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@furystack/logging

Logging API for FuryStack package

  • 1.1.1
  • Source
  • npm
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56
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@furystack/logging

Logging package for FuryStack

Initializing with @furystack/inject

You can start using the Logging service with an injector in the following way

import { ConsoleLogger } from '@furystack/logging'

const myInjector = new Injector().useLogging(ConsoleLogger, Logger1, Logger2 /** ...your Logger implementations */)

You can retrieve the Logger instance with

const myLogger = myInjector.logger

Logging events

You can log a simple event with

myLogger.addEntry({
  level: LogLevel.Verbose,
  message: 'My log message',
  scope: '@furystack/logging/test',
  data: {
    foo: 1,
    bar: 42,
  },
})

or

myLogger.verbose({
  message: 'My log message',
  scope: '@furystack/logging/test',
  data: {
    foo: 1,
    bar: 42,
  },
})

The two snippets do the same - they will add a log entry to each registered logger.

Scoped loggers

At the most of the cases, you use a logger in a service with a specific scope. You can create and use a scoped logger in the following way

const scopedLogger = myLogger.withScope('@furystack/logging/test')
scopedLogger.verbose({ message: 'FooBarBaz' })

Implementing your own logger

You can implement your own logging logic in the similar way as this custom log collector

import { AbstractLogger, ILeveledLogEntry } from '@furystack/logging'

@Injectable({ lifetime: 'singleton' })
export class MyCustomLogCollector extends AbstractLogger {
  private readonly entries: Array<ILeveledLogEntry<any>> = []

  public getEntries() {
    return [...this.entries]
  }

  public async addEntry<T>(entry: ILeveledLogEntry<T>): Promise<void> {
    this.entries.push(entry)
  }

  constructor() {
    super()
  }
}

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Package last updated on 26 Apr 2019

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