Insanely configurable logging for Node.js
NPM has no shortage of loggers. Bristol was created to address a few common shortcomings in the current pool of options:
- The message format should be decoupled from the message target (file, console, etc). You never know what system will be ingesting log files.
- Structured logging should be the norm, and simple log functions should
make that easy! No more shortcuts to
util.format
; if you're injecting values into a string, chances are they should be logged under their own keys. - No restrictions on data type. If you log an Error object, your logger should know what to do with that. Same goes for a string, an object, a date, as well as application-specific data types.
- Lightweight! Why load modules that your configuration never uses? Bristol lazy-loads everything it can.
- No callbacks, return values, or anything that would disincentivize a developer from throwing in a quick log message.
Those points and more drove the development of a brand new breed of logging library. Introducing Bristol.
In your project folder, type:
npm install bristol --save
var log = require('bristol');
log.addTarget('console');
log.info("We're up and running!", {port: 3000});
Outputs (pretty-printed for README only):
{
"message": "We're up and running!",
"date": "2014-04-09 00:45:37",
"severity": "info",
"file": "/path/to/my/file.js",
"line": "4",
"port": 3000
}
Bristol can now be require()'d in any other file, and the settings will follow it.
log.addTarget('console')
.withFormatter('human');
log.debug("Hello, world", {event: 'bootstrap:welcome'});
Outputs:
[2014-04-09 00:53:59] DEBUG: Hello, world (/path/to/my/file.js:5)
event: bootstrap:welcome
- human: Multi-line messages suitable for humans during development
- json: One line per message, valid json
- syslog: Syslog-compliant format, single-line
- commonInfoModel: Common Info Model format, friendly to many log aggregators. More human-readable than JSON with similar benefits. One line per message.
Outputs directly to stdout using console.log() to ensure writes are blocking and synchronous. This is excellent for debugging, but is not recommended in production as this is not performant. There are no options for this target.
Streams output to a file using a logrotate-friendly WriteStream. Required options:
- file string: The full path to the file to be created or opened
Pushes new messages directly to the Loggly API. Note that, to keep Bristol
light, the Loggly API library is not included as a core dependency. You must
run npm install loggly --save
in your project root in order to use this
target.
Required options:
- token string: Your loggly token
- subdomain string: Your registered Loggly subdomain
- username string: Loggly username
- password string: Loggly password
Optional:
- tags Array|string: Global Loggly tags
By default, Bristol provides error, warn, info, debug, and trace
severity levels. These can be called as function names from the log object,
or passed to the log
function as the first parameter.
To change these levels to something else:
// List in order from MOST to LEAST severe:
log.setSeverities(['panic', 'omg', 'uhoh', 'crap', 'ok']);
// Functions matching the provided severities now exist
log.panic("WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO?!");
log.log('omg', new Error("Something failed."));
// The old ones do not.
log.debug("This will throw an exception now");
log.log('trace', "So will this.");
Bristol allows you to send near-infinite arguments to the logging functions, and attempts to intelligently turn those into useful log messages. If your application has its own data structures, it can be useful to inform Bristol of them so that only pertinent values are logged if one of those is passed to a logging function.
log.addTransform(function(elem) {
// This function should return data that should be logged instead of
// the raw 'elem', or NULL if 'elem' isn't a type that we care about.
if (elem.userName && elem.userId) {
// elem is our enormous proprietary user object!
return {
username: elem.userName,
connected: elem.lastSuccessfulConnection,
ping: elem.getLastPingTime()
};
}
return null;
});
// Now our "incomingConn" user object will just add its 3 most important
// properties to the resulting log message, rather than all of them.
log.info("New connection", incomingConn, {connections: server.getUserCount()});
Do you need certain pieces of information logged with every message?
log.setGlobal('hostname', require('os').hostname());
log.setGlobal('msg_uuid', function() {
return uuid.v4();
});
log.info("This message contains both of those key/value pairs!");
Functions provided to setGlobal
will be executed for every log message.
Note that they're only called once per message even if multiple
targets have been added; therefore, the uuid in the example above will be
consistent across all configured targets.
Of course, you can also delete globals with:
log.deleteGlobal('msg_uuid');
// high_priority.log will contain only errors and warns
log.addTarget('file', {file: '/tmp/high_priority.log'})
.withLowestSeverity('warn');
// debug.log will only store debug messages
log.addTarget('file', {file: '/tmp/debug.log'})
.withLowestSeverity('debug')
.withHighestSeverity('debug');
// The console will only output trace messages
log.addTarget('console')
.withHighestSeverity('trace');
Sometimes, even within a severity level, it can be useful to filter out some kinds of log messages. Bristol leverages its key/value logging to allow you to blacklist or whitelist messages on a target, based on the values of certain keys.
// Don't log messages with event=disconnect, OR messages for certain channels
log.addTarget('console')
.withFormatter('human')
.excluding({
event: 'disconnect',
channel: ['#help', /^#anime.*$/]
});
// Only log the trace messages with event starting with "test", from userId
// 1, 2, or 3, and with destination set to a test server.
log.addTarget('file')
.withFormatter('commonInfoModel')
.withHighestSeverity('trace')
.onlyIncluding({
event: /^test:/,
userId: [1, 2, 3],
destination: function(val) { return isTestServer(val); }
Restrictions on keys can be static types like strings or numbers, RegExp objects to check for a match, functions to test the value each time the target is hit, or arrays of any of the above to allow more than one match. Exclusions and inclusions can also be combined in one target to summon Captain Planet.
Have a use case that requires more than one 'log' object, so you can maintain different sets of targets? No problem:
var log2 = new log.Bristol();
The default log object will remain the default, but now log2 is a completely independent instance with zero configuration.
Instead of passing in a target or formatter as a string, you can pass your own functions! Both of these modules are simply functions that take an options object as the first argument, and context-specific arguments after that. Check out some of the built-in targets and formatters for examples. They're super easy!
To test with full coverage report and enforcement of coverage percentage minimums:
npm test
For simple iterative testing, run just the mocha tests with:
npm run mocha
Bristol is distributed under the MIT license.
Bristol was created by Tom Shawver in 2014. Development of this library has been sponsored by TechnologyAdvice and Leadnomics.