$ gnpm install logform
A mutable object-based log format designed for chaining & objectMode streams.
const { format } = require('logform');
const alignedWithColorsAndTime = format.combine(
format.colorize(),
format.timestamp(),
format.align(),
format.printf(info => `${info.timestamp} ${info.level}: ${info.message}`)
);
info
ObjectsThe info
parameter provided to a given format represents a single log
message. The object itself is mutable. Every info
must have at least the
level
and message
properties:
const info = {
level: 'info', // Level of the logging message
message: 'Hey! Log something?' // Descriptive message being logged.
}
Properties besides level and message are considered as "meta
". i.e.:
const { level, message, ...meta } = info;
Several of the formats in logform
itself add additional properties:
Property | Format added by | Description |
---|---|---|
splat |
splat() |
String interpolation splat for %d %s -style messages. |
timestamp |
timestamp() |
timestamp the message was received. |
label |
label() |
Custom label associated with each message. |
ms |
ms() |
Number of milliseconds since the previous log message. |
As a consumer you may add whatever properties you wish – internal state is
maintained by Symbol
properties:
Symbol.for('level')
(READ-ONLY): equal to level
property.
Is treated as immutable by all code.Symbol.for('message'):
complete string message set by "finalizing formats":
json
logstash
printf
prettyPrint
simple
Symbol.for('splat')
: additional string interpolation arguments. Used
exclusively by splat()
format.These Symbols are stored in another package: triple-beam
so that all
consumers of logform
can have the same Symbol reference. i.e.:
const { LEVEL, MESSAGE, SPLAT } = require('triple-beam');
console.log(LEVEL === Symbol.for('level'));
// true
console.log(MESSAGE === Symbol.for('message'));
// true
console.log(SPLAT === Symbol.for('splat'));
// true
Formats are prototypal objects (i.e. class instances) that define a single method: transform(info, opts)
and return the mutated info
info
: an object representing the log message.opts
: setting specific to the current instance of the format.They are expected to return one of two things:
info
Object representing the modified info
argument. Object references need not be preserved if immutability is preferred. All current built-in formats consider info
mutable, but [immutablejs] is being considered for future releases.info
argument should be ignored by the caller. (See: Filtering info
Objects) below.logform.format
is designed to be as simple as possible. To define a new format simple pass it a transform(info, opts)
function to get a new Format
.
The named Format
returned can be used to create as many copies of the given Format
as desired:
const { format } = require('logform');
const volume = format((info, opts) => {
if (opts.yell) {
info.message = info.message.toUpperCase();
} else if (opts.whisper) {
info.message = info.message.toLowerCase();
}
return info;
});
// `volume` is now a function that returns instances of the format.
const scream = volume({ yell: true });
console.dir(scream.transform({
level: 'info',
message: `sorry for making you YELL in your head!`
}, scream.options));
// {
// level: 'info'
// message: 'SORRY FOR MAKING YOU YELL IN YOUR HEAD!'
// }
// `volume` can be used multiple times to create different formats.
const whisper = volume({ whisper: true });
console.dir(whisper.transform({
level: 'info',
message: `WHY ARE THEY MAKING US YELL SO MUCH!`
}), whisper.options);
// {
// level: 'info'
// message: 'why are they making us yell so much!'
// }
Any number of formats may be combined into a single format using format.combine
. Since format.combine
takes no opts
, as a convenience it returns pre-created instance of the combined format.
const { format } = require('logform');
const { combine, timestamp, label } = format;
const labelTimestamp = combine(
label({ label: 'right meow!' }),
timestamp()
);
const info = labelTimestamp.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'What time is the testing at?'
});
console.dir(info);
// { level: 'info',
// message: 'What time is the testing at?',
// label: 'right meow!',
// timestamp: '2017-09-30T03:57:26.875Z' }
info
ObjectsIf you wish to filter out a given info
Object completely then simply return a falsey value.
const ignorePrivate = format((info, opts) => {
if (info.private) { return false; }
return info;
});
console.dir(ignorePrivate.transform({
level: 'error',
message: 'Public error to share'
}));
// { level: 'error', message: 'Public error to share' }
console.dir(ignorePrivate.transform({
level: 'error',
private: true,
message: 'This is super secret - hide it.'
