    return ItemToDTO(todoItem);
}

Built-in logging providers

ASP.NET Core includes the following logging providers as part of the shared framework:

The following logging providers are shipped by Microsoft, but not as part of the shared framework. They must be installed as additional nuget.

ASP.NET Core doesn't include a logging provider for writing logs to files. To write logs to files from an ASP.NET Core app, consider using a third-party logging provider.

For information on stdout and debug logging with the ASP.NET Core Module, see Troubleshoot ASP.NET Core on Azure App Service and IIS and ASP.NET Core Module (ANCM) for IIS.

Console

The Console provider logs output to the console. For more information on viewing Console logs in development, see Logging output from dotnet run and Visual Studio.

Debug

The Debug provider writes log output by using the System.Diagnostics.Debug class. Calls to System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine write to the Debug provider.

On Linux, the Debug provider log location is distribution-dependent and may be one of the following:

  • /var/log/message
  • /var/log/syslog

Event Source

The EventSource provider writes to a cross-platform event source with the name Microsoft-Extensions-Logging. On Windows, the provider uses ETW.

dotnet-trace tooling

The dotnet-trace tool is a cross-platform CLI global tool that enables the collection of .NET Core traces of a running process. The tool collects Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.EventSource provider data using a LoggingEventSource.

For installation instructions, see dotnet-trace.

Use the dotnet-trace tooling to collect a trace from an app:

  1. Run the app with the dotnet run command.

  2. Determine the process identifier (PID) of the .NET Core app:

    dotnet-trace ps
    

    Find the PID for the process that has the same name as the app's assembly.

  3. Execute the dotnet-trace command.

    General command syntax:

    dotnet-trace collect -p {PID} 
        --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:{Keyword}:{Provider Level}
            :FilterSpecs=\"
                {Logger Category 1}:{Category Level 1};
                {Logger Category 2}:{Category Level 2};
                ...
                {Logger Category N}:{Category Level N}\"
    

    When using a PowerShell command shell, enclose the --providers value in single quotes ('):

    dotnet-trace collect -p {PID} 
        --providers 'Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:{Keyword}:{Provider Level}
            :FilterSpecs=\"
                {Logger Category 1}:{Category Level 1};
                {Logger Category 2}:{Category Level 2};
                ...
                {Logger Category N}:{Category Level N}\"'
    

    On non-Windows platforms, add the -f speedscope option to change the format of the output trace file to speedscope.

    The following table defines the Keyword:

    Keyword Description
    1 Log meta events about the LoggingEventSource. Doesn't log events from ILogger.
    2 Turns on the Message event when ILogger.Log() is called. Provides information in a programmatic (not formatted) way.
    4 Turns on the FormatMessage event when ILogger.Log() is called. Provides the formatted string version of the information.
    8 Turns on the MessageJson event when ILogger.Log() is called. Provides a JSON representation of the arguments.

    The following table lists the provider levels:

    Provider Level Description
    0 LogAlways
    1 Critical
    2 Error
    3 Warning
    4 Informational
    5 Verbose

    The parsing for a category level can be either a string or a number:

    Category named value Numeric value
    Trace 0
    Debug 1
    Information 2
    Warning 3
    Error 4
    Critical 5

    The provider level and category level:

    • Are in reverse order.
    • The string constants aren't all identical.

    If no FilterSpecs are specified then the EventSourceLogger implementation attempts to convert the provider level to a category level and applies it to all categories.

    Provider Level Category Level
    Verbose(5) Debug(1)
    Informational(4) Information(2)
    Warning(3) Warning(3)
    Error(2) Error(4)
    Critical(1) Critical(5)

    If FilterSpecs are provided, any category that is included in the list uses the category level encoded there, all other categories are filtered out.

    The following examples assume:

    • An app is running and calling logger.LogDebug("12345").
    • The process ID (PID) has been set via set PID=12345, where 12345 is the actual PID.

    Consider the following command:

    dotnet-trace collect -p %PID% --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:5
    

    The preceding command:

    • Captures debug messages.
    • Doesn't apply a FilterSpecs.
    • Specifies level 5 which maps category Debug.

    Consider the following command:

    dotnet-trace collect -p %PID%  --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:5:\"FilterSpecs=*:5\"
    

    The preceding command:

    • Doesn't capture debug messages because the category level 5 is Critical.
    • Provides a FilterSpecs.

    The following command captures debug messages because category level 1 specifies Debug.

    dotnet-trace collect -p %PID%  --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:5:\"FilterSpecs=*:1\"
    

    The following command captures debug messages because category specifies Debug.

    dotnet-trace collect -p %PID%  --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:5:\"FilterSpecs=*:Debug\"
    

    FilterSpecs entries for {Logger Category} and {Category Level} represent additional log filtering conditions. Separate FilterSpecs entries with the ; semicolon character.

    Example using a Windows command shell:

    dotnet-trace collect -p %PID% --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:2:FilterSpecs=\"Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting*:4\"
    

    The preceding command activates:

    • The Event Source logger to produce formatted strings (4) for errors (2).
    • Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting logging at the Informational logging level (4).
  4. Stop the dotnet-trace tooling by pressing the Enter key or Ctrl+C.

    The trace is saved with the name trace.nettrace in the folder where the dotnet-trace command is executed.

  5. Open the trace with Perfview. Open the trace.nettrace file and explore the trace events.

If the app doesn't build the host with WebApplication.CreateBuilder, add the Event Source provider to the app's logging configuration.

For more information, see:

Perfview

Use the PerfView utility to collect and view logs. There are other tools for viewing ETW logs, but PerfView provides the best experience for working with the ETW events emitted by ASP.NET Core.

To configure PerfView for collecting events logged by this provider, add the string *Microsoft-Extensions-Logging to the Additional Providers list. Don't miss the * at the start of the string.

Windows EventLog

The EventLog provider sends log output to the Windows Event Log. Unlike the other providers, the EventLog provider does not inherit the default non-provider settings. If EventLog log settings aren't specified, they default to LogLevel.Warning.

To log events lower than LogLevel.Warning, explicitly set the log level. The following example sets the Event Log default log level to LogLevel.Information:

"Logging": {
  "EventLog": {
    "LogLevel": {
      "Default": "Information"
    }
  }
}

AddEventLog overloads can pass in EventLogSettings. If null or not specified, the following default settings are used:

  • LogName: "Application"
  • SourceName: ".NET Runtime"
  • MachineName: The local machine name is used.

