I'm developing a sort of web application and recently come a need to log some of user activities in it. Therefore come with natural question is it a good idea to use Apache server logging mechanism for that? If the answer is yes, please explain why and so if not. Mine main concern is reduction in performance as a result of enabling logging in Apache. As well, what is the best practice for building logging mechanism in order to be able to track client activity in web based application?
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As MaxVT said, it is highly unlikely that the overhead of logging would impact performance. The overhead of network latency in a web application is generally far greater than a single disk write, which can be in the single-digit microseconds range. Generally, web based applications should always have some form of logging turned on, and the mod_logger based logs in Apache is a very cheap way of doing it. |
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Apache is simply appending text to a log file - it isn't much of a performance penalty. Also, there is an excellent chance that you have logs enabled already, since that's how most of the statistics packages installed on a web host work (unlike web-based Google Analytics etc.) If you have a single server, a separate log file would be my choice. I like to keep application logs separate from web server logs, because it is easier to find relevant records that way. If you have multiple servers and want to have a common log, you might want to look into syslogd et al. to send log data from your application servers to a single logging machine. Keeping a log in database is also possible, but may cause a significant load on the database servers, especially if your application already relies on caching to keep database load low. |
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While apache logging is very performance-cheap, you need to consider the uses of the logs:
These questions can lead you to chose either apache logging, or a DBMS-based custom logging. Using custom logging, you can easily build transactional logs that can help you revert your whole system from one state to another with as much as a click. jrh |
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