}));
// false
Use of format.combine
will respect any falsey values return and stop evaluation of later formats in the series. For example:
const { format } = require('logform');
const { combine, timestamp, label } = format;
const willNeverThrow = format.combine(
format(info => { return false })(), // Ignores everything
format(info => { throw new Error('Never reached') })()
);
console.dir(willNeverThrow.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'wow such testing'
}))
The align
format adds a \t
delimiter before the message to align it in the same place.
const { format } = require('logform');
const alignFormat = format.align();
const info = alignFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message'
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info', message: '\tmy message' }
This was previously exposed as { align: true }
in winston < 3.0.0
.
The cli
format is a combination of the colorize
and the padLevels
formats. It turns a log info
object into the same format previously available in winston.cli()
in winston < 3.0.0
.
const { format } = require('logform');
const LEVEL = Symbol.for('level');
const cliFormat = format.cli({ colors: { info: 'blue' }});
const info = cliFormat.transform({
[LEVEL]: 'info',
level: 'info',
message: 'my message'
}, { all: true });
console.log(info);
// { level: '\u001b[34minfo\u001b[39m',
// message: '\u001b[34m my message\u001b[39m',
// [Symbol(level)]: 'info',
// [Symbol(message)]:
// '\u001b[34minfo\u001b[39m:\u001b[34m my message\u001b[39m' }
The colorize
format adds different colors depending on the log level to the message and/or level.
It accepts the following options:
true
the color will be applied to the level
.true
the color will be applied to the message
and level
.true
the color will be applied to the message
.{ info: 'blue', error: 'red' }
const { format } = require('logform');
const LEVEL = Symbol.for('level');
const colorizeFormat = format.colorize({ colors: { info: 'blue' }});
const info = colorizeFormat.transform({
[LEVEL]: 'info',
level: 'info',
message: 'my message'
}, { all: true });
console.log(info);
// { level: '\u001b[34minfo\u001b[39m',
// message: '\u001b[34mmy message\u001b[39m',
// [Symbol(level)]: 'info' }
This was previously exposed as { colorize: true }
to transports in winston < 3.0.0
.
The combine
Format allows to combine multiple formats:
const { format } = require('logform');
const { combine, timestamp, json } = format;
const jsonWithTimestamp = combine(
timestamp(),
json()
);
const info = jsonWithTimestamp.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message'
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info',
// message: 'my message',
// timestamp: '2018-10-02T15:03:14.230Z',
// [Symbol(message)]:
// '{"level":"info","message":"my message","timestamp":"2018-10-02T15:03:14.230Z"}' }
The errors
format allows you to pass in an instance of a JavaScript Error
directly to the logger. It allows you to specify whether not to include the
stack-trace.
const { format } = require('logform');
const { errors } = format;
const errorsFormat = errors({ stack: true })
const info = errorsFormat.transform(new Error('Oh no!'));
console.log(info);
// Error: Oh no!
// at repl:1:13
// at ContextifyScript.Script.runInThisContext (vm.js:50:33)
// at REPLServer.defaultEval (repl.js:240:29)
// at bound (domain.js:301:14)
// at REPLServer.runBound [as eval] (domain.js:314:12)
// at REPLServer.onLine (repl.js:468:10)
// at emitOne (events.js:121:20)
// at REPLServer.emit (events.js:211:7)
// at REPLServer.Interface._onLine (readline.js:282:10)
// at REPLServer.Interface._line (readline.js:631:8)
It will also handle { message }
properties as Error
instances:
const { format } = require('logform');
const { errors } = format;
const errorsFormat = errors({ stack: true })
const info = errorsFormat.transform({
message: new Error('Oh no!')
});
console.log(info);
// Error: Oh no!
// at repl:1:13
// at ContextifyScript.Script.runInThisContext (vm.js:50:33)
// at REPLServer.defaultEval (repl.js:240:29)
// at bound (domain.js:301:14)
// at REPLServer.runBound [as eval] (domain.js:314:12)
// at REPLServer.onLine (repl.js:468:10)
// at emitOne (events.js:121:20)
// at REPLServer.emit (events.js:211:7)
// at REPLServer.Interface._onLine (readline.js:282:10)
// at REPLServer.Interface._line (readline.js:631:8)
The json
format uses safe-stable-stringify
to finalize the message.
It accepts the following options:
info
is stringified.const { format } = require('logform');
const jsonFormat = format.json();
const info = jsonFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message',
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info',
// message: 'my message',
// [Symbol(message)]: '{"level":"info","message":"my message"}' }
This was previously exposed as { json: true }
to transports in winston < 3.0.0
.
The label
format adds the specified label
before the message or adds it to the info
object.
