Observability
WatchDog is a Realtime Message, Event, HTTP (Request & Response) and Exception logger and viewer for ASP.Net Core Web Apps and APIs. It allows developers log and view messages, events, http requests made to their web application and also exception caught during runtime in their web applications, all in Realtime.
It leverages SignalR
for real-time monitoring and LiteDb
a Serverless MongoDB-like database with no configuration with the option of using your external databases (MSSQL, MySQl, Postgres, MongoDB).
Install via .NET CLI
dotnet add package WatchDog.NET --version 1.4.11
Install via Package Manager
Install-Package WatchDog.NET --version 1.4.11
To enable WatchDog to listen for requests, use the WatchDog middleware provided by WatchDog.
Add WatchDog Namespace in Startup.cs
using WatchDog;
Startup.cs
under ConfigureService()
services.AddWatchDogServices();
Optional
This clears the logs after a specific duration.
NOTE When
IsAutoClear = true
Default Schedule Time is set to Weekly, override the settings like below:
services.AddWatchDogServices(opt =>
{
opt.IsAutoClear = true;
opt.ClearTimeSchedule = WatchDogAutoClearScheduleEnum.Monthly;
});
Optional
Add Database Connection String and Choose DbDriver Option
services.AddWatchDogServices(opt =>
{
opt.IsAutoClear = true;
opt.SetExternalDbConnString = "Server=localhost;Database=testDb;User Id=postgres;Password=root;";
opt.DbDriverOption = WatchDogDbDriverEnum.PostgreSql;
});
Startup.cs
under Configure()
NOTE Add Authentication option like below:
Important
This authentication information (Username and Password) will be used to access the log viewer.
app.UseWatchDog(opt =>
{
opt.WatchPageUsername = "admin";
opt.WatchPagePassword = "Qwerty@123";
});
NOTE If your project uses authentication, then
app.UseWatchDog();
should come after app.UseRouting(), app.UseAuthentication(), app.UseAuthorization(), in that order
Optional
app.UseWatchDog(opt =>
{
opt.WatchPageUsername = "admin";
opt.WatchPagePassword = "Qwerty@123";
//Optional
opt.Blacklist = "Test/testPost, api/auth/login"; //Prevent logging for specified endpoints
opt.Serializer = WatchDogSerializerEnum.Newtonsoft; //If your project use a global json converter
opt.CorsPolicy = "MyCorsPolicy";
opt.UseOutputCache = true;
opt.UseRegexForBlacklisting = true;
});
Optional
This is used to log in-app exceptions that occur during a particular HTTP request.
NOTE Add Exception Logger before the main WatchDog Middleware, preferably at the top of the middleware hierarchy so as to catch possible early exceptions.
app.UseWatchDogExceptionLogger();
...
app.UseWatchDog(opt =>
{
opt.WatchPageUsername = "admin";
opt.WatchPagePassword = "Qwerty@123";
...
});
WatchLogger.Log("...Test Log...");
WatchLogger.LogWarning(JsonConvert.Serialize(model));
WatchLogger.LogError(res.Content, eventId: reference);
You can also sink logs from the .NET ILogger into WatchDog
For .NET 6 and above
builder.Logging.AddWatchDogLogger();
For .NET Core 3.1, configure logging and add .AddWatchDogLogger()
to the CreateHostBuilder
method of the Program.cs
class
Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
.ConfigureLogging( logging =>
{
logging.AddWatchDogLogger();
})
.ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webBuilder =>
{
webBuilder.UseStartup<Startup>();
});
Start your server and head to /watchdog
to view the logs.
Example: https://myserver.com/watchdog or https://localhost:[your-port]/watchdog
Still confused? Check out the implementation in the WatchDogCompleteTestAPI folder or the .NET 6 implementation in the WatchDogCompleteApiNet6 folder.
Feel like something is missing? Fork the repo and send a PR.
Encountered a bug? Fork the repo and send a PR.
Alternatively, open an issue and we'll get to it as soon as we can.