pino-pretty-browser v9.1.2
pino-pretty-browser
This module provides a basic ndjson formatter to be used in development. If an incoming line looks like it could be a log line from an ndjson logger, in particular the Pino logging library, then it will apply extra formatting by considering things like the log level and timestamp.
A standard Pino log line like:
{"level":30,"time":1522431328992,"msg":"hello world","pid":42,"hostname":"foo","v":1}
Will format to:
[17:35:28.992] INFO (42): hello world
If you landed on this page due to the deprecation of the prettyPrint
option
of pino
, read the Programmatic Integration section.
Example
Using the example script from the Pino module, we can see what the prettified logs will look like:
Install
$ npm install -g pino-pretty
Usage
It is recommended to use pino-pretty
with pino
by piping output to the CLI tool:
node app.js | pino-pretty
CLI Arguments
--colorize
(-c
): Adds terminal color escape sequences to the output.--crlf
(-f
): Appends carriage return and line feed, instead of just a line feed, to the formatted log line.--errorProps
(-e
): When formatting an error object, display this list of properties. The list should be a comma-separated list of properties Default:''
. Do not use this option if logging from pino@7. Support will be removed from future verions.--levelFirst
(-l
): Display the log level name before the logged date and time.--errorLikeObjectKeys
(-k
): Define the log keys that are associated with error like objects. Default:err,error
.--messageKey
(-m
): Define the key that contains the main log message. Default:msg
.--levelKey
(--levelKey
): Define the key that contains the level of the log. Default:level
.--levelLabel
(-b
): Output the log level using the specified label. Default:levelLabel
.--minimumLevel
(-L
): Hide messages below the specified log level. Accepts a number,trace
,debug
,info
,warn
,error
, orfatal
. If any more filtering is required, consider usingjq
.--customLevels
(-x
): Override default levels with custom levels, e.g.-x err:99,info:1
--customColors
(-X
): Override default colors with custom colors, e.g.-X err:red,info:blue
--useOnlyCustomProps
(-U
): Only use custom levels and colors (if provided) (default: true); else fallback to default levels and colors, e.g.-U false
--messageFormat
(-o
): Format output of message, e.g.{levelLabel} - {pid} - url:{req.url}
will output message:INFO - 1123 - url:localhost:3000/test
Default:false
--timestampKey
(-a
): Define the key that contains the log timestamp. Default:time
.--translateTime
(-t
): Translate the epoch time value into a human-readable date and time string. This flag also can set the format string to apply when translating the date to a human-readable format. For a list of available pattern letters, see thedateformat
documentation.- The default format is
HH:MM:ss.l
in the local timezone. - Require a
UTC:
prefix to translate time to UTC, e.g.UTC:yyyy-mm-dd HH:MM:ss.l o
. - Require a
SYS:
prefix to translate time to the local system's time zone. A shortcutSYS:standard
to translate time toyyyy-mm-dd HH:MM:ss.l o
in system time zone.
- The default format is
--ignore
(-i
): Ignore one or several keys, nested keys are supported with each property delimited by a dot character (.
), keys may be escaped to target property names that contains the delimiter itself: (-i time,hostname,req.headers,log\\.domain\\.corp/foo
). The--ignore
option would be ignored, if both--ignore
and--include
are passed. Default:hostname
.--include
(-I
): The opposite of--ignore
. Include one or several keys.--hideObject
(-H
): Hide objects from output (but not error object)--singleLine
(-S
): Print each log message on a single line (errors will still be multi-line)--config
: Specify a path to a config file containing the pino-pretty options. pino-pretty will attempt to read from a.pino-prettyrc
in your current directory (process.cwd
) if not specified
Programmatic Integration
We recommend against using pino-pretty
in production and highly
recommend installing pino-pretty
as a development dependency.
Install pino-pretty
alongside pino
and set the transport target to 'pino-pretty'
:
const pino = require('pino')
const logger = pino({
transport: {
target: 'pino-pretty'
},
})
logger.info('hi')
The transport option can also have an options object containing pino-pretty
options:
const pino = require('pino')
const logger = pino({
transport: {
target: 'pino-pretty',
options: {
colorize: true
}
}
})
logger.info('hi')
Use it as a stream:
const pino = require('pino')
const pretty = require('pino-pretty')
const logger = pino(pretty())
logger.info('hi')
Options are also supported:
const pino = require('pino')
const pretty = require('pino-pretty')
const stream = pretty({
colorize: true
})
const logger = pino(stream)
logger.info('hi')
See the Options section for all possible options.
