Send logs to Datadog from your Flutter applications with Datadog’s flutter plugin and leverage the following features:

  • Log to Datadog in JSON format natively.
  • Use default and add custom attributes to each log sent.
  • Record real client IP addresses and User-Agents.
  • Leverage optimized network usage with automatic bulk posts.

Setup

To initialize the Datadog Flutter SDK for Logs, see Setup.

Once you have initialized the Datadog Flutter SDK with a LoggingConfiguration parameter, you can create a DatadogLogger and send logs to Datadog.

final logConfiguration = DatadogLoggerConfiguration(
  remoteLogThreshold: LogLevel.debug,
  networkInfoEnabled: true,
);
final logger = DatadogSdk.instance.logs?.createLogger(logConfiguration);

logger?.debug("A debug message.");
logger?.info("Some relevant information?");
logger?.warn("An important warning…");
logger?.error("An error was met!");

You can create additional loggers with different services and names using the createLogger method as well:

final myLogger = DatadogSdk.instance.logs?.createLogger(
  DatadogLoggerConfiguration(
    service: 'com.example.custom_service',
    name: 'Additional logger'
  )
);

myLogger?.info('Info from my additional logger.');

For more information about available logging options, see the DatadogLoggerConfiguration class documentation.

Manage tags

Tags set on loggers are local to each logger.

Add tags

Use the DatadogLogger.addTag method to add tags to all logs sent by a specific logger:

// This adds a "build_configuration:debug" tag
logger.addTag("build_configuration", "debug")

Remove tags

Use the DatadogLogger.removeTag method to remove tags from all logs sent by a specific logger:

// This removes any tag that starts with "build_configuration"
logger.removeTag("build_configuration")

For more information, see Getting Started with Tags.

Manage attributes

Attributes set on loggers are local to each logger.

Default attributes

By default, the following attributes are added to all logs sent by a logger:

  • http.useragent and its extracted device and OS properties
  • network.client.ip and its extracted geographical properties (country, city)
  • logger.version, Datadog SDK version
  • logger.thread_name, (main, background)
  • version, client’s app version extracted from either the Info.plist or application.manifest
  • environment, the environment name used to initialize the SDK

Add attributes

Use the DatadogLogger.addAttribute method to add a custom attribute to all logs sent by a specific logger:

logger.addAttribute("user-status", "unregistered")

The value can be most types supported by the StandardMessageCodec class.

Remove attributes

Use the DatadogLogger.removeAttribute method to remove a custom attribute from all logs sent by a specific logger:

// This removes the attribute "user-status" from all logs sent moving forward.
logger.removeAttribute("user-status")

Customizing log output

By default, for debug builds, DatadogLoggers print all logs to the Flutter console in the format:

[{level}] message

This can be customized by setting a DatadogLoggerConfiguration.customConsoleLogFunction. To filter logs below a certain level, set this to simpleConsolePrintForLevel:

final config = DatadogLoggerConfiguration(
  // Other configuration options...
  customConsoleLogFunction: simpleConsolePrintForLevel(LogLevel.warn),
);

You can also forward Datadog logs to other log packages, such as logger, by supplying a custom function:

var Logger logger;
void customDatadogLog(LogLevel level,
  String message,
  String? errorMessage,
  String? errorKind,
  StackTrace? stackTrace,
  Map<String, Object?> attributes,) {
    // Assuming you have a Logger and custom level mapping function:
    logger.log(mapLogLevels(level), message, error: errorKind, stackTrace: stackTrace);
}

final datadogLogger = DatadogSdk.instance.logs?.createLogger(
  DatadogLoggerConfiguration(
    // Other configuration options...
    customConsoleLogFunction: simpleConsolePrintForLevel(LogLevel.warn),
  );
);

Further reading

PREVIEWING: Cyril-Bouchiat/add-vm-package-explorer-doc