@flla/winston-loki v6.1.3
winston-loki
A Grafana Loki transport for the nodejs logging library Winston.
Usage
This Winston transport is used similarly to other Winston transports. Require winston and define a new LokiTransport() inside its options when creating it.
Examples
Several usage examples with a test configuration for Grafana+Loki+Promtail reside under examples/. If you want the simplest possible configuration, that's probably the place to check out. By defining json: true and giving winston-loki the correct host address for Loki is enough for most.
Options
LokiTransport() takes a Javascript object as an input. These are the options that are available, required in bold:
| Parameter | Description | Example | Default | 
|---|---|---|---|
host | URL for Grafana Loki | http://127.0.0.1:3100 | null | 
interval | The interval at which batched logs are sent in seconds | 30 | 5 | 
json | Use JSON instead of Protobuf for transport | true | false | 
batching | If batching is not used, the logs are sent as they come | true | true | 
clearOnError | Discard any logs that result in an error during transport | true | false | 
replaceTimestamp | Replace any log timestamps with Date.now(). Warning: Disabling replaceTimestamp may result in logs failing to upload due to recent changes in the upstream Loki project. It is recommended to leave this option enabled unless you have a specific reason to disable it. | true | true | 
labels | custom labels, key-value pairs | { module: 'http' } | undefined | 
format | winston format (https://github.com/winstonjs/winston#formats) | simple() | undefined | 
gracefulShutdown | Enable/disable graceful shutdown (wait for any unsent batches) | false | true | 
timeout | timeout for requests to grafana loki in ms | 30000 | undefined | 
basicAuth | basic authentication credentials to access Loki over HTTP | username:password | undefined | 
onConnectionError | Loki error connection handler | (err) => console.error(err) | undefined | 
useWinstonMetaAsLabels | Use Winston's "meta" (such as defaultMeta values) as Loki labels | true | false | 
ignoredMeta | When useWinstonMetaAsLabels is enabled, a list of meta values to ignore | "error_description" | undefined | 
Example (Running Loki Locally)
With default formatting:
const { createLogger, transports } = require("winston");
const LokiTransport = require("winston-loki");
const options = {
  ...,
  transports: [
    new LokiTransport({
      host: "http://127.0.0.1:3100"
    })
  ]
  ...
};
const logger = createLogger(options);You can set custom labels in every log as well like this:
logger.debug({ message: 'test', labels: { 'key': 'value' } })TODO: Add custom formatting example
Example (Grafana Cloud Loki)
Important: this snippet requires the following values, here are the instructions for how you can find them.
LOKI_HOST: find this in your Grafana Cloud instance by checking Connections > Data Sources, find the right Loki connection, and copy its URL, which may look likehttps://logs-prod-006.grafana.netUSER_ID: the user number in the same data source definition, it will be a multi-digit number like372040GRAFANA_CLOUD_TOKEN: In Grafana Cloud, search for Cloud Access Policies. Create a new Cloud Access Policy, ensuring its scopes includelogs:write. Generate a token for this cloud access policy, and use this value here.
const { createLogger, transports } = require("winston");
const LokiTransport = require("winston-loki");
const options = {
  ...,
  transports: [
    new LokiTransport({
        host: 'LOKI_HOST',
        labels: { app: 'my-app' },
        json: true,
        basicAuth: 'USER_ID:GRAFANA_CLOUD_TOKEN',
        format: winston.format.json(),
        replaceTimestamp: true,
        onConnectionError: (err) => console.error(err),
    })
  ]
  ...
};
const logger = createLogger(options);
logger.debug({ message: 'test', labels: { 'key': 'value' } })Developing
Requirements
Running a local Loki for testing is probably required, and the easiest way to do that is to follow this guide: https://github.com/grafana/loki/tree/master/production#run-locally-using-docker. After that, Grafana Loki instance is available at http://localhost:3100, with a Grafana instance running at http://localhost:3000. Username admin, password admin. Add the Loki source with the URL http://loki:3100, and the explorer should work.
Refer to https://grafana.com/docs/loki/latest/api/ for documentation about the available endpoints, data formats etc.
Example
npm install
npm link
cd ~/your_project
npm link winston-loki
npm installAnd you should have a working, requirable winston-loki package under your project's node_modules. After the link has been established, any changes to winston-loki should show on rerun of the software that uses it.
Run tests
npm testWrite new ones under /test
9 months ago