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lumelog

v1.0.0

Published

Human-first Node.js logger optimized for terminal readability

Readme

lumelog

npm version node >=18 test license: MIT

Better console.log for Node.js.

Human-first terminal logging for CLIs, scripts, and developer-facing services.

Install

npm install lumelog

Requires Node.js 18+. ESM-only. Use import log from "lumelog".

Mental Model

Think of lumelog like this:

  • log(...) is your better console.log(...)
  • log.info(), log.warn(), log.error() add readable levels
  • a trailing object is treated as metadata
  • log.child({...}) creates a logger with metadata attached to every line
import log from "lumelog";

log("Starting sync for %s", projectName);
log.info("User fetched", { userId: 123 });
log.warn("Cache is stale");
log.error(new Error("Connection refused"));

const reqLog = log.child({ requestId: "req_123" });
reqLog.info("Handled request");

Why Not console.log?

console.log is flexible, but terminal output gets hard to scan fast.

With lumelog you get:

  • readable levels without hand-written prefixes
  • cleaner object and error output
  • lightweight metadata
  • better terminal readability with almost no extra API
console.log("User fetched", user, requestId);
log.info("User fetched", user, { requestId });

Where It Shines

  • CLIs
  • scripts
  • internal tools
  • dev-focused services

If a human is reading the terminal, lumelog is a good fit.

What It Is Not

  • not a logging pipeline
  • not an observability tool
  • not a full production logging system

It works best as a human-readable logger, and can complement structured logging tools when you need more than terminal output.

Small API

log("plain output");
log.info("info");
log.warn("warn");
log.error("error");
log.success("success");
log.debug("debug");
log.trace("trace");

log.scope("DB").info("connected");
log.child({ requestId: "123" }).info("request started");

License

MIT