Application Insights logging with .NET
In this article, you learn how to capture logs with Application Insights in .NET apps by using the Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.ApplicationInsights
provider package. If you use this provider, you can query and analyze your logs by using the Application Insights tools.
Caution
We recommend the Azure Monitor OpenTelemetry Distro for new applications or customers to power Azure Monitor Application Insights. The Azure Monitor OpenTelemetry Distro delivers a similar functionality and experience as the Application Insights SDK. It's possible to migrate from the Application Insights SDK using the migration guides for .NET, Node.js, and Python, but we are still working to add a few more features for backwards compatibility.
Note
If you want to implement the full range of Application Insights telemetry along with logging, see Configure Application Insights for your ASP.NET websites or Application Insights for ASP.NET Core applications.
Tip
The Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.WorkerService
NuGet package, used to enable Application Insights for background services, is out of scope. For more information, see Application Insights for Worker Service apps.
ASP.NET Core applications
To add Application Insights logging to ASP.NET Core applications:
Install the
Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.ApplicationInsights
.Add
ApplicationInsightsLoggerProvider
:
using Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.ApplicationInsights;
var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
// Add services to the container.
builder.Services.AddControllers();
// Learn more about configuring Swagger/OpenAPI at https://aka.ms/aspnetcore/swashbuckle
builder.Services.AddEndpointsApiExplorer();
builder.Services.AddSwaggerGen();
builder.Logging.AddApplicationInsights(
configureTelemetryConfiguration: (config) =>
config.ConnectionString = builder.Configuration.GetConnectionString("APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"),
configureApplicationInsightsLoggerOptions: (options) => { }
);
builder.Logging.AddFilter<ApplicationInsightsLoggerProvider>("your-category", LogLevel.Trace);
var app = builder.Build();
// Configure the HTTP request pipeline.
if (app.Environment.IsDevelopment())
{
app.UseSwagger();
app.UseSwaggerUI();
}
app.UseHttpsRedirection();
app.UseAuthorization();
app.MapControllers();
app.Run();
With the NuGet package installed and the provider being registered with dependency injection, the app is ready to log. With constructor injection, either ILogger or the generic-type alternative ILogger<TCategoryName> is required. When these implementations are resolved, ApplicationInsightsLoggerProvider
provides them. Logged messages or exceptions are sent to Application Insights.
Consider the following example controller:
public class ValuesController : ControllerBase
{
private readonly ILogger _logger;
public ValuesController(ILogger<ValuesController> logger)
{
_logger = logger;
}
[HttpGet]
public ActionResult<IEnumerable<string>> Get()
{
_logger.LogWarning("An example of a Warning trace..");
_logger.LogError("An example of an Error level message");
return new string[] { "value1", "value2" };
}
}
For more information, see Logging in ASP.NET Core and What Application Insights telemetry type is produced from ILogger logs? Where can I see ILogger logs in Application Insights?.
Console application
To add Application Insights logging to console applications, first install the following NuGet packages:
The following example uses the Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.ApplicationInsights package and demonstrates the default behavior for a console application. The Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.ApplicationInsights package should be used in a console application or whenever you want a bare minimum implementation of Application Insights without the full feature set such as metrics, distributed tracing, sampling, and telemetry initializers.
using Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.Channel;
using Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.Extensibility;
using Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Logging;
using var channel = new InMemoryChannel();
try
{
IServiceCollection services = new ServiceCollection();
services.Configure<TelemetryConfiguration>(config => config.TelemetryChannel = channel);
services.AddLogging(builder =>
{
// Only Application Insights is registered as a logger provider
builder.AddApplicationInsights(
configureTelemetryConfiguration: (config) => config.ConnectionString = "<YourConnectionString>",
configureApplicationInsightsLoggerOptions: (options) => { }
);
});
IServiceProvider serviceProvider = services.BuildServiceProvider();
ILogger<Program> logger = serviceProvider.GetRequiredService<ILogger<Program>>();
logger.LogInformation("Logger is working...");
}
finally
{
// Explicitly call Flush() followed by Delay, as required in console apps.
