# cloudfront-logs A Rust-based AWS CloudFront log line parser ## Log format The AWS CloudFront log file format is described here: ## Purpose and Design This parser currently focuses on parsing a single line of a log file only. It provides are structured view to those tab-separated field items and avoids fiddling with numeric indices. It's up to the user of this library to pass the individual lines to the parser. This makes it very flexible to use in different scenarios as there are no assumptions about where those log lines come from and how they pass through the program. It's possible that in the future more utilities get added, but as of now it's more important to deliver a fast and reliable parsing functionality. The library therefore serves different parser implementation, so you can pick the one for your use cases and needs. Consult the benchmarks (run `./benches.sh`) for a synthetic overview. ## Example Given the following log line: ```log 2019-12-04 21:02:31 LAX1 392 192.0.2.100 GET d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net /index.html 200 - Mozilla/5.0%20(Windows%20NT%2010.0;%20Win64;%20x64)%20AppleWebKit/537.36%20(KHTML,%20like%20Gecko)%20Chrome/78.0.3904.108%20Safari/537.36 - - Hit SOX4xwn4XV6Q4rgb7XiVGOHms_BGlTAC4KyHmureZmBNrjGdRLiNIQ== d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net https 23 0.001 - TLSv1.2 ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256 Hit HTTP/2.0 - - 11040 0.001 Hit text/html 78 - - ``` You have different options to proces this line: ```rust use cloudfront_logs::*; let logline: &str = "2019-12-04 21:02:31 LAX1 392 192.0.2.100 GET d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net /index.html 200 - Mozilla/5.0%20(Windows%20NT%2010.0;%20Win64;%20x64)%20AppleWebKit/537.36%20(KHTML,%20like%20Gecko)%20Chrome/78.0.3904.108%20Safari/537.36 - - Hit SOX4xwn4XV6Q4rgb7XiVGOHms_BGlTAC4KyHmureZmBNrjGdRLiNIQ== d111111abcdef8.cloudfront.net https 23 0.001 - TLSv1.2 ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256 Hit HTTP/2.0 - - 11040 0.001 Hit text/html 78 - -"; // -- borrowing the input -- // reasonable default parser let item = ValidatedRawLogline::try_from(logline).unwrap(); // fields are only sub-slices from the input and therefore all return &str assert_eq!(item.date, "2019-12-04"); assert_eq!(item.sc_bytes, "392"); assert_eq!(item.c_ip, "192.0.2.100"); // -- get an owned version -- // parser which only uses types accessible without external dependencies, // only Rust's core and std library is allowed let item = ValidatedSimpleLogline::try_from(logline).unwrap(); assert_eq!(item.date, "2019-12-04"); assert_eq!(item.sc_content_len, 78); assert_eq!(item.c_ip, IpAddr::V4(Ipv4Addr::new(192, 0, 2, 100))); // -- get an owned and typed version -- // parser which also converts some fields via external dependencies, let item = ValidatedTimeLogline::try_from(logline).unwrap(); // here: date and time from the `time` crate assert_eq!(item.date, time_macros::date!(2019-12-04)); assert_eq!(item.time, time_macros::time!(21:02:31)); assert_eq!(item.time_taken, Duration::from_millis(1)); ``` ## Benchmark example The following was run under WSL Ubuntu, on a AMD Ryzen 9 7950X3D 16-Core Processor, 64 GiB RAM machine. Your own numbers may vary. What's more important are the relative differences of the parser implementations. ```shell # code under benches/comparison-real-world.rs RUSTFLAGS="-Ctarget-cpu=native" cargo bench -q --all-features --bench real-world ``` ```txt *** Comparing different parsers for AWS CloudFront logs *** Parses lines and extracts a few fields, slightly unordered, this should simulate close to real-world usages. Timer precision: 10 ns real_world fastest │ slowest │ median │ mean │ samples │ iters ├─ 00 CheckedRawLogLine │ │ │ │ │ │ ├─ Line A 162.3 ns │ 210.6 ns │ 167.1 ns │ 167.8 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ├─ Line B 164.2 ns │ 275.6 ns │ 171.8 ns │ 175.8 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ├─ Lines A+B 325.1 ns │ 398.2 ns │ 337.4 ns │ 337.5 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ╰─ Sample File 994 ns │ 1.1 µs │ 1.024 µs │ 1.029 µs │ 1000 │ 1000000 ├─ 10 CheckedRawLogLineView │ │ │ │ │ │ ├─ Line A 366.6 ns │ 422.9 ns │ 376.8 ns │ 378 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ├─ Line B 358.8 ns │ 412.5 ns │ 369 ns │ 370 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ├─ Lines A+B 716.5 ns │ 888.4 ns │ 748.2 ns │ 749.7 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ╰─ Sample File 2.178 µs │ 2.784 µs │ 2.279 µs │ 2.279 µs │ 1000 │ 1000000 ├─ 11 SmartRawLogLineView │ │ │ │ │ │ ├─ Line A 287.5 ns │ 385 ns │ 298.9 ns │ 301.3 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ├─ Line B 285.2 ns │ 401.5 ns │ 301.5 ns │ 303 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ├─ Lines A+B 556.7 ns │ 680.3 ns │ 594.7 ns │ 595.8 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ╰─ Sample File 1.694 µs │ 2.671 µs │ 1.789 µs │ 1.796 µs │ 1000 │ 1000000 ├─ 20 SimpleLogLine │ │ │ │ │ │ ├─ Line A 355.2 ns │ 432 ns │ 370.8 ns │ 372.9 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ├─ Line B 347.8 ns │ 533.7 ns │ 370.7 ns │ 373.5 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ├─ Lines A+B 715.5 ns │ 883.4 ns │ 752 ns │ 753.9 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 │ ╰─ Sample File 2.136 µs │ 3.085 µs │ 2.236 µs │ 2.247 µs │ 1000 │ 1000000 ╰─ 21 TypedLogLine │ │ │ │ │ ├─ Line A 395.5 ns │ 467.9 ns │ 407.9 ns │ 409.6 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 ├─ Line B 387.8 ns │ 512.7 ns │ 397.1 ns │ 399.5 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 ├─ Lines A+B 781 ns │ 1.164 µs │ 812.2 ns │ 813.6 ns │ 1000 │ 1000000 ╰─ Sample File 2.317 µs │ 3.551 µs │ 2.384 µs │ 2.409 µs │ 1000 │ 1000000 ``` There are more benches you can run, like `single-field` and `two-fields` which should highlight where the "View" parsers shine. ## Safety This crate uses ``#![forbid(unsafe_code)]`` to ensure everything is implemented in 100% Safe Rust. ## License Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this crate by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.