The following code changes the SourceName from the default value of ".NET Runtime" to MyLogs:


var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder();
builder.Logging.AddEventLog(eventLogSettings =>
{
    eventLogSettings.SourceName = "MyLogs";
});

Azure App Service

The Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.AzureAppServices provider package writes logs to text files in an Azure App Service app's file system and to blob storage in an Azure Storage account.

The provider package isn't included in the shared framework. To use the provider, add the provider package to the project.

To configure provider settings, use AzureFileLoggerOptions and AzureBlobLoggerOptions, as shown in the following example:

using Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.AzureAppServices;

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder();
builder.Logging.AddAzureWebAppDiagnostics();
builder.Services.Configure<AzureFileLoggerOptions>(options =>
{
    options.FileName = "azure-diagnostics-";
    options.FileSizeLimit = 50 * 1024;
    options.RetainedFileCountLimit = 5;
});
builder.Services.Configure<AzureBlobLoggerOptions>(options =>
{
    options.BlobName = "log.txt";
});

When deployed to Azure App Service, the app uses the settings in the App Service logs section of the App Service page of the Azure portal. When the following settings are updated, the changes take effect immediately without requiring a restart or redeployment of the app.

  • Application Logging (Filesystem)
  • Application Logging (Blob)

The default location for log files is in the D:\\home\\LogFiles\\Application folder, and the default file name is diagnostics-yyyymmdd.txt. The default file size limit is 10 MB, and the default maximum number of files retained is 2. The default blob name is {app-name}{timestamp}/yyyy/mm/dd/hh/{guid}-applicationLog.txt.

This provider only logs when the project runs in the Azure environment.

Azure log streaming

Azure log streaming supports viewing log activity in real time from:

  • The app server
  • The web server
  • Failed request tracing

To configure Azure log streaming:

  • Navigate to the App Service logs page from the app's portal page.
  • Set Application Logging (Filesystem) to On.
  • Choose the log Level. This setting only applies to Azure log streaming.

Navigate to the Log Stream page to view logs. The logged messages are logged with the ILogger interface.

Azure Application Insights

The Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.ApplicationInsights provider package writes logs to Azure Application Insights. Application Insights is a service that monitors a web app and provides tools for querying and analyzing the telemetry data. If you use this provider, you can query and analyze your logs by using the Application Insights tools.

The logging provider is included as a dependency of Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.AspNetCore, which is the package that provides all available telemetry for ASP.NET Core. If you use this package, you don't have to install the provider package.

The Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.Web package is for ASP.NET 4.x, not ASP.NET Core.

For more information, see the following resources:

Third-party logging providers

Third-party logging frameworks that work with ASP.NET Core:

Some third-party frameworks can perform semantic logging, also known as structured logging.

Using a third-party framework is similar to using one of the built-in providers:

  1. Add a NuGet package to your project.
  2. Call an ILoggerFactory extension method provided by the logging framework.

For more information, see each provider's documentation. Third-party logging providers aren't supported by Microsoft.

No asynchronous logger methods

Logging should be so fast that it isn't worth the performance cost of asynchronous code. If a logging data store is slow, don't write to it directly. Consider writing the log messages to a fast store initially, then moving them to the slow store later. For example, when logging to SQL Server, don't do so directly in a Log method, since the Log methods are synchronous. Instead, synchronously add log messages to an in-memory queue and have a background worker pull the messages out of the queue to do the asynchronous work of pushing data to SQL Server. For more information, see Guidance on how to log to a message queue for slow data stores (dotnet/AspNetCore.Docs #11801).

Change log levels in a running app

The Logging API doesn't include a scenario to change log levels while an app is running. However, some configuration providers are capable of reloading configuration, which takes immediate effect on logging configuration. For example, the File Configuration Provider, reloads logging configuration by default. If configuration is changed in code while an app is running, the app can call IConfigurationRoot.Reload to update the app's logging configuration.

ILogger and ILoggerFactory

The ILogger<TCategoryName> and ILoggerFactory interfaces and implementations are included in the .NET Core SDK. They are also available in the following NuGet packages:

Apply log filter rules in code

The preferred approach for setting log filter rules is by using Configuration.

The following example shows how to register filter rules in code:

using Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.Console;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.Debug;

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder();
builder.Logging.AddFilter("System", LogLevel.Debug);
builder.Logging.AddFilter<DebugLoggerProvider>("Microsoft", LogLevel.Information);
builder.Logging.AddFilter<ConsoleLoggerProvider>("Microsoft", LogLevel.Trace);

logging.AddFilter("System", LogLevel.Debug) specifies the System category and log level Debug. The filter is applied to all providers because a specific provider was not configured.

AddFilter<DebugLoggerProvider>("Microsoft", LogLevel.Information) specifies:

  • The Debug logging provider.
  • Log level Information and higher.
  • All categories starting with "Microsoft".

Automatically log scope with SpanId, TraceId, ParentId, Baggage, and Tags.

The logging libraries implicitly create a scope object with SpanId, TraceId, ParentId,Baggage, and Tags. This behavior is configured via ActivityTrackingOptions.

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);

builder.Logging.AddSimpleConsole(options =>
{
    options.IncludeScopes = true;
});

builder.Logging.Configure(options =>
{
    options.ActivityTrackingOptions = ActivityTrackingOptions.SpanId
                                       | ActivityTrackingOptions.TraceId
                                       | ActivityTrackingOptions.ParentId
                                       | ActivityTrackingOptions.Baggage
                                       | ActivityTrackingOptions.Tags;
});
var app = builder.Build();

app.MapGet("/", () => "Hello World!");

app.Run();

If the traceparent http request header is set, the ParentId in the log scope shows the W3C parent-id from in-bound traceparent header and the SpanId in the log scope shows the updated parent-id for the next out-bound step/span. For more information, see Mutating the traceparent Field.

Create a custom logger

To create a custom logger, see Implement a custom logging provider in .NET.

Additional resources

By Kirk Larkin, Juergen Gutsch, and Rick Anderson

This topic describes logging in .NET as it applies to ASP.NET Core apps. For detailed information on logging in .NET, see Logging in .NET. For more information on logging in Blazor apps, see ASP.NET Core Blazor logging.

View or download sample code (how to download).

Logging providers

Logging providers store logs, except for the Console provider which displays logs. For example, the Azure Application Insights provider stores logs in Azure Application Insights. Multiple providers can be enabled.

The default ASP.NET Core web app templates:

public class Program
{
    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        CreateHostBuilder(args).Build().Run();
    }

    public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args) =>
        Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
            .ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
            {
                webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
            });
}

The preceding code shows the Program class created with the ASP.NET Core web app templates. The next several sections provide samples based on the ASP.NET Core web app templates, which use the Generic Host. Non-host console apps are discussed later in this document.