It accepts the following options:
true
the label
will be added to info.message
. If set to false
the label
will be added as info.label
.const { format } = require('logform');
const labelFormat = format.label();
const info = labelFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message'
}, { label: 'my label', message: true });
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info', message: '[my label] my message' }
This was previously exposed as { label: 'my label' }
to transports in winston < 3.0.0
.
The logstash
Format turns a log info
object into pure JSON with the appropriate logstash options.
const { format } = require('logform');
const { logstash, combine, timestamp } = format;
const logstashFormat = combine(
timestamp(),
logstash()
);
const info = logstashFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message'
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info',
// [Symbol(message)]:
// '{"@message":"my message","@timestamp":"2018-10-02T11:04:52.915Z","@fields":{"level":"info"}}' }
This was previously exposed as { logstash: true }
to transports in winston < 3.0.0
.
The metadata
format adds a metadata object to collect extraneous data, similar to the metadata object in winston 2.x.
It accepts the following options:
metadata
.const { format } = require('logform');
const metadataFormat = format.metadata();
const info = metadataFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message',
meta: 42
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info', message: 'my message', metadata: { meta: 42 } }
The padLevels
format pads levels to be the same length.
const { format } = require('logform');
const LEVEL = Symbol.for('level');
const padLevelsFormat = format.padLevels();
const info = padLevelsFormat.transform({
[LEVEL]: 'info',
message: 'my message'
});
console.log(info);
// { message: ' my message', [Symbol(level)]: 'info' }
This was previously exposed as { padLevels: true }
to transports in winston < 3.0.0
.
The prettyPrint
format finalizes the message using util.inspect
.
It accepts the following options:
number
that specifies the maximum depth of the info
object being stringified by util.inspect
. Defaults to 2
.true
. Defaults to false
.The prettyPrint
format should not be used in production because it may impact performance negatively and block the event loop.
NOTE: the
LEVEL
,MESSAGE
, andSPLAT
symbols are stripped from the output message by design.
This was previously exposed as { prettyPrint: true }
to transports in winston < 3.0.0
.
const { format } = require('logform');
const prettyPrintFormat = format.prettyPrint();
const info = prettyPrintFormat.transform({
[LEVEL]: 'info',
level: 'info',
message: 'my message'
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info',
// message: 'my message',
// [Symbol(level)]: 'info',
// [Symbol(message)]: '{ level: \'info\', message: \'my message\' }' }
The printf
format allows to create a custom logging format:
const { format } = require('logform');
const myFormat = format.printf((info) => {
return `${info.level} ${info.message}`;
})
const info = myFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message'
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info',
// message: 'my message',
// [Symbol(message)]: 'info my message' }
The simple
format finalizes the info
object using the format: level: message stringifiedRest
.
const { format } = require('logform');
const MESSAGE = Symbol.for('message');
const simpleFormat = format.simple();
const info = simpleFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message',
number: 123
});
console.log(info[MESSAGE]);
// info: my message {number:123}
The splat
format transforms the message by using util.format
to complete any info.message
provided it has string interpolation tokens.
const { format } = require('logform');
const splatFormat = format.splat();
const info = splatFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message %s',
splat: ['test']
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info', message: 'my message test', splat: [ 'test' ] }
Any additional splat parameters beyond those needed for the %
tokens
(aka "metas") are assumed to be objects. Their enumerable properties are
merged into the info
.
const { format } = require('logform');
const splatFormat = format.splat();
const info = splatFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message %s',
splat: ['test', { thisIsMeta: true }]
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info',
// message: 'my message test',
// thisIsMeta: true,
// splat: [ 'test' ] }
This was previously exposed implicitly in winston < 3.0.0
.
The timestamp
format adds a timestamp to the info.
It accepts the following options:
new Date().toISOString()
will be used.info
object.const { format } = require('logform');
const timestampFormat = format.timestamp();
const info = timestampFormat.transform({
level: 'info',
message: 'my message'
});
console.log(info);
// { level: 'info',
// message: 'my message',
// timestamp: '2018-10-02T11:47:02.682Z' }
It was previously available in winston < 3.0.0
as { timestamp: true }
and { timestamp: function:String }
.
The uncolorize
format strips colors from info
objects.
It accepts the following options:
info.level
if set to false
.info.message
if set to false
.info[MESSAGE]
if set to false
.This was previously exposed as { stripColors: true }
to transports in winston < 3.0.0
.
Tests are written with mocha
, assume
, and nyc
. They can be run with npm
:
npm test
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