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log4js-node

This is a conversion of the log4js framework to work with node. I've mainly stripped out the browser-specific code and tidied up some of the javascript. It includes a basic file logger, with log rolling based on file size. It also enhances the default console logging functions (console.log, console.debug, etc) so that they use log4js and can be directed to a file, with log rolling etc - which is handy if you have some third party modules that use console.log but want that output included in your application log files.

NOTE: since v0.2.0 require('log4js') returns a function, so you need to call that function in your code before you can use it. I've done this to make testing easier (allows dependency injection).

installation

npm install log4js

tests

Tests now use vows, run with vows test/*.js.

usage

Minimalist version: var log4js = require('log4js')(); var logger = log4js.getLogger(); logger.debug("Some debug messages"); Even more minimalist version: require('log4js')(); console.debug("Some debug messages"); By default, log4js outputs to stdout with the coloured layout (thanks to masylum), so for the above you would see: [2010-01-17 11:43:37.987] [DEBUG] [default] - Some debug messages

See example.js:

var log4js = require('log4js')(); //note the need to call the function
log4js.addAppender(log4js.consoleAppender());
log4js.addAppender(log4js.fileAppender('logs/cheese.log'), 'cheese');

var logger = log4js.getLogger('cheese');
logger.setLevel('ERROR');

logger.trace('Entering cheese testing');
logger.debug('Got cheese.');
logger.info('Cheese is Gouda.');  
logger.warn('Cheese is quite smelly.');
logger.error('Cheese is too ripe!');
logger.fatal('Cheese was breeding ground for listeria.');

Output [2010-01-17 11:43:37.987] [ERROR] cheese - Cheese is too ripe! [2010-01-17 11:43:37.990] [FATAL] cheese - Cheese was breeding ground for listeria.

configuration

You can either configure the appenders and log levels manually (as above), or provide a configuration file (log4js.configure('path/to/file.json')) explicitly, or just let log4js look for a file called log4js.json (it looks in the current directory first, then the require paths, and finally looks for the default config included in the same directory as the log4js.js file). An example file can be found in test/log4js.json. An example config file with log rolling is in test/with-log-rolling.json You can also pass an object to the configure function, which has the same properties as the json versions.

todo

patternLayout has no tests. This is mainly because I haven't found a use for it yet, and am not entirely sure what it was supposed to do. It is more-or-less intact from the original log4js.

connect/express logger

A connect/express logger has been added to log4js. This allows connect/express servers to log using log4js. See example-connect-logger.js.

var log4js = require('./lib/log4js')();
log4js.addAppender(log4js.consoleAppender());
log4js.addAppender(log4js.fileAppender('cheese.log'), 'cheese');
  
var logger = log4js.getLogger('cheese');

logger.setLevel('INFO');

var app = require('express').createServer();
app.configure(function() {
    app.use(log4js.connectLogger(logger, { level: log4js.levels.INFO }));
});
app.get('/', function(req,res) {
    res.send('hello world');
});
app.listen(5000);

The options object that is passed to log4js.connectLogger supports a format string the same as the connect/express logger. For example:

app.configure(function() {
    app.use(log4js.connectLogger(logger, { level: log4js.levels.INFO, format: ':method :url' }));
});

author (of this node version)

Gareth Jones (csausdev - gareth.jones@sensis.com.au)

License

The original log4js was distributed under the Apache 2.0 License, and so is this. I've tried to keep the original copyright and author credits in place, except in sections that I have rewritten extensively.