To override the default set of logging providers added by Host.CreateDefaultBuilder, call ClearProviders and add the required logging providers. For example, the following code:

public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args) =>
    Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
        .ConfigureLogging(logging =>
        {
            logging.ClearProviders();
            logging.AddConsole();
        })
        .ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
        {
            webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
        });

For additional providers, see:

Create logs

To create logs, use an ILogger<TCategoryName> object from dependency injection (DI).

The following example:

  • Creates a logger, ILogger<AboutModel>, which uses a log category of the fully qualified name of the type AboutModel. The log category is a string that is associated with each log.
  • Calls LogInformation to log at the Information level. The Log level indicates the severity of the logged event.
public class AboutModel : PageModel
{
    private readonly ILogger _logger;

    public AboutModel(ILogger<AboutModel> logger)
    {
        _logger = logger;
    }
    public string Message { get; set; }

    public void OnGet()
    {
        Message = $"About page visited at {DateTime.UtcNow.ToLongTimeString()}";
        _logger.LogInformation(Message);
    }
}

Levels and categories are explained in more detail later in this document.

For information on Blazor, see ASP.NET Core Blazor logging.

Create logs in Main and Startup shows how to create logs in Main and Startup.

Configure logging

Logging configuration is commonly provided by the Logging section of appsettings.{Environment}.json files. The following appsettings.Development.json file is generated by the ASP.NET Core web app templates:

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": {
      "Default": "Information",
      "Microsoft": "Warning",
      "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime": "Information"
    }
  }
}

In the preceding JSON:

  • The "Default", "Microsoft", and "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime" categories are specified.
  • The "Microsoft" category applies to all categories that start with "Microsoft". For example, this setting applies to the "Microsoft.AspNetCore.Routing.EndpointMiddleware" category.
  • The "Microsoft" category logs at log level Warning and higher.
  • The "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime" category is more specific than the "Microsoft" category, so the "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime" category logs at log level "Information" and higher.
  • A specific log provider is not specified, so LogLevel applies to all the enabled logging providers except for the Windows EventLog.

The Logging property can have LogLevel and log provider properties. The LogLevel specifies the minimum level to log for selected categories. In the preceding JSON, Information and Warning log levels are specified. LogLevel indicates the severity of the log and ranges from 0 to 6:

Trace = 0, Debug = 1, Information = 2, Warning = 3, Error = 4, Critical = 5, and None = 6.

When a LogLevel is specified, logging is enabled for messages at the specified level and higher. In the preceding JSON, the Default category is logged for Information and higher. For example, Information, Warning, Error, and Critical messages are logged. If no LogLevel is specified, logging defaults to the Information level. For more information, see Log levels.

A provider property can specify a LogLevel property. LogLevel under a provider specifies levels to log for that provider, and overrides the non-provider log settings. Consider the following appsettings.json file:

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": { // All providers, LogLevel applies to all the enabled providers.
      "Default": "Error", // Default logging, Error and higher.
      "Microsoft": "Warning" // All Microsoft* categories, Warning and higher.
    },
    "Debug": { // Debug provider.
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Information", // Overrides preceding LogLevel:Default setting.
        "Microsoft.Hosting": "Trace" // Debug:Microsoft.Hosting category.
      }
    },
    "EventSource": { // EventSource provider
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Warning" // All categories of EventSource provider.
      }
    }
  }
}

Settings in Logging.{providername}.LogLevel override settings in Logging.LogLevel. In the preceding JSON, the Debug provider's default log level is set to Information:

Logging:Debug:LogLevel:Default:Information

The preceding setting specifies the Information log level for every Logging:Debug: category except Microsoft.Hosting. When a specific category is listed, the specific category overrides the default category. In the preceding JSON, the Logging:Debug:LogLevel categories "Microsoft.Hosting" and "Default" override the settings in Logging:LogLevel

The minimum log level can be specified for any of:

  • Specific providers: For example, Logging:EventSource:LogLevel:Default:Information
  • Specific categories: For example, Logging:LogLevel:Microsoft:Warning
  • All providers and all categories: Logging:LogLevel:Default:Warning

Any logs below the minimum level are not:

  • Passed to the provider.
  • Logged or displayed.

To suppress all logs, specify LogLevel.None. LogLevel.None has a value of 6, which is higher than LogLevel.Critical (5).

If a provider supports log scopes, IncludeScopes indicates whether they're enabled. For more information, see log scopes

The following appsettings.json file contains all the providers enabled by default:

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": { // No provider, LogLevel applies to all the enabled providers.
      "Default": "Error",
      "Microsoft": "Warning",
      "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime": "Warning"
    },
    "Debug": { // Debug provider.
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Information" // Overrides preceding LogLevel:Default setting.
      }
    },
    "Console": {
      "IncludeScopes": true,
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Razor.Internal": "Warning",
        "Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Razor.Razor": "Debug",
        "Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Razor": "Error",
        "Default": "Information"
      }
    },
    "EventSource": {
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft": "Information"
      }
    },
    "EventLog": {
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft": "Information"
      }
    },
    "AzureAppServicesFile": {
      "IncludeScopes": true,
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Warning"
      }
    },
    "AzureAppServicesBlob": {
      "IncludeScopes": true,
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft": "Information"
      }
    },
    "ApplicationInsights": {
      "LogLevel": {
        "Default": "Information"
      }
    }
  }
}

In the preceding sample:

  • The categories and levels are not suggested values. The sample is provided to show all the default providers.
  • Settings in Logging.{providername}.LogLevel override settings in Logging.LogLevel. For example, the level in Debug.LogLevel.Default overrides the level in LogLevel.Default.
  • Each default provider alias is used. Each provider defines an alias that can be used in configuration in place of the fully qualified type name. The built-in providers aliases are:
    • Console
    • Debug
    • EventSource
    • EventLog
    • AzureAppServicesFile
    • AzureAppServicesBlob
    • ApplicationInsights

Set log level by command line, environment variables, and other configuration

Log level can be set by any of the configuration providers.

The : separator doesn't work with environment variable hierarchical keys on all platforms. For example, the : separator is not supported by Bash. The double underscore, __, is:

  • Supported by all platforms.
  • Automatically replaced by a colon, :.

The following commands:

  • Set the environment key Logging:LogLevel:Microsoft to a value of Information on Windows.
  • Test the settings when using an app created with the ASP.NET Core web application templates. The dotnet run command must be run in the project directory after using set.
set Logging__LogLevel__Microsoft=Information
dotnet run

The preceding environment setting:

  • Is only set in processes launched from the command window they were set in.
  • Isn't read by browsers launched with Visual Studio.

