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logged

v0.2.1

Published

json logging to stdout

Downloads

16

Readme

logged

Logging should be simple. This library is 80 lines of code. It gets the job done. Simply.

examples

simple

var log = require('logged')();
log.debug('test');

What you should see on stderr: {"level":0,"message":"test","date":"2012-04-21T09:37:47.373Z"}

named logger

var log = require('logged')('my-logger');
log.debug('test');

What you should see on stderr: {"level":0,"message":"test","name":"my-logger","date":"2012-04-21T09:37:47.373Z"}

log with more context

var log = require('logged')({name: 'my-logger', env: 'production'});
log.debug('test', {user: 'joe'});

What you should see on stderr: {"level":0,"message":"test","name":"my-logger","date":"2012-04-21T09:37:47.373Z","env":"production","user":"joe"}

customizable

change the log levels

//before requiring anything else from logged
var levels = require('logged/levels');
levels.trace = 0;
levels.debug = 1;
levels.awesome = 2;
levels.chainsaw = 3;
levels.boom = 4;

var log = require('logged')();
log.trace('yeah');
log.awesome('srsly');

change how the log is output

var logged = require('logged');
//if you handle the log event yourself
//logged will do no outputting to stderr
//this lets you effectively do anything you want
//with the log messages
logged.on('log', function(logMessage) {
  //redis.lpush(logMessage);
  //mongo.store(logMessage);
  //pg.query('INSERT INTO log(level, message) VALUES(level, message)');
  if(logMessage.level > 10) {
    email.send('[email protected]', JSON.stringify(logMessage));
  }
});