Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

@krakenjs/beaver-logger

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
0
Versions
17
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@krakenjs/beaver-logger

Client side logger.

  • 5.8.0
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
0
Created
Source

beaver-logger

build status code coverage npm version

Front-end logger, which will:

  • Buffer your front-end logs and periodically send them to the server side
  • Automatically flush logs for any errors or warnings

This is a great tool to use if you want to do logging on the client side in the same way you do on the server, without worrying about sending off a million beacons. You can quickly get an idea of what's going on on your client, including error cases, page transitions, or anything else you care to log!

Overview

Setup

var $logger = beaver.Logger({
  url: "/my/logger/url",
});

Basic logging

$logger.info(<event>, <payload>);

Queues a log. Options are debug, info, warn, error.

For example:

$logger.error('something_went_wrong', { error: err.toString() })

$logger.track(<payload>);

Call this to attach general tracking information to the current page. This is useful if the data is not associated with a specific event, and will be sent to the server the next time the logs are flushed.

$logger.metricCounter(<event>, <payload>);

Queues a counter metric, helper wrapping logger.metric

logger.metricCounter({
  namespace: "pp.team.product.feature",
  event: "button_click",
  dimensions: {
    type: "paypal"
  }
})
Using a namespace prefix
const logger = new Logger({...options, metricNamespacePrefix: "company.team.app"})

logger.metricCounter({
  namespace: "product.feature",
  event: "button_click",
})

// creates metric with namespace of
// company.team.app.product.feature

$logger.metricGauge(<event>, <payload>);

Queues a gauge metric, helper wrapping logger.metric

logger.metricGauge({
  namespace: "pp.team.product.feature",
  event: "request_latency",
  value: 100,
  dimensions: {
    method: "GET"
  }
})
Using a namespace prefix
const logger = new Logger({...options, metricNamespacePrefix: "company.team.app"})

logger.metricGauge({
  namespace: "product.feature",
  event: "request_latency",
  value: 100
})

// creates metric with namespace of
// company.team.app.product.feature

Deprecated - $logger.metric(<event>, <payload>);

Queues a metric. We suggest using the metricCount or metricGauge interface for better type safety and clearer intention in your code.

Advanced

$logger.addMetaBuilder(<function>);

Attach a method which is called and will attach general information to the logging payload whenever the logs are flushed

$logger.addMetaBuilder(function () {
  return {
    current_page: getMyCurrentPage(),
  };
});

$logger.addMetricDimensionBuilder(<function>);

Attach a method which is called and will attach values to each metric's dimensions whenever the logs are flushed

$logger.addMetricDimensionBuilder(() => ({
  token_used: true,
  type: "user_id_token",
}));

$logger.addPayloadBuilder(<function>);

Attach a method which is called and will attach values to each individual log's payload whenever the logs are flushed

$logger.addPayloadBuilder(function () {
  return {
    performance_ts: window.performance.now(),
  };
});

$logger.addTrackingBuilder(<function>);

Attach a method which is called and will attach values to each individual log's tracking whenever the logs are flushed

$logger.addTrackingBuilder(function () {
  return {
    pageLoadTime: getPageLoadTime(),
  };
});

$logger.addHeaderBuilder(<function>);

Attach a method which is called and will attach values to each individual log requests' headers whenever the logs are flushed

$logger.addHeaderBuilder(function () {
  return {
    "x-csrf-token": getCSRFToken(),
  };
});

$logger.flush();

Flushes the logs to the server side. Recommended you don't call this manually, as it will happen automatically after a configured interval.

Installing

  • Install via npm

npm install --save beaver-logger

  • Include in your project
<script src="/js/beaver-logger.min.js"></script>

or

let $logger = require("beaver-logger");

Configuration

Full configuration options:

var $logger = beaver.Logger({
  // Url to send logs to
  url: "/my/logger/url",

  // Prefix to prepend to all events
  prefix: "myapp",

  // Log level to display in the browser console
  logLevel: beaver.LOG_LEVEL.WARN,

  // Interval to flush logs to server
  flushInterval: 60 * 1000,

  // Use sendBeacon if supported rather than XHR to send logs; defaults to false
  enableSendBeacon: true,
});

Server Side

beaver-logger includes a small node endpoint which will automatically accept the logs sent from the client side. You can mount this really easily:

let beaverLogger = require("beaver-logger/server");

myapp.use(
  beaverLogger.expressEndpoint({
    // URI to recieve logs at
    uri: "/api/log",

    // Custom logger (optional, by default logs to console)
    logger: myLogger,

    // Enable cross-origin requests to your logging endpoint
    enableCors: false,
  })
);

Or if you're using kraken, you can add this in your config.json as a middleware:

      "beaver-logger": {
          "priority": 106,
          "module": {
              "name": "beaver-logger/server",
              "method": "expressEndpoint",
              "arguments": [
                  {
                      "uri": "/api/log",
                      "logger": "require:my-custom-logger-module"
                  }
              ]
          }
      }

Custom backend logger

Setting up a custom logger is really easy, if you need to transmit these logs to some backend logging service rather than just logging them to your server console:

module.exports = {
  log: function (req, level, event, payload) {
    logSocket.send(
      JSON.stringify({
        level: level,
        event: event,
        payload: payload,
      })
    );
  },
};

Data Flow

flowchart TD
    A[Client-Side Log statement] --> B[beaver-logger/client]
    B[beaver-logger/client] --> C[beaver-logger/server]
    C[beaver-logger/server] --> D[your-custom-logger]
    D[your-customer-logger] --> E[Backend 1]
    D[your-customer-logger] --> F[Backend 2]
    G[Server-Side Log statement] --> D[your-custom-logger]

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 12 Nov 2024

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc