1.3.0 • Published 10 years ago

@leisurelink/skinny-loggins v1.3.0

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
10 years ago

Skinny Loggins

Skinny Loggins

The logger of your dreams.

Setting it up

  • npm i -S @leisurelink/skinny-loggins
// src/logger.js
import createLoggins from '@leisurelink/skinny-loggins';
const settings = {
  // Console: { /* are defaulted */ },
  // Logstash: { host: '', port: 28777 }
}
export default createLoggins(settings);
// src/magicbus.js
import nameLogger from './path/to/logger';
const logger = nameLogger('magicbus');

logger.info('Message Sent'); // MM/DD/YYYY HH:mm:ss UTC info: magicbus: "Message Sent"

Logging levels

These are the current logging levels:

  • silly - 1
  • debug - 2
  • verbose - 3
  • info - 4
  • warn - 5
  • error - 6

logger.log() is a special case where you can specify the level to which you should log.

logger.log('debug', 'Here is my debug message');
logger.log('info', 'Here is my info message');
// ....

logger.silly('Here is my silly message');
logger.debug('Here is my debug message');
logger.verbose('Here is my verbose message');
logger.info('Here is my info message');
logger.warn('Here is my warn message');
logger.error('Here is my error message');

Adding and removing transports

Adding defaults is simple. The only caveat is that currently you can only add supported transports.

var createLoggins = require('@leisurelink/skinny-loggins');
var logger = createLoggins();

// create an http transport
var transport = {
  host: 'http://some.url'
};
logger.add('http', transport);

// remove
logger.remove('http');

Transports and their defaults

If you new up a logger but don't specify a transport for it to log on, these are the defaults.

Console

Defaults

{
  level: 'info',
  silent: false,
  colorize: true,
  timestamp: true,
  json: true,
  stringify: true,
  humanReadableUnhandledException: true,
  showLevel: true,
  stderrLevels: [ 'error', 'debug' ]
}

logstash

The logstash information is not defaulted as this should be specified from the environment. The properties required are:

  • host
  • port -- this will default to 2877

Defaults

{
  host: '<specified host>', // Required
  port: 28777,
  logstash: true,
  ssl_enable: false,
  rejectUnauthorized: false,
  strip_colors: false
}

File

Defaults

{
  level: 'info',
  filename: 'logs.log',
  maxsize: 5242880,
  maxFiles: 5,
  json: true,
  eol: '\n',
  logstash: true,
  showLevel: true,
  options: { flags: 'a' }
}

consumeFrom

Many of LeisureLink's modules use an event logging pattern to publish events for any logger to consume. One example of this is @leisurelink/skinny-event-loggins. The consumeFrom method is for convenience in integrating these log events into your logging configuration. The consumeFrom expects a component argument with an on function that can be used to subscribe to log events. These events should have this structure:

{
  kind: 'info',
  message: 'howdy',
  namespace: 'component',
  err: new Error('Badness')
}

Example

// src/logger.js
import createLoggins from '@leisurelink/skinny-loggins';
import component from './configured-component';
const settings = {
  // Console: { /* are defaulted */ },
  // Logstash: { host: '', port: 28777 }
}
let logger = createLoggins(settings);
logger.consumeFrom(component);
export default logger;

// src/component.js
import createEventLogger from '@leisurelink/skinny-event-loggins';
let logger = createEventLogger('component');
export default {
  work: () => { logger.info('Work started'); },
  on: (ev, handler) => { logger.on(ev, handler); }
};
1.3.0

10 years ago

1.2.0

10 years ago

1.1.2

10 years ago

1.1.1

10 years ago

1.1.0

10 years ago

1.0.1

10 years ago

1.0.0

10 years ago

0.3.2

10 years ago

0.3.1

10 years ago

0.3.0

10 years ago

0.2.0

10 years ago