The following setx command also sets the environment key and value on Windows. Unlike set, setx settings are persisted. The /M switch sets the variable in the system environment. If /M isn't used, a user environment variable is set.

setx Logging__LogLevel__Microsoft Information /M

Consider the following appsettings.json file:

"Logging": {
    "Console": {
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime": "Trace"
      }
    }
}

The following command sets the preceding configuration in the environment:

setx Logging__Console__LogLevel__Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime Trace /M

On Azure App Service, select New application setting on the Settings > Configuration page. Azure App Service application settings are:

  • Encrypted at rest and transmitted over an encrypted channel.
  • Exposed as environment variables.

For more information, see Azure Apps: Override app configuration using the Azure Portal.

For more information on setting ASP.NET Core configuration values using environment variables, see environment variables. For information on using other configuration sources, including the command line, Azure Key Vault, Azure App Configuration, other file formats, and more, see Configuration in ASP.NET Core.

How filtering rules are applied

When an ILogger<TCategoryName> object is created, the ILoggerFactory object selects a single rule per provider to apply to that logger. All messages written by an ILogger instance are filtered based on the selected rules. The most specific rule for each provider and category pair is selected from the available rules.

The following algorithm is used for each provider when an ILogger is created for a given category:

  • Select all rules that match the provider or its alias. If no match is found, select all rules with an empty provider.
  • From the result of the preceding step, select rules with longest matching category prefix. If no match is found, select all rules that don't specify a category.
  • If multiple rules are selected, take the last one.
  • If no rules are selected, use MinimumLevel.

Logging output from dotnet run and Visual Studio

Logs created with the default logging providers are displayed:

  • In Visual Studio
    • In the Debug output window when debugging.
    • In the ASP.NET Core Web Server window.
  • In the console window when the app is run with dotnet run.

Logs that begin with "Microsoft" categories are from ASP.NET Core framework code. ASP.NET Core and application code use the same logging API and providers.

Log category

When an ILogger object is created, a category is specified. That category is included with each log message created by that instance of ILogger. The category string is arbitrary, but the convention is to use the class name. For example, in a controller the name might be "TodoApi.Controllers.TodoController". The ASP.NET Core web apps use ILogger<T> to automatically get an ILogger instance that uses the fully qualified type name of T as the category:

public class PrivacyModel : PageModel
{
    private readonly ILogger<PrivacyModel> _logger;

    public PrivacyModel(ILogger<PrivacyModel> logger)
    {
        _logger = logger;
    }

    public void OnGet()
    {
        _logger.LogInformation("GET Pages.PrivacyModel called.");
    }
}

To explicitly specify the category, call ILoggerFactory.CreateLogger:

public class ContactModel : PageModel
{
    private readonly ILogger _logger;

    public ContactModel(ILoggerFactory logger)
    {
        _logger = logger.CreateLogger("TodoApi.Pages.ContactModel.MyCategory");
    }

    public void OnGet()
    {
        _logger.LogInformation("GET Pages.ContactModel called.");
    }

Calling CreateLogger with a fixed name can be useful when used in multiple methods so the events can be organized by category.

ILogger<T> is equivalent to calling CreateLogger with the fully qualified type name of T.

Log level

The following table lists the LogLevel values, the convenience Log{LogLevel} extension method, and the suggested usage:

LogLevel Value Method Description
Trace 0 LogTrace Contain the most detailed messages. These messages may contain sensitive app data. These messages are disabled by default and should not be enabled in production.
Debug 1 LogDebug For debugging and development. Use with caution in production due to the high volume.
Information 2 LogInformation Tracks the general flow of the app. May have long-term value.
Warning 3 LogWarning For abnormal or unexpected events. Typically includes errors or conditions that don't cause the app to fail.
Error 4 LogError For errors and exceptions that cannot be handled. These messages indicate a failure in the current operation or request, not an app-wide failure.
Critical 5 LogCritical For failures that require immediate attention. Examples: data loss scenarios, out of disk space.
None 6 Specifies that a logging category should not write any messages.

In the previous table, the LogLevel is listed from lowest to highest severity.

The Log method's first parameter, LogLevel, indicates the severity of the log. Rather than calling Log(LogLevel, ...), most developers call the Log{LogLevel} extension methods. The Log{LogLevel} extension methods call the Log method and specify the LogLevel. For example, the following two logging calls are functionally equivalent and produce the same log:

[HttpGet]
public IActionResult Test1(int id)
{
    var routeInfo = ControllerContext.ToCtxString(id);

    _logger.Log(LogLevel.Information, MyLogEvents.TestItem, routeInfo);
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.TestItem, routeInfo);

    return ControllerContext.MyDisplayRouteInfo();
}

MyLogEvents.TestItem is the event ID. MyLogEvents is part of the sample app and is displayed in the Log event ID section.

MyDisplayRouteInfo and ToCtxString are provided by the Rick.Docs.Samples.RouteInfo NuGet package. The methods display Controller and Razor Page route information.

The following code creates Information and Warning logs:

[HttpGet("{id}")]
public async Task<ActionResult<TodoItemDTO>> GetTodoItem(long id)
{
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.GetItem, "Getting item {Id}", id);

    var todoItem = await _context.TodoItems.FindAsync(id);

    if (todoItem == null)
    {
        _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, "Get({Id}) NOT FOUND", id);
        return NotFound();
    }

    return ItemToDTO(todoItem);
}

In the preceding code, the first Log{LogLevel} parameter,MyLogEvents.GetItem, is the Log event ID. The second parameter is a message template with placeholders for argument values provided by the remaining method parameters. The method parameters are explained in the message template section later in this document.

Call the appropriate Log{LogLevel} method to control how much log output is written to a particular storage medium. For example:

  • In production:
    • Logging at the Trace or Information levels produces a high-volume of detailed log messages. To control costs and not exceed data storage limits, log Trace and Information level messages to a high-volume, low-cost data store. Consider limiting Trace and Information to specific categories.
    • Logging at Warning through Critical levels should produce few log messages.
      • Costs and storage limits usually aren't a concern.
      • Few logs allow more flexibility in data store choices.
  • In development:
    • Set to Warning.
    • Add Trace or Information messages when troubleshooting. To limit output, set Trace or Information only for the categories under investigation.

