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A Serilog sink that writes events to Microsoft SQL Server and works with .NET Core

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Ketrex.Serilog.Sinks.MSSqlServer

A Serilog sink that writes events to Microsoft SQL Server. This sink will write the logevent data to a table and can optionally also store the properties inside an Xml column so they can be queried.

Package - Ketrex.Serilog.Sinks.MSSqlServer | Platforms - .NET 4.52, Netstandard 1.2

Original Package - Serilog.Sinks.MSSqlServer

Configuration

At minimum a connection string and table name are required.

To use a connection string from the <connectionStrings> element of your application config file, specify its name as the value of the connection string.

Code

var connectionString = @"Server=...";  // or the name of a connection string in your .config file
var tableName = "Logs";
var columnOptions = new ColumnOptions();  // optional

var log = new LoggerConfiguration()
    .WriteTo.MSSqlServer(connectionString, tableName, columnOptions: columnOptions)
    .CreateLogger();

XML

If you are configuring Serilog with the ReadFrom.AppSettings() XML configuration support, you can use:

<add key="serilog:using:MSSqlSever" value="Serilog.Sinks.MSSqlServer" />
<add key="serilog:write-to:MSSqlServer.connectionString" value="Server=..."/>
<add key="serilog:write-to:MSSqlServer.tableName" value="Logs"/>
<add key="serilog:write-to:MSSqlServer.autoCreateSqlTable" value="true"/>

Table definition

Automatic table creation

If you set the autoCreateSqlTable option to true, the sink will create a table for you in the database specified in the connection string. Make sure that the user associated with this connection string has enough rights to make schema changes.

If you do not want the table to be automatically created, you'll need to create a table like this in your database:

CREATE TABLE [Logs] (

   [Id] int IDENTITY(1,1) NOT NULL,
   [Message] nvarchar(max) NULL,
   [MessageTemplate] nvarchar(max) NULL,
   [Level] nvarchar(128) NULL,
   [TimeStamp] datetimeoffset(7) NOT NULL,  -- use datetime for SQL Server pre-2008
   [Exception] nvarchar(max) NULL,
   [Properties] xml NULL,
   [LogEvent] nvarchar(max) NULL

   CONSTRAINT [PK_Logs] 
     PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED ([Id] ASC) 
     WITH (PAD_INDEX = OFF, STATISTICS_NORECOMPUTE = OFF, IGNORE_DUP_KEY = OFF,
           ALLOW_ROW_LOCKS = ON, ALLOW_PAGE_LOCKS = ON) 
     ON [PRIMARY]

) ON [PRIMARY];

Remember to grant the necessary permissions for the sink to be able to write to the log table.

If you don't plan on using one or more columns, you can specify which columns to include in the columnOptions.Store parameter (see below).

The Level column should be defined as a TinyInt if the columnOptions.Level.StoreAsEnum is set to true.

Standard columns

The "standard columns" used by this sink (apart from obvious required columns like Id) are described by the StandardColumn enumeration and controlled by columnOptions.Store.

By default (and consistent with the SQL command to create a table, above) these columns are included:

  • StandardColumn.Message
  • StandardColumn.MessageTemplate
  • StandardColumn.Level
  • StandardColumn.TimeStamp
  • StandardColumn.Exception
  • StandardColumn.Properties

You can change this list, as long as the table definition is consistent:

// Don't include the Properties XML column.
columnOptions.Store.Remove(StandardColumn.Properties);

// Do include the log event data as JSON.
columnOptions.Store.Add(StandardColumn.LogEvent);

You can also store your own log event properties as additional columns; see below.

Saving properties in additional columns

By default any log event properties you include in your log statements will be saved to the Properties column (and/or LogEvent column, per columnOption.Store). But they can also be stored in their own columns via the AdditionalDataColumns setting.

var columnOptions = new ColumnOptions
{
    AdditionalDataColumns = new Collection<DataColumn>
    {
        new DataColumn {DataType = typeof (string), ColumnName = "User"},
        new DataColumn {DataType = typeof (string), ColumnName = "Other"},
    }
};

var log = new LoggerConfiguration()
    .WriteTo.MSSqlServer(@"Server=.\SQLEXPRESS;Database=LogEvents;Trusted_Connection=True;", "Logs", columnOptions: columnOptions)
    .CreateLogger();

The log event properties User and Other will now be placed in the corresponding column upon logging. The property name must match a column name in your table. Be sure to include them in the table definition.

Excluding redundant items from the Properties column

By default, additional properties will still be included in the XML data saved to the Properties column (assuming that is not disabled via the columnOptions.Store parameter). This is consistent with the idea behind structured logging, and makes it easier to convert the log data to another (e.g. NoSQL) storage platform later if desired.

However, if necessary, then the properties being saved in their own columns can be excluded from the XML. Use the columnOptions.Properties.ExcludeAdditionalProperties parameter in the sink configuration to exclude the redundant properties from the XML.

XML configuration for columns

Columns can be defined with the name and data type of the column in SQL Server. Columns specified must match database table exactly. DataType is case sensitive, based on SQL type (excluding precision/length).

  <configSections>
    <section name="MSSqlServerSettingsSection"
             type="Serilog.Configuration.MSSqlServerConfigurationSection, Serilog.Sinks.MSSqlServer"/>
  </configSections>
  <MSSqlServerSettingsSection>
    <Columns>
      <add ColumnName="EventType" DataType="int"/>
      <add ColumnName="Release" DataType="varchar"/>
    </Columns>
  </MSSqlServerSettingsSection>      

Options for serialization of the log event data

JSON (LogEvent column)

The log event JSON can be stored to the LogEvent column. This can be enabled by adding the LogEvent column to the columnOptions.Store collection. Use the columnOptions.LogEvent.ExcludeAdditionalProperties parameter to exclude redundant properties from the JSON. This is analogue to excluding redundant items from XML in the Properties column.

XML (Properties column)

To take advantage of SQL Server's XML support, the default storage of the log event properties is in the Properties XML column.

The serialization of the properties can be controlled by setting values in the in the columnOptions.Properties parameter.

Names of elements can be controlled by the RootElementName, PropertyElementName, ItemElementName, DictionaryElementName, SequenceElementName, StructureElementName and UsePropertyKeyAsElementName options.

The UsePropertyKeyAsElementName option, if set to true, will use the property key as the element name instead of "property" for the name with the key as an attribute.

If OmitDictionaryContainerElement, OmitSequenceContainerElement or OmitStructureContainerElement are set then the "dictionary", "sequence" or "structure" container elements will be omitted and only child elements are included.

If OmitElementIfEmpty is set then if a property is empty, it will not be serialized.

Querying the properties XML

Extracting and querying the properties data directly can be helpful when looking for specific log sequences.

Given the following XML property collection:

<properties>
  <property key="Action">GetUsers</property>
  <property key="Controller">UserController</property>
</properties>

The following query will extract the Action property and restrict the query based on the Controller property using SQL Servers built-in XQuery support.

SELECT 	[Message]
  , [TimeStamp]
  , [Exception]
  , [Properties].value('(//property[@key="Action"]/node())[1]', 'nvarchar(max)') as Action
FROM [Logs]
WHERE [Properties].value('(//property[@key="Controller"]/node())[1]', 'nvarchar(max)') = 'UserController'

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A Serilog sink that writes events to Microsoft SQL Server and works with .NET Core

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