1.9 KiB
name, group, category, update-time, description, key-word
| name | group | category | update-time | description | key-word | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| configured-logger-pending-count | api | runtime | 20260512 | Read the current queued backlog count from a configured runtime logger. |
|
Configured-logger-pending-count
Read the current queued backlog count from a ConfiguredLogger. This is the direct runtime metric for config-driven queue wrapping.
Interface
pub fn ConfiguredLogger::pending_count(self : ConfiguredLogger) -> Int {}
input
self : ConfiguredLogger- Config-driven runtime logger whose queue backlog should be inspected.
output
Int- Current number of pending queued records.
Explanation
Detailed rules explaining key parameters and behaviors
- Queue-backed sinks return their live pending count.
- Non-queued sinks report
0. - This is a point-in-time metric and may change immediately after it is read.
- This helper delegates to
RuntimeSink::pending_count(...)through the configured logger wrapper.
How to Use
Here are some specific examples provided.
When Need Configured Queue Backlog Visibility
When a config-built logger should expose queue pressure:
let pending = logger.pending_count()
In this example, queue backlog is observed without reaching into the sink internals.
When Verify Manual Drain Progress
When drain loops should observe remaining backlog:
ignore(logger.drain(max_items=8))
ignore(logger.pending_count())
In this example, the queue metric helps verify manual drain progress.
Error Case
e.g.:
-
If the logger is not queue-backed, the method simply returns
0. -
If callers need richer file-plus-queue state for file sinks,
file_runtime_state()is the better API.
Notes
-
Use this helper for simple queue visibility on config-built loggers.
-
Pair it with
dropped_count()when investigating loss behavior.