logbro v2.0.1
logbro · 
There were no good names left for logging libraries, so I chose a terrible one instead.
const bro = require('logbro');
bro.warn('I have a terrible name, but I make pretty logs');Features
- Pretty (default), JSON, and custom formats
- Configurable
stdoutandstderrstreams - Singleton by default
- Shared or local format and level
Errorstack serialization
Levels
stdout
tracedebuginfo
stderr
warnerrorcritical
Each value implicitly includes all levels above itself – so, for example, when
your app is run with NODE_DEBUG=warn node app.js, all warn, error, and
critical logs will be sent to stdout/stderr. In the same example,
bro.info() and bro.debug() would effectively be no-ops.
API
bro.log(level, message, [...interpolationValues])
level(string): one of the levels defined abovemessage(string): an optional message. If the message is a format string, it will use theinterpolationValuesas the format parameters.[...interpolationValues](...any): optional values to use to format themessageusingutil.format(). Otherwise, these values will be appended to themessage.
bro.<level>(message, [interpolationValues])
The same as bro.log, but without the need to pass the level as a parameter. Prefer using these to bro.log.
bro.format (Log => string)
Get the current log format OR set the current log format for this bro instance. By default, a bro instance will use the shared log format. Set bro.format = null to resume using the shared log format.
Log:
timestamp(string)level(string)message(string | undefined)
Logbro.level (string)
Get the shared log level OR set the shared log level.
Logbro.format (Log => string)
Get the shared log format OR set the shared log format.
new Logbro(opts)
opts
[format](string | (Log => string))[stdout](stream.Writable)[stderr](stream.Writable)
Example
bro.log('info', 'This is an info log');
// Preferred
bro.info('This is another info log');NOTE: bro.log has the same argument signature as console.log.
Configuration
Log Level
logbro will read the initial log level from the NODE_DEBUG environment variable.
The NODE_DEBUG environment variable can actually contain multiple flags,
but the one with the lowest priority level will win. For example,
NODE_DEBUG=debug,info,critical node app.js will use debug as the log level,
since it automatically includes the other levels.
NOTE: If the log level is not set, logbro will not write any logs.
Log Format
logbro will read the initial log format from the LOGBRO_FORMAT environment variable.
Possible formats:
prettyjson
Events
Each log level will emit an event of the same name if the log level is high enough.
For example, bro.critical('foo'); will emit a 'critical' event whose
callback argument will be of type Log.
This way, applications can hook in to the logging system and respond however they want (post to Slack, send to a logging service, etc.).
Streaming
By default, logs are written to either process.stdout or process.stderr.
Apps can optionally overwrite bro.stdout and bro.stderr with other
instances of stream.Writable in order to stream logs to the filesystem,
via HTTP, to a database, etc.
Node.js Compatibility
logbro requires >= Node.js 8.3.
Examples
Logging
const bro = require('logbro');
bro.critical( 'this is a %s with some %s', 'log', 'formatting' );Event binding
const bro = require('logbro');
bro.on( 'critical', msg => slack.notify( msg ) );
bro.on( 'error', (msg, log) => {
slack.notify(msg);
console.error(log.stack);
})Streaming
const bro = require('logbro'),
const fs = require('fs'),
const file = fs.createWriteStream('./log.txt');
bro.stdout = file;
bro.stderr = file;
bro.info('blah blah blah');Custom Logbro Instance
const { Logbro } = require('logbro')
const format = log => '>> ' + log.message || 'No message';
const logger = new Logbro({ format });
logger.info('Hello world'); // ">> Hello world"