C bindings to syslog and a fast, more feature-rich console module.
$ npm install rconsole
By default your syslogs will land in /var/log/messages
. Add a new facility
where your syslog configuration is located to change this. (see notes)
require('rconsole')
console.set({ facility: 'local0', title: 'basic' })
console.log('hello world')
Here is an example webserver that pipes express.logger
to the stream for notice severity logs. It includes development
and production
configuration. Create a new file called app.js
with the following code:
require('rconsole')
var express = require('express')
, app = express.createServer()
app.use(express.favicon())
app.configure(function () {
console.set({
facility: 'local0'
, title: 'express'
, syslogHashTags: true
})
})
app.configure('production', function () {
// any options passed to console.set in a subsequent call
// will override the previous values and reconnect to syslog
console.set({highestLevel: 'notice', stderr: false})
})
// pass in the stream to console.notice
app.use(express.logger({ stream: console.stream('notice') }))
app.get('/', function (req, res, next) {
res.end('hello world')
})
app.listen(3000)
console.notice('Server running on port 3000')
Start the server
$ node app.js
And then visit http://localhost:3000/ and express.logger will be streaming to console.notice
in your terminal as well as syslog.
To disable the stderr stream, start the app with NODE_ENV=production
and then tail -f /var/log/path/to/logFile
to monitor the logs
$ NODE_ENV=production node app.js
require('rconsole')
console.set({
facility: 'local0' // default: user
, title: 'web-01' // default: node -- can also be set with `process.title`
, highestLevel: 'debug' // [emerg, alert, crit, err, warning, notice, info, debug]
, stdout: false // default: false
, stderr: true // default: true
, syslog: true // default: true
, syslogHashTags: false // default: false
, showTime: true // default: true
, showLine: true // default: true
, showFile: true // default: true
, showTags: true // default: true
})
console.emerg('level 0')
console.alert('level 1')
console.crit('level 2')
console.error('level 3')
console.warn('level 4')
console.notice('level 5')
console.info('level 6')
console.log('level 6')
console.debug('level 7', { hello: 'world' })
console.trace('level 7')
console.dir({ 'level 7': { 'deep': { 'level': { 'inspect': true } } } }, true, 5)
console.time('level 7')
console.timeEnd('level 7')
facility
change the facility (syslog, default: user)title
change the title of the process (syslog, default: node)showLine
automatically add line numbers (default: true)showFile
automatically add file names (default: true)showTime
automatically add timestamps (default: true)syslogHashTags
automatically append hashtags for log analyzation (syslog, default: false)highestLevel
limit the display based on severity (default: debug)showTags
add tags with colors (stderr/stdout, default: true)stderr
use stderr (default: true)stdout
use stdout (default: false)syslog
use syslog bindings (default: true)
- console.stream(level)
- console.emerg
- console.alert
- console.crit
- console.error
- console.warn
- console.notice
- console.info, console.log
- console.debug
- console.trace
- console.dir
- console.time
- console.timeEnd
The default configuration is suited for development, however you should immediately set up configuration for syslog and choose a facility (local0-local7) that is not already in use on your system.
By default your syslogs will land in /var/log/messages
with facility user
and tag node
. Configure a new facility
in /etc/rsyslog.conf
, /etc/syslog-ng/syslog-ng.conf
, /etc/syslog-ng.conf
or wherever your syslog configuration is located.
For rsyslog your configuration might look something like this:
local0.notice /var/log/node/production.log
local0.info /var/log/node/staging.log
local0.debug /var/log/node/debug.log
rconsole
provides display features and is a drop in replacement for the native console
module. console
will come with a number of options that you can console.set
(see the api)
If you completely disable stderr/stdout you can just tail your syslogs.
The aim of this module is to provide an interface to syslog.h
based on the syslog RFC (http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5424). Any configuration that can be done with rsyslog or syslog-ng is not provided in this module; such as log reception, forwaring, filtering, etc. The archival destinations are not visible to or configurable by the app, and instead are completely managed by the execution environment.
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2012 Thomas Blobaum [email protected]
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.