다음을 통해 공유


DiagnosticMonitorConfiguration.Logs Property

 

Gets or sets the buffer configuration for basic Windows Azure logs captured by the Windows Azure Trace Listener.

Namespace:   Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics
Assembly:  Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics (in Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics.dll)

Syntax

public BasicLogsBufferConfiguration Logs { get; set; }
public:
property BasicLogsBufferConfiguration^ Logs {
    BasicLogsBufferConfiguration^ get();
    void set(BasicLogsBufferConfiguration^ value);
}
member Logs : BasicLogsBufferConfiguration with get, set
Public Property Logs As BasicLogsBufferConfiguration

Property Value

Type: Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics.BasicLogsBufferConfiguration

Type: Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics.BasicLogsBufferConfiguration

Returns BasicLogsBufferConfiguration.

Remarks

The diagnostics.wadcfg file is used to configure diagnostics in your application. For more information on how to configure your diagnostics.wadcfg file, see Enabling Diagnostics in Windows Azure. Once your application is running in Windows Azure, you can use the DiagnosticMonitorConfiguration class along with the RoleInstanceDiagnosticManager class to remotely change your application’s diagnostics configuration.

The Logs property is used to specify the BasicLogsBufferConfiguration data buffer that is used for Windows Azure logs. This property enables you to set the ScheduledTransferLogLevelFilter property, as well as the default data buffer properties: BufferQuotaInMB and ScheduledTransferPeriod.

Example

The following code snippet gets the diagnostic monitor configuration for each instance in a role, specifies the log configuration for Windows Azure logs, and sets the updated configuration.

 // Get the connection string. It's recommended that you store the connection string in your web.config or app.config file.
// Use the ConfigurationManager type to retrieve your storage connection string.  You can find the account name and key in
// the Windows Azure Management Portal (https://manage.windowsazure.com).
//string connectionString = "DefaultEndpointsProtocol=https;AccountName=<AccountName>;AccountKey=<AccountKey>";
string connectionString = System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["StorageConnectionString"].ConnectionString;

// The deployment ID and role name for your application can be obtained from the 
// Windows Azure Management Portal (https://manage.windowsazure.com). See your 
// application dashboard under Cloud Services.
string deploymentID = "e2ab8b6667644666ba627bdf6f5e4daa";
string roleName = "WebRole1";

// Get the DeploymentDiagnosticManager object for your deployment.
DeploymentDiagnosticManager diagManager = new DeploymentDiagnosticManager(connectionString, deploymentID);

// Get the RoleInstanceDiagnosticManager objects for each instance of your role.
IEnumerable<RoleInstanceDiagnosticManager> instanceManagers = diagManager.GetRoleInstanceDiagnosticManagersForRole(roleName);

// Iterate through the role instances and update the configuration.
foreach (RoleInstanceDiagnosticManager roleInstance in instanceManagers)
{
   DiagnosticMonitorConfiguration diagnosticConfiguration = roleInstance.GetCurrentConfiguration();

   // Filter the logs so that only error-level logs are transferred to persistent storage.
   diagnosticConfiguration.Logs.ScheduledTransferLogLevelFilter = LogLevel.Error;

   // Schedule a transfer period of 30 minutes.
   diagnosticConfiguration.Logs.ScheduledTransferPeriod = TimeSpan.FromMinutes(30.0);

   // Specify a buffer quota of 1GB.
   diagnosticConfiguration.Logs.BufferQuotaInMB = 1024;

   // Set the configuration.
   roleInstance.SetCurrentConfiguration(diagnosticConfiguration);
}

Warning

This API is not supported in Azure SDK versions 2.5 and higher. Instead, use the diagnostics.wadcfg XML configuration file. For more information, see Collect Logging Data by Using Azure Diagnostics.

See Also

DiagnosticMonitorTraceListener
DiagnosticMonitorConfiguration Class
Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics Namespace

Return to top