// This ensures that even if the application terminates, telemetry is sent to the back end.
channel.Flush();
await Task.Delay(TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(1000));
}
For more information, see What Application Insights telemetry type is produced from ILogger logs? Where can I see ILogger logs in Application Insights?.
Logging scopes
ApplicationInsightsLoggingProvider
supports log scopes. Scopes are enabled by default.
If the scope is of type IReadOnlyCollection<KeyValuePair<string,object>>
, then each key/value pair in the collection is added to the Application Insights telemetry as custom properties. In the following example, logs are captured as TraceTelemetry
and has ("MyKey", "MyValue")
in properties.
using (_logger.BeginScope(new Dictionary<string, object> { ["MyKey"] = "MyValue" }))
{
_logger.LogError("An example of an Error level message");
}
If any other type is used as a scope, it gets stored under the property Scope
in Application Insights telemetry. In the following example, TraceTelemetry
has a property called Scope
that contains the scope.
using (_logger.BeginScope("hello scope"))
{
_logger.LogError("An example of an Error level message");
}
Frequently asked questions
What Application Insights telemetry type is produced from ILogger logs? Where can I see ILogger logs in Application Insights?
ApplicationInsightsLoggerProvider
captures ILogger
logs and creates TraceTelemetry
from them. If an Exception
object is passed to the Log
method on ILogger
, ExceptionTelemetry
is created instead of TraceTelemetry
.
Viewing ILogger Telemetry
In the Azure portal:
- Go to the Azure portal and access your Application Insights resource.
- Select the Logs section inside Application Insights.
- Use Kusto Query Language (KQL) to query ILogger messages stored in the
traces
table. Example Query:traces | where message contains "YourSearchTerm"
. - Refine your queries to filter ILogger data by severity, time range, or specific message content.
In Visual Studio (Local Debugger):
- Start your application in debug mode within Visual Studio.
- Open the Diagnostic Tools window while the application runs.
- In the Events tab, ILogger logs appear along with other telemetry data.
- To locate specific ILogger messages, use the search and filter features in the Diagnostic Tools window.
If you prefer to always send TraceTelemetry
, use this snippet:
builder.AddApplicationInsights(
options => options.TrackExceptionsAsExceptionTelemetry = false);
Why do some ILogger logs not have the same properties as others?
Application Insights captures and sends ILogger
logs by using the same TelemetryConfiguration
information that's used for every other telemetry. But there's an exception. By default, TelemetryConfiguration
isn't fully set up when you log from Program.cs or Startup.cs. Logs from these places don't have the default configuration, so they aren't running all TelemetryInitializer
instances and TelemetryProcessor
instances.
I'm using the standalone package Microsoft.Extensions.Logging.ApplicationInsights, and I want to log more custom telemetry manually. How should I do that?
When you use the standalone package, TelemetryClient
isn't injected to the dependency injection (DI) container. You need to create a new instance of TelemetryClient
and use the same configuration that the logger provider uses, as the following code shows. This requirement ensures that the same configuration is used for all custom telemetry and telemetry from ILogger
.
public class MyController : ApiController
{
// This TelemetryClient instance can be used to track additional telemetry through the TrackXXX() API.
private readonly TelemetryClient _telemetryClient;
private readonly ILogger _logger;
public MyController(IOptions<TelemetryConfiguration> options, ILogger<MyController> logger)
{
_telemetryClient = new TelemetryClient(options.Value);
_logger = logger;
}
}
Note
If you use the Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.AspNetCore
package to enable Application Insights, modify this code to get TelemetryClient
directly in the constructor.
I don't have the SDK installed, and I use the Azure Web Apps extension to enable Application Insights for my ASP.NET Core applications. How do I use the new provider?
The Application Insights extension in Azure Web Apps uses the new provider. You can modify the filtering rules in the appsettings.json file for your application.