Last active
April 27, 2022 13:51
-
-
Save taylorhutchison/98491fdd96a6dcf51ae050b054feebca to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Writing to the log stream in a Window Azure App Service.
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
// This is a ASP.NET 6 sample showing how to write to the log stream in a Window Azure App Service. | |
// It seems standard out (stdout) is disabled in a Window Azure App Service. | |
// The key for me was adding the Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.AzureAppServices package | |
// To see logs in the Log Stream | |
// 1. go to "App Service logs" panel under monitoring | |
// 2. turn on Application logging (Filesystem) | |
// 3. set the level to Verbose or whatever is appropriate for the level of logging you want to see. | |
// Note: This will automatically turn back off after 12 hours by design. | |
// 4. Now you can see the logs in the Log Stream panel of your App Service. | |
var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args); | |
// You need to add the Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.AzureAppServices packge | |
// dotnet add package Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.AzureAppServices | |
builder.Logging.AddAzureWebAppDiagnostics(); | |
var app = builder.Build(); | |
app.MapGet("/", () => { | |
var logger = app.Services.GetService<ILogger<Program>>(); | |
logger?.LogInformation("This is visible in the Log Stream."); | |
return "Hello world"; | |
}); | |
app.Run(); |
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment