9

How can I make each unicorn worker of my Rails application writting in a different log file ?

The why : problem of mixed log files... In its default configuration, Rails will write its log messages to a single log file: log/<environment>.log.

Unicorn workers will write to the same log file at once, the messages can get mixed up. This is a problem when request-log-analyzer parses a log file. An example:

Processing Controller1#action1 ...
Processing Controller2#action2 ...
Completed in 100ms...
Completed in 567ms...

In this example, what action was completed in 100ms, and what action in 567 ms? We can never be sure.

2 Answers 2

3

add this code to after_fork in unicorn.rb:

#one log per unicorn worker
if log = Rails.logger.instance_values['log']
  ext = File.extname log.path
  new_path =log.path.gsub %r{(.*)(#{Regexp.escape ext})}, "\\1.#{worker.nr}\\2"
  Rails.logger.instance_eval do
    @log.close
    @log= open_log new_path, 'a+'
  end
end
1
  • Should this implementation work in a Rails 2.3 app? Nobody in this thread really specified what versions their code would work in, and I'm trying to do this exact thing in a fairly old app, but not sure how to go about it. Jan 13, 2017 at 1:56
2

@slact's answer doesn't work on Rails 3. This works:

after_fork do |server, worker|

  # Override the default logger to use a separate log for each Unicorn worker.
  # https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/3-2-stable/railties/lib/rails/application/bootstrap.rb#L23-L49
  Rails.logger = ActiveRecord::Base.logger = ActionController::Base.logger = begin
    path = Rails.configuration.paths["log"].first
    f = File.open(path.sub(".log", "-#{worker.nr}.log"), "a")
    f.binmode
    f.sync = true
    logger = ActiveSupport::TaggedLogging.new(ActiveSupport::BufferedLogger.new(f))
    logger.level = ActiveSupport::BufferedLogger.const_get(Rails.configuration.log_level.to_s.upcase)
    logger
  end
end

Your Answer

Reminder: Answers generated by Artificial Intelligence tools are not allowed on Stack Overflow. Learn more

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.