composite_logger.cr

Logger interface to write to multiple loggers

IMPORTANT

composite_logger.cr has been closed. Use Pretty::Logger instead.

composite_logger.cr Build Status

Logger interface to write to multiple loggers for Crystal. In addition, this extends handy methods to stdlib Logger.

require "composite_logger"

logger = CompositeLogger.new
logger << Logger.new(STDOUT, level: "=INFO")
logger << Logger.new(STDERR, level: ">=WARN")
logger << Logger.new("err.log", level: "ERROR")

logger.warn("API: HTTP 500")
logger.error("DB: file not found")
logger.info("done")
--- STDOUT ---
done
--- STDERR ---
API: HTTP 500
DB: file not found
--- err.log ---
DB: file not found

API

class CompositeLogger < Logger
  def initialize(loggers : Array(Logger), ...)

class Logger
  def colorize=(bool : Bool)
  def formatter=(fmt : String)
  def level=(str : String)
  def level_op=(op : LevelOp)

Installation

Add this to your application's shard.yml:

dependencies:
  composite_logger:
    github: maiha/composite_logger.cr
    version: 0.4.0

Usage (CompositeLogger)

logging to both STDOUT, STDERR and FILE

already described in top usage.

in memory logging

memory: option provides a handy in-memory logging.

logger = CompositeLogger.new(memory: Logger::ERROR)
...
unless logger.memory.to_s.empty?
  STDERR.puts "Some errors occurred while running program."
  exit -1
end

Usage (Logger extensions)

Logger#colorize = true

This library enhanced stdlib Logger to colorize messages.

  • ERROR, FATAL: red
  • WARN: yellow

This is enabled only when colorize == true and formatter= is used.

logger.formatter = "{{message}}"
logger.colorize = true
logger.error "foo" # => "\e[31mfoo\e[0m\n"

Logger#formatter=(fmt : String)

This library enhanced stdlib Logger#formtter= to accept format string.

The traditional way to set formatter is not pretty.

logger.formatter = Logger::Formatter.new do |severity, datetime, progname, message, io|
  io << severity.to_s << "," << message
end
logger.info "foo" # => "INFO,foo\n"

This can be simply refactored by {{KEYWORD(=FORMAT)}} as follows.

logger.formatter = "{{severity}},{{message}}"
logger.info "foo" # => "INFO,foo\n"
available keywords
Keyword Alias Converted to Example
{{level}} severity severity "INFO"
{{level=[%-5s]}} severity "[INFO ]"
{{mark}} severity.to_s[0] "I"
{{time}} datetime datetime "2019-01-24 21:03:45"
{{time=%H:%M}} datetime.to_s("...") "21:03"
{{prog}} progname progname "main"
{{message}} message "foo"
{{pid=%6s}} Process.pid " 5361"
{{xxx}} (leaves unknowns) "{{xxx}}"

The default formatter in stdlib can be represented as follows.

"{{mark}}, [{{time}}\#{{pid}}] {{prog=%s: }}{{message}}"

Logger#level=(str : String)

This library enhanced stdlib Logger#level= to accept level string for handy accessor.

logger = Logger.new(nil)
logger.level = "DEBUG"

In addition, it provides a level op as level quantifier.

logger = Logger.new(STDOUT, level: "=INFO")
logger.info "foo" # Of course stored
logger.warn "foo" # ignored **(NEW)**
available quantifier
  • >=(default), =, >, <, <=, <>, !=(same as <>)

Contributing

  1. Fork it (https://github.com/maiha/composite_logger.cr/fork)
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request

Contributors

Repository

composite_logger.cr

Owner
Statistic
  • 1
  • 0
  • 0
  • 1
  • 0
  • about 4 years ago
  • September 7, 2018
License

MIT License

Links
Synced at

Mon, 06 May 2024 07:04:38 GMT

Languages