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vlt Launches "reproduce": A New Tool Challenging the Limits of Package Provenance
vlt's new "reproduce" tool verifies npm packages against their source code, outperforming traditional provenance adoption in the JavaScript ecosystem.
@node-ts/logger-core
Advanced tools
Defines a logging adapter contract between consumers and implementations
The core logger abstraction that should be referenced throughout any package or application that requires logging functionality.
By default a raw console-based logger is provided. However, switching out the logger implementation (eg with Winston, Morgan etc) can be done by loading the module of that adapter.
Currently only one logger adapter is provided:
Creating a new log adapter is relatively simple; and we do welcome pull requests to this monorepo.
The logger should be injected into your target classes through constructor parameters, eg:
// my-service.ts
import { injectable, inject } from 'inversify'
import { LOGGER_SYMBOLS, Logger } from '@node-ts/logger-core'
@injectable()
export class MyService {
constructor (
@inject(LOGGER_SYMBOLS.Logger) private readonly logger: Logger
) {
}
action (): void {
this.logger.info('Logging is now enabled')
}
}
This is done by loading the LoggerModule
and creating a binding of the Logger
when it's injected into the service:
// application-container.ts
import { Container } from 'inversify'
import { LoggerModule, LoggerFactory, LOGGER_SYMBOLS } from '@node-ts/logger-core'
import { MyService } from './my-service'
export class ApplicationContainer extends Container {
constructor () {
super (bind => {
bind(LOGGER_SYMBOLS.Logger)
.toDynamicValue(context => {
const builder = context.container.get<LoggerFactory>(LOGGER_SYMBOLS.LoggerFactory)
return builder.build('My Service', context)
})
.whenInjectedInto(MyService)
})
}
start (): void {
this.load(new LoggerModule())
}
}
For a list of prebuilt adapters, please search for @node-ts/logger-
on npmjs.
Creation of your own logger adapter is done by implementing the Logger
interface (to do the actual logging), and also implementing the LoggerFactory
interface (to customize how loggers are built).
For example, a Logger
implementation for the default logger looks something like:
// console-logger.ts
import { Logger } from './logger'
import { injectable } from 'inversify'
@injectable()
export class ConsoleLogger implements Logger {
constructor (
private readonly name: string, // The name of this instance of the logger
private readonly jsConsole = console // Used for testing
) {
}
debug (message: string, data?: object): void {
log(this.jsConsole.debug.bind(this), this.name, message, data)
}
// ...additional logger functions as defined in `Logger`
}
function log (
consoleLog: (message: string, ...optionalParams: any[]) => void,
name: string,
message: string,
data?: object
): void {
const namedMessage = `${name}: ${message}`
if (data) {
consoleLog(namedMessage, data)
} else {
consoleLog(namedMessage)
}
}
Building a logger of this instance is managed by the ConsoleLoggerFactory
that implements the LoggerFactory
as such:
import { injectable, interfaces } from 'inversify'
import { LoggerFactory } from './logger-factory'
import { ConsoleLogger } from './console-logger'
import { Logger } from './logger'
@injectable()
export class ConsoleLoggerFactory implements LoggerFactory {
build (name: string, _: interfaces.Container): Logger {
// The container can be used to get and inject any other dependencies used by the logger implementation
return new ConsoleLogger(name)
}
}
These two classes need to be exposed via your module. This is done by module rebinding, eg:
// my-console-logger-module.ts
import { ContainerModule } from 'inversify'
import { LOGGER_SYMBOLS } from './logger-symbols'
import { ConsoleLoggerFactory } from './console-logger-factory'
export class MyConsoleLoggerModule extends ContainerModule {
constructor () {
super((_, __, ___, rebind) => {
rebind(LOGGER_SYMBOLS.LoggerFactory).to(ConsoleLoggerFactory)
})
}
}
Named loggers help to decorate each log message with the name of the class that produced it. Setting up a name for each logger when binding can get repetitive, so a utility function is provided to build loggers with the name of the type its being injected into.
For example, when binding a simple service, the bindLogger
function can be used:
// application-container.ts
import { Container } from 'inversify'
import { LoggerModule, bindLogger } from '@node-ts/logger-core'
import { MyService } from './my-service'
export class ApplicationContainer extends Container {
constructor () {
super (bind => {
bindLogger(bind, MyService)
})
}
start (): void {
this.load(new LoggerModule())
}
}
FAQs
Defines a logging adapter contract between consumers and implementations
The npm package @node-ts/logger-core receives a total of 188 weekly downloads. As such, @node-ts/logger-core popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @node-ts/logger-core demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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