ASP.NET Core writes logs for framework events. For example, consider the log output for:

  • A Razor Pages app created with the ASP.NET Core templates.
  • Logging set to Logging:Console:LogLevel:Microsoft:Information
  • Navigation to the Privacy page:
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting.Diagnostics[1]
      Request starting HTTP/2 GET https://localhost:5001/Privacy
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Routing.EndpointMiddleware[0]
      Executing endpoint '/Privacy'
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[3]
      Route matched with {page = "/Privacy"}. Executing page /Privacy
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[101]
      Executing handler method DefaultRP.Pages.PrivacyModel.OnGet - ModelState is Valid
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[102]
      Executed handler method OnGet, returned result .
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[103]
      Executing an implicit handler method - ModelState is Valid
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[104]
      Executed an implicit handler method, returned result Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.PageResult.
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.RazorPages.Infrastructure.PageActionInvoker[4]
      Executed page /Privacy in 74.5188ms
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Routing.EndpointMiddleware[1]
      Executed endpoint '/Privacy'
info: Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting.Diagnostics[2]
      Request finished in 149.3023ms 200 text/html; charset=utf-8

The following JSON sets Logging:Console:LogLevel:Microsoft:Information:

{
  "Logging": {      // Default, all providers.
    "LogLevel": {
      "Microsoft": "Warning"
    },
    "Console": { // Console provider.
      "LogLevel": {
        "Microsoft": "Information"
      }
    }
  }
}

Log event ID

Each log can specify an event ID. The sample app uses the MyLogEvents class to define event IDs:

public class MyLogEvents
{
    public const int GenerateItems = 1000;
    public const int ListItems     = 1001;
    public const int GetItem       = 1002;
    public const int InsertItem    = 1003;
    public const int UpdateItem    = 1004;
    public const int DeleteItem    = 1005;

    public const int TestItem      = 3000;

    public const int GetItemNotFound    = 4000;
    public const int UpdateItemNotFound = 4001;
}
[HttpGet("{id}")]
public async Task<ActionResult<TodoItemDTO>> GetTodoItem(long id)
{
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.GetItem, "Getting item {Id}", id);

    var todoItem = await _context.TodoItems.FindAsync(id);

    if (todoItem == null)
    {
        _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, "Get({Id}) NOT FOUND", id);
        return NotFound();
    }

    return ItemToDTO(todoItem);
}

An event ID associates a set of events. For example, all logs related to displaying a list of items on a page might be 1001.

The logging provider may store the event ID in an ID field, in the logging message, or not at all. The Debug provider doesn't show event IDs. The console provider shows event IDs in brackets after the category:

info: TodoApi.Controllers.TodoItemsController[1002]
      Getting item 1
warn: TodoApi.Controllers.TodoItemsController[4000]
      Get(1) NOT FOUND

Some logging providers store the event ID in a field, which allows for filtering on the ID.

Log message template

Each log API uses a message template. The message template can contain placeholders for which arguments are provided. Use names for the placeholders, not numbers.

[HttpGet("{id}")]
public async Task<ActionResult<TodoItemDTO>> GetTodoItem(long id)
{
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.GetItem, "Getting item {Id}", id);

    var todoItem = await _context.TodoItems.FindAsync(id);

    if (todoItem == null)
    {
        _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, "Get({Id}) NOT FOUND", id);
        return NotFound();
    }

    return ItemToDTO(todoItem);
}

The order of the parameters, not their placeholder names, determines which parameters are used to provide placeholder values in log messages. In the following code, the parameter names are out of sequence in the placeholders of the message template:

var apples = 1;
var pears = 2;
var bananas = 3;

_logger.LogInformation("Parameters: {pears}, {bananas}, {apples}", apples, pears, bananas);

However, the parameters are assigned to the placeholders in the order: apples, pears, bananas. The log message reflects the order of the parameters:

Parameters: 1, 2, 3

This approach allows logging providers to implement semantic or structured logging. The arguments themselves are passed to the logging system, not just the formatted message template. This enables logging providers to store the parameter values as fields. For example, consider the following logger method:

_logger.LogInformation("Getting item {Id} at {RequestTime}", id, DateTime.Now);

For example, when logging to Azure Table Storage:

  • Each Azure Table entity can have ID and RequestTime properties.
  • Tables with properties simplify queries on logged data. For example, a query can find all logs within a particular RequestTime range without having to parse the time out of the text message.

Log exceptions

The logger methods have overloads that take an exception parameter:

[HttpGet("{id}")]
public IActionResult TestExp(int id)
{
    var routeInfo = ControllerContext.ToCtxString(id);
    _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.TestItem, routeInfo);

    try
    {
        if (id == 3)
        {
            throw new Exception("Test exception");
        }
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, ex, "TestExp({Id})", id);
        return NotFound();
    }

    return ControllerContext.MyDisplayRouteInfo();
}

MyDisplayRouteInfo and ToCtxString are provided by the Rick.Docs.Samples.RouteInfo NuGet package. The methods display Controller and Razor Page route information.

Exception logging is provider-specific.

Default log level

If the default log level is not set, the default log level value is Information.

For example, consider the following web app:

  • Created with the ASP.NET web app templates.
  • appsettings.json and appsettings.Development.json deleted or renamed.

With the preceding setup, navigating to the privacy or home page produces many Trace, Debug, and Information messages with Microsoft in the category name.

The following code sets the default log level when the default log level is not set in configuration:

public class Program
{
    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        CreateHostBuilder(args).Build().Run();
    }

    public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args) =>
        Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
            .ConfigureLogging(logging => logging.SetMinimumLevel(LogLevel.Warning))
            .ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
            {
                webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
            });
}

Generally, log levels should be specified in configuration and not code.

Filter function

A filter function is invoked for all providers and categories that don't have rules assigned to them by configuration or code:

public class Program
{
    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        CreateHostBuilder(args).Build().Run();
    }

    public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args) =>
        Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
            .ConfigureLogging(logging =>
            {
                logging.AddFilter((provider, category, logLevel) =>
                {
                    if (provider.Contains("ConsoleLoggerProvider")
                        && category.Contains("Controller")
                        && logLevel >= LogLevel.Information)
                    {
                        return true;
                    }
                    else if (provider.Contains("ConsoleLoggerProvider")
                        && category.Contains("Microsoft")
                        && logLevel >= LogLevel.Information)
                    {
                        return true;
                    }
                    else
                    {
                        return false;
                    }
                });
            })
            .ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
            {
                webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
            });
}

The preceding code displays console logs when the category contains Controller or Microsoft and the log level is Information or higher.

Generally, log levels should be specified in configuration and not code.

ASP.NET Core and EF Core categories

The following table contains some categories used by ASP.NET Core and Entity Framework Core, with notes about the logs:

Category Notes
Microsoft.AspNetCore General ASP.NET Core diagnostics.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.DataProtection Which keys were considered, found, and used.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.HostFiltering Hosts allowed.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting How long HTTP requests took to complete and what time they started. Which hosting startup assemblies were loaded.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc MVC and Razor diagnostics. Model binding, filter execution, view compilation, action selection.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Routing Route matching information.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Server Connection start, stop, and keep alive responses. HTTPS certificate information.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.StaticFiles Files served.
Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore General Entity Framework Core diagnostics. Database activity and configuration, change detection, migrations.

To view more categories in the console window, set appsettings.Development.json to the following:

{
  "Logging": {
    "LogLevel": {
      "Default": "Information",
      "Microsoft": "Trace",
      "Microsoft.Hosting.Lifetime": "Information"
    }
  }
}

Log scopes

A scope can group a set of logical operations. This grouping can be used to attach the same data to each log that's created as part of a set. For example, every log created as part of processing a transaction can include the transaction ID.

A scope:

The following providers support scopes:

Use a scope by wrapping logger calls in a using block:

[HttpGet("{id}")]
public async Task<ActionResult<TodoItemDTO>> GetTodoItem(long id)
{
    TodoItem todoItem;
    var transactionId = Guid.NewGuid().ToString();
    using (_logger.BeginScope(new List<KeyValuePair<string, object>>
        {
            new KeyValuePair<string, object>("TransactionId", transactionId),
        }))
    {
        _logger.LogInformation(MyLogEvents.GetItem, "Getting item {Id}", id);

        todoItem = await _context.TodoItems.FindAsync(id);

        if (todoItem == null)
        {
            _logger.LogWarning(MyLogEvents.GetItemNotFound, 
                "Get({Id}) NOT FOUND", id);
            return NotFound();
        }
    }

    return ItemToDTO(todoItem);
}

Built-in logging providers

ASP.NET Core includes the following logging providers as part of the shared framework:

The following logging providers are shipped by Microsoft, but not as part of the shared framework. They must be installed as additional nuget.

ASP.NET Core doesn't include a logging provider for writing logs to files. To write logs to files from an ASP.NET Core app, consider using a third-party logging provider.

For information on stdout and debug logging with the ASP.NET Core Module, see Troubleshoot ASP.NET Core on Azure App Service and IIS and ASP.NET Core Module (ANCM) for IIS.

Console

The Console provider logs output to the console. For more information on viewing Console logs in development, see Logging output from dotnet run and Visual Studio.

Debug

The Debug provider writes log output by using the System.Diagnostics.Debug class. Calls to System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine write to the Debug provider.

On Linux, the Debug provider log location is distribution-dependent and may be one of the following:

  • /var/log/message
  • /var/log/syslog

Event Source

The EventSource provider writes to a cross-platform event source with the name Microsoft-Extensions-Logging. On Windows, the provider uses ETW.

dotnet trace tooling

The dotnet-trace tool is a cross-platform CLI global tool that enables the collection of .NET Core traces of a running process. The tool collects Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.EventSource provider data using a LoggingEventSource.

See dotnet-trace for installation instructions.

Use the dotnet trace tooling to collect a trace from an app:

  1. Run the app with the dotnet run command.

  2. Determine the process identifier (PID) of the .NET Core app:

    dotnet trace ps
    

    Find the PID for the process that has the same name as the app's assembly.

  3. Execute the dotnet trace command.

    General command syntax:

    dotnet trace collect -p {PID} 
        --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:{Keyword}:{Provider Level}
            :FilterSpecs=\"
                {Logger Category 1}:{Category Level 1};
                {Logger Category 2}:{Category Level 2};
                ...
                {Logger Category N}:{Category Level N}\"
    

    When using a PowerShell command shell, enclose the --providers value in single quotes ('):

    dotnet trace collect -p {PID} 
        --providers 'Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:{Keyword}:{Provider Level}
            :FilterSpecs=\"
                {Logger Category 1}:{Category Level 1};
                {Logger Category 2}:{Category Level 2};
                ...
                {Logger Category N}:{Category Level N}\"'
    

    On non-Windows platforms, add the -f speedscope option to change the format of the output trace file to speedscope.

    The following table defines the Keyword:

    Keyword Description
    1 Log meta events about the LoggingEventSource. Doesn't log events from ILogger.
    2 Turns on the Message event when ILogger.Log() is called. Provides information in a programmatic (not formatted) way.
    4 Turns on the FormatMessage event when ILogger.Log() is called. Provides the formatted string version of the information.
    8 Turns on the MessageJson event when ILogger.Log() is called. Provides a JSON representation of the arguments.

    The following table lists the provider levels:

    Provider Level Description
    0 LogAlways
    1 Critical
    2 Error
    3 Warning
    4 Informational
    5 Verbose

    The parsing for a category level can be either a string or a number:

    Category named value Numeric value
    Trace 0
    Debug 1
    Information 2
    Warning 3
    Error 4
    Critical 5

    The provider level and category level:

    • Are in reverse order.
    • The string constants aren't all identical.

    If no FilterSpecs are specified then the EventSourceLogger implementation attempts to convert the provider level to a category level and applies it to all categories.

    Provider Level Category Level
    Verbose(5) Debug(1)
    Informational(4) Information(2)
    Warning(3) Warning(3)
    Error(2) Error(4)
    Critical(1) Critical(5)

    If FilterSpecs are provided, any category that is included in the list uses the category level encoded there, all other categories are filtered out.

    The following examples assume:

    • An app is running and calling logger.LogDebug("12345").
    • The process ID (PID) has been set via set PID=12345, where 12345 is the actual PID.

    Consider the following command:

    dotnet trace collect -p %PID% --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:5
    

    The preceding command:

    • Captures debug messages.
    • Doesn't apply a FilterSpecs.
    • Specifies level 5 which maps category Debug.

    Consider the following command:

    dotnet trace collect -p %PID%  --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:5:\"FilterSpecs=*:5\"
    

    The preceding command:

    • Doesn't capture debug messages because the category level 5 is Critical.
    • Provides a FilterSpecs.

    The following command captures debug messages because category level 1 specifies Debug.

    dotnet trace collect -p %PID%  --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:5:\"FilterSpecs=*:1\"
    

    The following command captures debug messages because category specifies Debug.

    dotnet trace collect -p %PID%  --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:5:\"FilterSpecs=*:Debug\"
    

    FilterSpecs entries for {Logger Category} and {Category Level} represent additional log filtering conditions. Separate FilterSpecs entries with the ; semicolon character.

    Example using a Windows command shell:

    dotnet trace collect -p %PID% --providers Microsoft-Extensions-Logging:4:2:FilterSpecs=\"Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting*:4\"
    

    The preceding command activates:

    • The Event Source logger to produce formatted strings (4) for errors (2).
    • Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting logging at the Informational logging level (4).
  4. Stop the dotnet trace tooling by pressing the Enter key or Ctrl+C.

