I love how open and non-defensive this comment is :)
There are a few ways to slice this, but one is that logs are human-readable print statements and are often per-task. E.g. if you have 100 machines, you don't want to co-mingle their logs because that will make it harder to debug a failure. Metrics are statistics and are often aggregated across tasks. But there are also per-task metrics like cpu usage, io usage etc.
They can both be structured to some extent. Often storage strategies might differ but not necessarily. I think at Google the evolution of structured logging was probably something like (1) printf some stuff, (2) build tooling to scrape and combine the logs, (3) we're good at searching, but searching would be easier if we just logged some protos.
I think logs are basically self-explanatory since everything logs. To understand why you would want separate metrics, consider computing the average cpu utilization for your app across a fleet of machines. You don't want to do that by printf the CPU usage, grep-ing all the logs, etc. You could try to do that with structured logs, and I'm sure some structured logs SaSS companies would advocate that.
If you're new to this space, I really liked the book Designing Data-Intensive Applications.
There are a few ways to slice this, but one is that logs are human-readable print statements and are often per-task. E.g. if you have 100 machines, you don't want to co-mingle their logs because that will make it harder to debug a failure. Metrics are statistics and are often aggregated across tasks. But there are also per-task metrics like cpu usage, io usage etc.
They can both be structured to some extent. Often storage strategies might differ but not necessarily. I think at Google the evolution of structured logging was probably something like (1) printf some stuff, (2) build tooling to scrape and combine the logs, (3) we're good at searching, but searching would be easier if we just logged some protos.
I think logs are basically self-explanatory since everything logs. To understand why you would want separate metrics, consider computing the average cpu utilization for your app across a fleet of machines. You don't want to do that by printf the CPU usage, grep-ing all the logs, etc. You could try to do that with structured logs, and I'm sure some structured logs SaSS companies would advocate that.
If you're new to this space, I really liked the book Designing Data-Intensive Applications.
There's also tracing