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traceify-node

v0.0.8

Published

traceify client for Node.js

Downloads

23

Readme

traceify-node

NPM

Node/Javascript client for the Traceify service on opeNode.io.

Installation

npm install traceify-node

Usage

As for the configurations, you need an opeNode token and site_name, both are available via the administration dashboard on opeNode:

const traceify = require('traceify-node')({ token: "your token", site_name: "site name here" })

All methods available in traceify returns a promise.

Log with trace level

You can log a simple string:

traceify.trace("my simple string begin logged")

or a json:

traceify.trace({ complex: "obj" })

Log with info level

You can log a simple string:

traceify.info("my simple string begin logged")

or a json:

traceify.info({ complex: "obj" })

Log with warn level

You can log a simple string:

traceify.warn("my simple string begin logged")

or a json:

traceify.warn({ complex: "obj" })

Log with debug level

You can log a simple string:

traceify.debug("my simple string begin logged")

or a json:

traceify.debug({ complex: "obj" })

Log with error level

You can log a simple string:

traceify.error("my simple string begin logged")

or a json:

traceify.error({ complex: "obj" })

Log with a custom level

You can log using a custom log level:

traceify.log("mylevel", "string or json")

Usage in Applications

Usually, you will want to create your own logging package on the top of traceify, or use winston with traceity, for example:

const traceify = require('traceify-node')({ token: "your token", site_name: "site name here" })

module.exports = {
  mylog: function(level, content) {
    traceify.log(level, content).then(() => {
      console.log('logged!')
    }).catch((err) => {
      console.error('there was an issue logging')
      console.error(err)
    })
  }
}

Then everywhere in your application you can just write:

mypackage.mylog('info', 'hello logs!')

License

ISC