This library includes:
It's useful for querying events and working with configuration data - everything you can do using the Seq web UI, you can do programmatically via the API.
If you want to write events to Seq, use one of the logging framework clients, such as Serilog.Sinks.Seq or NLog.Targets.Seq instead.
Install from NuGet:
dotnet add package Seq.Api
Create a SeqConnection
with your server URL:
var connection = new SeqConnection("http://localhost:5341");
Navigate the "resource groups" exposed as properties of the connnection
:
var installedApps = await connection.Apps.ListAsync();
To authenticate, the SeqConnection
constructor accepts an apiKey
parameter (make sure the API key permits user-level access) or, if you want to log in with personal credentials you can await connection.Users.LoginAsync(username, password)
.
For a more complete example, see the seq-tail app included in the source.
The Seq API provides a /template
resource for each resource group that provides a new instance of the resource with defaults populated. The API client uses this pattern when creating new entities:
var signal = await connection.Signals.TemplateAsync();
signal.Title = "Signal 123";
await connection.Signals.AddAsync(signal);
See the signal-copy app for an example of this pattern in action.
Seq internally limits the resources a query is allowed to consume. The query methods on SeqConnection.Events
include a status with each result set - a Partial
status indicates that further results must be retrieved.
The snippet below demonstrates lazily enumerating through results to retrieve the complete set.
var resultSet = await connection.Events.EnumerateAsync(
filter: "Environment = 'Test'",
render: true,
count: 1000);
await foreach (var evt in resultSet)
Console.WriteLine(evt.RenderedMessage);
All methods that retrieve events require a count
. The API client defaults this value to 30
if not specified.
Seq 3.4 provides live streaming of events matching a filter and/or set of signals.
var filter = "@Level = 'Error'";
using (var stream = await connection.Events.StreamAsync<JObject>(filter: filter))
using (stream.Select(jObject => LogEventReader.ReadFromJObject(jObject))
.Subscribe(evt => Log.Write(evt)))
{
await stream;
}
The Events.StreamAsync()
method returns a hot IObservable<T>
over a WebSocket. The observable will keep producing events until either it's disposed, or the server is shut down.
Seq streams the events in compact JSON format, which the Seq API client library can deserialize into JSON.NET JObjects
for consumption.
Serilog.Formatting.Compact.Reader provides the LogEventReader
class used above to turn these documents back into Serilog LogEvent
s. Having the events represented in Serilog’s object model means they can be passed back into a logging pipeline, as performed above using Log.Write()
.
The SeqApiClient
class implements the low level interactions with the API's entities and links. It's one step up from System.Net.HttpClient
- you may be able to use it in cases not supported by the high-level wrapper.
Create a SeqApiClient
with your server URL:
var client = new SeqApiClient("http://localhost:5341");
Get the root resource and use it to retrieve one or more of the resource groups:
var root = await client.GetRootAsync();
var events = await client.GetAsync<ResourceGroup>(root, "EventsResources");
(Available resource groups, like Events
, Users
and so-on, can be seen in the root document's Links
collection.)
Use the client to navigate links from entity to entity:
var matched = await client.ListAsync<EventEntity>(
events,
"Items",
new Dictionary<string, object>{{"count", 10}, {"render", true}});
foreach (var match in matched)
Console.WriteLine(match.RenderedMessage);
This package does not follow the SemVer rule of major version increments for breaking changes. Instead, the package version tracks the Seq version it supports.