Usage as a stream
If you are using pino-pretty
as a stream and you need to provide options to pino
,
pass the options as the first argument and pino-pretty
as second argument:
const pino = require('pino')
const pretty = require('pino-pretty')
const stream = pretty({
colorize: true
})
const logger = pino({ level: 'info' }, stream)
// Nothing is printed
logger.debug('hi')
Usage with Jest
Logging with Jest is problematic, as the test framework requires no asynchronous operation to continue after the test has finished. The following is the only supported way to use this module with Jest:
import pino from 'pino'
import pretty from 'pino-pretty'
test('test pino-pretty', () => {
const logger = pino(pretty({ sync: true }));
logger.info('Info');
logger.error('Error');
});
Handling non-serializable options
Using the new pino v7+
transports not all
options are serializable, for example if you want to use messageFormat
as a
function you will need to wrap pino-pretty
in a custom module.
Executing main.js
below will log a colorized hello world
message using a
custom function messageFormat
:
// main.js
const pino = require('pino')
const logger = pino({
transport: {
target: './pino-pretty-transport',
options: {
colorize: true
}
},
})
logger.info('world')
// pino-pretty-transport.js
module.exports = opts => require('pino-pretty')({
...opts,
messageFormat: (log, messageKey) => `hello ${log[messageKey]}`
})
Options
The options accepted have keys corresponding to the options described in CLI Arguments:
{
colorize: colorette.isColorSupported, // --colorize
crlf: false, // --crlf
errorLikeObjectKeys: ['err', 'error'], // --errorLikeObjectKeys
errorProps: '', // --errorProps
levelFirst: false, // --levelFirst
messageKey: 'msg', // --messageKey
levelKey: 'level', // --levelKey
messageFormat: false, // --messageFormat
timestampKey: 'time', // --timestampKey
translateTime: false, // --translateTime
ignore: 'pid,hostname', // --ignore
include: 'level,time', // --include
hideObject: false, // --hideObject
singleLine: false, // --singleLine
config: '/path/to/config/', // --config
customColors: 'err:red,info:blue', // --customColors
customLevels: 'err:99,info:1', // --customLevels
levelLabel: 'levelLabel', // --levelLabel
minimumLevel: 'info', // --minimumLevel
useOnlyCustomProps: true, // --useOnlyCustomProps
// The file or file descriptor (1 is stdout) to write to
destination: 1,
// Alternatively, pass a `sonic-boom` instance (allowing more flexibility):
// destination: new SonicBoom({ dest: 'a/file', mkdir: true })
// You can also configure some SonicBoom options directly
sync: false, // by default we write asynchronously
append: true, // the file is opened with the 'a' flag
mkdir: true, // create the target destination
customPrettifiers: {}
}
The colorize
default follows
colorette.isColorSupported
.
The defaults for sync
, append
, mkdir
inherit from
SonicBoom(opts)
.
customPrettifiers
option provides the ability to add a custom prettify function
for specific log properties. customPrettifiers
is an object, where keys are
log properties that will be prettified and value is the prettify function itself.
For example, if a log line contains a query
property,
you can specify a prettifier for it:
{
customPrettifiers: {
query: prettifyQuery
}
}
//...
const prettifyQuery = value => {
// do some prettify magic
}
Additionally, customPrettifiers
can be used to format the time
, hostname
, pid
, name
, caller
and level
outputs:
{
customPrettifiers: {
// The argument for this function will be the same
// string that's at the start of the log-line by default:
time: timestamp => `🕰 ${timestamp}`,
// The argument for the level-prettifier may vary depending
// on if the levelKey option is used or not.
// By default this will be the same numerics as the Pino default:
level: logLevel => `LEVEL: ${logLevel}`
// other prettifiers can be used for the other keys if needed, for example
hostname: hostname => colorGreen(hostname)
pid: pid => colorRed(pid)
name: name => colorBlue(name)
caller: caller => colorCyan(caller)
}
}
Note that prettifiers do not include any coloring, if the stock coloring on
level
is desired, it can be accomplished using the following:
const { colorizerFactory } = require('pino-pretty')
const levelColorize = colorizerFactory(true)
const levelPrettifier = logLevel => `LEVEL: ${levelColorize(logLevel)}`
//...
{
customPrettifiers: { level: levelPrettifier }
}
messageFormat
option allows you to customize the message output. A template string
like this can define the format:
{
messageFormat: '{levelLabel} - {pid} - url:{req.url}'
}
This option can also be defined as a function
with this prototype:
{
messageFormat: (log, messageKey, levelLabel) => {
// do some log message customization
return customized_message;
}
}
Limitations
Because pino-pretty
uses stdout redirection, in some cases the command may
terminate with an error due to shell limitations.
For example, currently, mingw64 based shells (e.g. Bash as supplied by git for
Windows) are affected and terminate the process with
a stdout is not a tty
error message.
Any PRs are welcomed!
License
MIT License