escriba v3.0.0
Logging on steroids
Escriba
The motivations for this library is to provide ways for a better express application logging. To achieve this goal we provide tools to managing logs, a log tracker across services and we add relevant information to your log.
Cool features
- JSON format
- Unique id
- Request and responses share the same id. This enables tracking the path of a request across your services
- Hide secret information based on regex
- Adds extra information to your logs as
pid,hostname,level,startTime, andlatency - Filter props from request and/or response
- Skip routes based on methods/rules/body props
Installation
npm install --save escribaUsage
Escriba provides two kinds of logger: logger and httpLogger.
Logger
Use logger log across your application.
For example, to log some information from an userController hidding the password property:
const log4js = require('log4js').getLogger()
const escriba = require('escriba')
const cuid = require('cuid')
log4js.level = 'info'
const { logger } = escriba({
loggerEngine: log4js,
service: 'api',
sensitive: {
password: {
paths: ['message.password'],
pattern: /\w.*/g,
replacer: '*'
}
}
})
logger.info({ text: 'Setting user permission', password: 'abc' }, { id: cuid(), from: 'userController' })Http logger
Use httpLogger to log an http request and response.
For this example we'll long only some properties: id, body and statusCode.
We'll also skip status route, options method and body property from routes that end with .csv or .xlsx.
It's important to hide sentive information like api_key.
const express = require('express')
const log4js = require('log4js').getLogger()
const escriba = require('escriba')
const cuid = require('cuid')
const roomController = require('./controllers/room')
const app = express()
const { httpLogger } = escriba({
loggerEngine: log4js,
sensitive: {
password: {
paths: ['body.api_key'],
pattern: /(ak_test|ak_live).*/g,
replacer: '*'
}
},
httpConf: {
logIdPath: 'headers.my_path_id',
propsToLog: {
request: ['id', 'url', 'body'],
response: ['id', 'url', 'body', 'statusCode', 'latency']
},
envToLog: ['SHELL', 'PATH'],
skipRules: [
{
route: /\/status/,
method: /.*/,
onlyBody: false
},
{
route: /.*\.(csv|xlsx)$/,
method: /GET/,
onlyBody: true
},
{
route: /.*/,
method: /OPTIONS/,
onlyBody: false
}
],
propMaxLength: {
body: 2048,
url: 1024
},
propsToParse: {
request: {
'id': String,
'body.document_number': Number,
},
response: {
'body.customer.id': Number
}
}
}
})
app.use(httpLogger)
app.get('/room/:id', roomController.index)
app.post('/room', roomController.save)Every request and response will be logged, and the coolest part: both will have the same id. This is important because you can search for this id and get all information about your request and response.
As you can see we have the logIdPath inside the httpConf object. This property allow you to pick log id from a desired path in request object. If you don't pass this property escriba will generate a new id for your request/response logs using cuid.
This id is injected in the req object, so if you need to log some extra information between a request and response just do something like this:
logger.info('some controller information', { id: req.id })Also it's possible to skip logs or only the body property through skipRules, in the example we are skiping logs from route /status for all methods and skiping the body property from routes that ends with .csv or .xlsx.
The propMaxLength attribute is responsible to limit the number of characters for certain properties if they exist within propsTolog definition.
The propsToParse attribute is responsible to parse any atribute based on a path, the parsing works by providing a valid javascript native Function (e.g String, Number etc).
Masks
Just like the loggerEngine option, escriba accepts two types of mask engines, they are iron-mask and mask-json. If you don't pass any maskEngine, iron-mask will be used as default.
iron-mask
const { logger, httpLogger } = escriba({
loggerEngine,
service: 'bla',
// no `maskEngine` informed, `iron-mask` will be used
sensitive: { // `iron-mask` sensitive format
secret: {
paths: ['message.secret', 'message.metadata.secret', 'body.secret'],
pattern: /\w.*/g,
replacer: '*',
},
},
})mask-json
const maskJson = require('mask-json')
const { logger, httpLogger } = escriba({
loggerEngine,
service: 'bla',
maskEngine: maskJson,
sensitive: { // `mask-json` sensitive format
blacklist: ['secret'],
options: {
replacement: '*',
},
},
})Integrations
You can enable integrations by simply passing a integrations key in the config. Like this:
escriba({
integrations: {
datadog: true
}
})But remember, for each integration to work you may need to configure your application via environment variables.
Datadog
You'll need to install dd-trace in your application.
The Datadog integration enable this feature: https://docs.datadoghq.com/tracing/advanced/connect_logs_and_traces/.
Examples
The log-generator inside examples folder will run a Node.js application that will make a request for itself every in an interval defined by the user (in milliseconds). The application will get input values from an environment variable ESCRIBA_TIMEOUT(3000 is the default value, this represents 3 seconds)
To use log-generator through Docker use these commands inside the log-generator folder:
docker build -t pagarme/log-generator:latest .
docker run -e ESCRIBA_TIMEOUT=3000 -p 3000:3000 -d -v $(cd ../../ && pwd):/log-generator/node_modules/escriba pagarme/log-generator:latestAnd to make some manual requests use:
curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X GET http://localhost:3000/escriba
curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"username":"a name"}' http://localhost:3000/escribaThe log-generator example will get Escriba library from npm. If you want to get the library directly from the repository run docker with -v:
docker run -e ESCRIBA_TIMEOUT=3000 -p 3000:3000 -d -v $(cd ../../ && pwd):/escriba pagarme/log-generator:latestLicense
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Pagar.me Pagamentos S/A2 years ago
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