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2026-05-12 16:06:00 +08:00

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name, group, category, update-time, description, key-word
name group category update-time description key-word
logger-bind api logging 20260512 Attach reusable structured fields to a logger through the bind alias.
logger
bind
fields
public

Logger-bind

Attach shared structured fields to a logger through the bind(...) alias. This API is behaviorally identical to with_context_fields(...) and exists as a shorter name for common structured context binding.

Interface

pub fn[S] Logger::bind(self : Logger[S], fields : Array[Field]) -> Logger[ContextSink[S]] {}

input

  • self : Logger[S] - Base logger that should gain shared fields.
  • fields : Array[Field] - Structured fields attached to every emitted record.

output

  • Logger[ContextSink[S]] - New logger wrapper that prepends shared fields at write time.

Explanation

Detailed rules explaining key parameters and behaviors

  • bind(...) delegates directly to with_context_fields(...).
  • The original logger value is not mutated; a wrapped logger is returned.
  • Shared fields are applied to every later log call emitted through the returned logger.
  • This alias is useful when you prefer shorter chaining syntax in application code.

How to Use

Here are some specific examples provided.

When Bind Shared Request Context

When a logger should carry stable fields through a flow:

let request_logger = Logger::new(console_sink(), target="api")
  .bind([field("request_id", "req-42")])

In this example, subsequent writes automatically include request_id.

When Prefer Shorter Chaining Syntax

When a context-bound child logger should stay readable:

let worker = Logger::new(console_sink(), target="app")
  .child("worker")
  .bind([field("component", "worker")])

In this example, bind(...) communicates intent without changing underlying behavior.

Error Case

e.g.:

  • If fields is empty, the returned logger remains valid and simply adds no extra metadata.

  • If duplicate field keys are bound, all copies are preserved for downstream formatting or inspection.

Notes

  1. Use bind(...) and with_context_fields(...) interchangeably; choose the one that reads better in context.

  2. This alias exists for ergonomics, not for different semantics.