    The trace is saved with the name trace.nettrace in the folder where the dotnet trace command is executed.

  5. Open the trace with Perfview. Open the trace.nettrace file and explore the trace events.

If the app doesn't build the host with CreateDefaultBuilder, add the Event Source provider to the app's logging configuration.

For more information, see:

Perfview

Use the PerfView utility to collect and view logs. There are other tools for viewing ETW logs, but PerfView provides the best experience for working with the ETW events emitted by ASP.NET Core.

To configure PerfView for collecting events logged by this provider, add the string *Microsoft-Extensions-Logging to the Additional Providers list. Don't miss the * at the start of the string.

Windows EventLog

The EventLog provider sends log output to the Windows Event Log. Unlike the other providers, the EventLog provider does not inherit the default non-provider settings. If EventLog log settings aren't specified, they default to LogLevel.Warning.

To log events lower than LogLevel.Warning, explicitly set the log level. The following example sets the Event Log default log level to LogLevel.Information:

"Logging": {
  "EventLog": {
    "LogLevel": {
      "Default": "Information"
    }
  }
}

AddEventLog overloads can pass in EventLogSettings. If null or not specified, the following default settings are used:

  • LogName: "Application"
  • SourceName: ".NET Runtime"
  • MachineName: The local machine name is used.

The following code changes the SourceName from the default value of ".NET Runtime" to MyLogs:

public class Program
{
    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        CreateHostBuilder(args).Build().Run();
    }

    public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args) =>
        Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
            .ConfigureLogging(logging =>
            {
                logging.AddEventLog(eventLogSettings =>
                {
                    eventLogSettings.SourceName = "MyLogs"; 
                });
            })
            .ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
            {
                webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
            });
}

Azure App Service

The Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.AzureAppServices provider package writes logs to text files in an Azure App Service app's file system and to blob storage in an Azure Storage account.

The provider package isn't included in the shared framework. To use the provider, add the provider package to the project.

To configure provider settings, use AzureFileLoggerOptions and AzureBlobLoggerOptions, as shown in the following example:

public class Scopes
{
    public class Program
    {
        public static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            CreateHostBuilder(args).Build().Run();
        }

        public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args) =>
            Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
                .ConfigureLogging(logging => logging.AddAzureWebAppDiagnostics())
                .ConfigureServices(serviceCollection => serviceCollection
                    .Configure<AzureFileLoggerOptions>(options =>
                    {
                        options.FileName = "azure-diagnostics-";
                        options.FileSizeLimit = 50 * 1024;
                        options.RetainedFileCountLimit = 5;
                    })
                    .Configure<AzureBlobLoggerOptions>(options =>
                    {
                        options.BlobName = "log.txt";
                    }))
                .ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
                {
                    webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
                });
    }
}

When deployed to Azure App Service, the app uses the settings in the App Service logs section of the App Service page of the Azure portal. When the following settings are updated, the changes take effect immediately without requiring a restart or redeployment of the app.

  • Application Logging (Filesystem)
  • Application Logging (Blob)

The default location for log files is in the D:\home\LogFiles\Application folder, and the default file name is diagnostics-yyyymmdd.txt. The default file size limit is 10 MB, and the default maximum number of files retained is 2. The default blob name is {app-name}{timestamp}/yyyy/mm/dd/hh/{guid}-applicationLog.txt.

This provider only logs when the project runs in the Azure environment.

Azure log streaming

Azure log streaming supports viewing log activity in real time from:

  • The app server
  • The web server
  • Failed request tracing

To configure Azure log streaming:

  • Navigate to the App Service logs page from the app's portal page.
  • Set Application Logging (Filesystem) to On.
  • Choose the log Level. This setting only applies to Azure log streaming.

Navigate to the Log Stream page to view logs. The logged messages are logged with the ILogger interface.

Azure Application Insights

The Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.ApplicationInsights provider package writes logs to Azure Application Insights. Application Insights is a service that monitors a web app and provides tools for querying and analyzing the telemetry data. If you use this provider, you can query and analyze your logs by using the Application Insights tools.

The logging provider is included as a dependency of Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.AspNetCore, which is the package that provides all available telemetry for ASP.NET Core. If you use this package, you don't have to install the provider package.

The Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.Web package is for ASP.NET 4.x, not ASP.NET Core.

For more information, see the following resources:

Third-party logging providers

Third-party logging frameworks that work with ASP.NET Core:

Some third-party frameworks can perform semantic logging, also known as structured logging.

Using a third-party framework is similar to using one of the built-in providers:

  1. Add a NuGet package to your project.
  2. Call an ILoggerFactory extension method provided by the logging framework.

For more information, see each provider's documentation. Third-party logging providers aren't supported by Microsoft.

Non-host console app

For an example of how to use the Generic Host in a non-web console app, see the Program.cs file of the Background Tasks sample app (Background tasks with hosted services in ASP.NET Core).

Logging code for apps without Generic Host differs in the way providers are added and loggers are created.

Logging providers

In a non-host console app, call the provider's Add{provider name} extension method while creating a LoggerFactory:

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        using var loggerFactory = LoggerFactory.Create(builder =>
        {
            builder
                .AddFilter("Microsoft", LogLevel.Warning)
                .AddFilter("System", LogLevel.Warning)
                .AddFilter("LoggingConsoleApp.Program", LogLevel.Debug)
                .AddConsole()
                .AddEventLog();
        });
        ILogger logger = loggerFactory.CreateLogger<Program>();
        logger.LogInformation("Example log message");
    }
}

Create logs

To create logs, use an ILogger<TCategoryName> object. Use the LoggerFactory to create an ILogger.

The following example creates a logger with LoggingConsoleApp.Program as the category.

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        using var loggerFactory = LoggerFactory.Create(builder =>
        {
            builder
                .AddFilter("Microsoft", LogLevel.Warning)
                .AddFilter("System", LogLevel.Warning)
                .AddFilter("LoggingConsoleApp.Program", LogLevel.Debug)
                .AddConsole()
                .AddEventLog();
        });
        ILogger logger = loggerFactory.CreateLogger<Program>();
        logger.LogInformation("Example log message");
    }
}

In the following example, the logger is used to create logs with Information as the level. The Log level indicates the severity of the logged event.

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        using var loggerFactory = LoggerFactory.Create(builder =>
        {
            builder
                .AddFilter("Microsoft", LogLevel.Warning)
                .AddFilter("System", LogLevel.Warning)
                .AddFilter("LoggingConsoleApp.Program", LogLevel.Debug)
                .AddConsole()
                .AddEventLog();
        });
        ILogger logger = loggerFactory.CreateLogger<Program>();
        logger.LogInformation("Example log message");
    }
}

Levels and categories are explained in more detail in this document.

Log during host construction

Logging during host construction isn't directly supported. However, a separate logger can be used. In the following example, a Serilog logger is used to log in CreateHostBuilder. AddSerilog uses the static configuration specified in Log.Logger:

using System;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting;
using Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Hosting;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Logging;

public class Program
{
    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        CreateHostBuilder(args).Build().Run();
    }

    public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args)
    {
        var builtConfig = new ConfigurationBuilder()
            .AddJsonFile("appsettings.json")
            .AddCommandLine(args)
            .Build();

        Log.Logger = new LoggerConfiguration()
            .WriteTo.Console()
            .WriteTo.File(builtConfig["Logging:FilePath"])
            .CreateLogger();

        try
        {
            return Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
                .ConfigureServices((context, services) =>
                {
                    services.AddRazorPages();
                })
                .ConfigureAppConfiguration((hostingContext, config) =>
                {
                    config.AddConfiguration(builtConfig);
                })
                .ConfigureLogging(logging =>
                {   
                    logging.AddSerilog();
                })
                .ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
                {
                    webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
                });
        }
        catch (Exception ex)
        {
            Log.Fatal(ex, "Host builder error");

            throw;
        }
        finally
        {
            Log.CloseAndFlush();
        }
    }
}

Configure a service that depends on ILogger

Constructor injection of a logger into Startup works in earlier versions of ASP.NET Core because a separate DI container is created for the Web Host. For information about why only one container is created for the Generic Host, see the breaking change announcement.

To configure a service that depends on ILogger<T>, use constructor injection or provide a factory method. The factory method approach is recommended only if there is no other option. For example, consider a service that needs an ILogger<T> instance provided by DI:

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
    services.AddControllers();
    services.AddRazorPages();

    services.AddSingleton<IMyService>((container) =>
    {
        var logger = container.GetRequiredService<ILogger<MyService>>();
        return new MyService() { Logger = logger };
    });
}

The preceding highlighted code is a Func<T,TResult> that runs the first time the DI container needs to construct an instance of MyService. You can access any of the registered services in this way.

Create logs in Main

The following code logs in Main by getting an ILogger instance from DI after building the host:

public static void Main(string[] args)
{
    var host = CreateHostBuilder(args).Build();

    var logger = host.Services.GetRequiredService<ILogger<Program>>();
    logger.LogInformation("Host created.");

    host.Run();
}

public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args) =>
    Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
        .ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
        {
            webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
        });

Create logs in Startup

The following code writes logs in Startup.Configure:

public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IWebHostEnvironment env,
                      ILogger<Startup> logger)
{
    if (env.IsDevelopment())
    {
        logger.LogInformation("In Development.");
        app.UseDeveloperExceptionPage();
    }
    else
    {
        logger.LogInformation("Not Development.");
        app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
        app.UseHsts();
    }

    app.UseHttpsRedirection();
    app.UseStaticFiles();

    app.UseRouting();

    app.UseAuthorization();

    app.UseEndpoints(endpoints =>
    {
        endpoints.MapControllers();
        endpoints.MapRazorPages();
    });
}

Writing logs before completion of the DI container setup in the Startup.ConfigureServices method is not supported:

  • Logger injection into the Startup constructor is not supported.
  • Logger injection into the Startup.ConfigureServices method signature is not supported

The reason for this restriction is that logging depends on DI and on configuration, which in turns depends on DI. The DI container isn't set up until ConfigureServices finishes.

For information on configuring a service that depends on ILogger<T> or why constructor injection of a logger into Startup worked in earlier versions, see Configure a service that depends on ILogger

No asynchronous logger methods

Logging should be so fast that it isn't worth the performance cost of asynchronous code. If a logging data store is slow, don't write to it directly. Consider writing the log messages to a fast store initially, then moving them to the slow store later. For example, when logging to SQL Server, don't do so directly in a Log method, since the Log methods are synchronous. Instead, synchronously add log messages to an in-memory queue and have a background worker pull the messages out of the queue to do the asynchronous work of pushing data to SQL Server. For more information, see this GitHub issue.

Change log levels in a running app

The Logging API doesn't include a scenario to change log levels while an app is running. However, some configuration providers are capable of reloading configuration, which takes immediate effect on logging configuration. For example, the File Configuration Provider, reloads logging configuration by default. If configuration is changed in code while an app is running, the app can call IConfigurationRoot.Reload to update the app's logging configuration.

ILogger and ILoggerFactory

The ILogger<TCategoryName> and ILoggerFactory interfaces and implementations are included in the .NET Core SDK. They are also available in the following NuGet packages:

Apply log filter rules in code

The preferred approach for setting log filter rules is by using Configuration.

The following example shows how to register filter rules in code:

public class Program
{
    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        CreateHostBuilder(args).Build().Run();
    }

    public static IHostBuilder CreateHostBuilder(string[] args) =>
        Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
            .ConfigureLogging(logging =>
               logging.AddFilter("System", LogLevel.Debug)
                  .AddFilter<DebugLoggerProvider>("Microsoft", LogLevel.Information)
                  .AddFilter<ConsoleLoggerProvider>("Microsoft", LogLevel.Trace))
            .ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
            {
                webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
            });
}

logging.AddFilter("System", LogLevel.Debug) specifies the System category and log level Debug. The filter is applied to all providers because a specific provider was not configured.

AddFilter<DebugLoggerProvider>("Microsoft", LogLevel.Information) specifies:

  • The Debug logging provider.
  • Log level Information and higher.
  • All categories starting with "Microsoft".

Automatically log scope with SpanId, TraceId, and ParentId

The logging libraries implicitly create a scope object with SpanId, TraceId, and ParentId. This behavior is configured via ActivityTrackingOptions.

  var loggerFactory = LoggerFactory.Create(logging =>
  {
      logging.Configure(options =>
      {
          options.ActivityTrackingOptions = ActivityTrackingOptions.SpanId
                                              | ActivityTrackingOptions.TraceId
                                              | ActivityTrackingOptions.ParentId;
      }).AddSimpleConsole(options =>
      {
          options.IncludeScopes = true;
      });
  });

If the traceparent http request header is set, the ParentId in the log scope shows the W3C parent-id from in-bound traceparent header and the SpanId in the log scope shows the updated parent-id for the next out-bound step/span. For more information, see Mutating the traceparent Field.

Create a custom logger

To create a custom logger, see Implement a custom logging provider in .NET.

Additional resources