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The consola npm package is a console logger for Node.js and browsers. It provides an easy-to-use API for logging information, warnings, errors, and more, with a focus on developer experience and universal compatibility.
Basic Logging
Consola allows you to log messages at various levels, such as info, warn, and error, which are color-coded and formatted for better readability.
const consola = require('consola');
consola.info('Information message');
consola.warn('Warning message');
consola.error('Error message');
Reporters
You can add custom reporters to modify how logs are displayed or processed, giving you control over the logging output.
const consola = require('consola');
consola.addReporter({
log(logObj) {
console.log(logObj.message);
}
});
Tagged Logging
Consola supports tagged logging, which allows you to prepend a tag to your log messages, making it easier to filter and identify logs related to specific parts of your application.
const consola = require('consola').withTag('my-tag');
consola.info('Tagged information message');
Log Level Control
You can control the log level threshold, which determines the minimum level of logs that will be displayed, allowing you to filter out less important logs in different environments.
const consola = require('consola');
consola.level = 3; // Only display logs with a level of 3 (errors) or higher
Winston is a multi-transport async logging library for Node.js. It is similar to consola in that it provides logging capabilities, but it also allows for more complex transport configurations, such as logging to files, databases, or remote services.
Pino is a very low overhead Node.js logger, which focuses on performance. It provides similar logging capabilities to consola but is designed to be as efficient as possible, making it suitable for high-performance applications.
Debug is a tiny Node.js debugging utility that is similar to consola's tagged logging feature. It allows you to create debug instances with different namespaces, which you can enable or disable using environment variables.
Log4js is a logging framework for Node.js, which provides similar functionality to consola. It supports multiple appenders, log levels, and layouts, and it can be configured via JSON configuration files.
Elegant Console Logger for Node.js and Browser
👌 Easy to use
💅 Fancy output with fallback for minimal environments
🔌 Pluggable reporters
💻 Consistent command line interface (CLI) experience
🏷 Tag support
🚏 Redirect console
and stdout/stderr
to consola and easily restore redirect.
🌐 Browser support
⏯ Pause/Resume support
👻 Mocking support
👮♂️ Spam prevention by throttling logs
Using yarn:
yarn add consola
Using npm:
npm i consola
const consola = require('consola')
// See types section for all available types
consola.success('Built!')
consola.info('Reporter: Some info')
consola.error(new Error('Foo'))
Will display in the terminal:
NOTE: Alternatively, you can import consola from source. But don't forget to whitelist it for transpilation:
import consola from 'consola/src/node'
import consola from 'consola/src/browser'
<type>(logObject)
<type>(args...)
Log to all reporters.
Example: consola.info('Message')
A list of available types can be found here.
addReporter(reporter)
add
Register a custom reporter instance.
removeReporter(reporter?)
remove
, clear
Remove a registered reporter.
If no arguments are passed all reporters will be removed.
setReporters(reporter|reporter[])
Replace all reporters.
create(options)
Create a new Consola
instance and inherit all parent options for defaults.
withDefaults(defaults)
Create a new Consola
instance with provided defaults
withTag(tag)
withScope
Create a new Consola
instance with that tag.
wrapConsole()
restoreConsole()
Globally redirect all console.log
, etc calls to consola handlers.
wrapStd()
restoreStd()
Globally redirect all stdout/stderr outputs to consola.
wrapAll()
restoreAll()
Wrap both, std and console.
console uses std in the underlying so calling wrapStd
redirects console too.
Benefit of this function is that things like console.info
will be correctly redirected to the corresponding type.
pauseLogs()
resumeLogs()
pause
/resume
Globally pause and resume logs.
Consola will enqueue all logs when paused and then sends them to the reported when resumed.
mockTypes
mock
Mock all types. Useful for using with tests.
The first argument passed to mockTypes
should be a callback function accepting (typeName, type)
and returning the mocked value:
consola.mockTypes((typeName, type) => jest.fn())
Please note that with the example above, everything is mocked independently for each type. If you need one mocked fn create it outside:
const fn = jest.fn()
consola.mockTypes(() => fn)
If callback function returns a falsy value, that type won't be mocked.
For example if you just need to mock consola.fatal
:
consola.mockTypes((typeName) => typeName === 'fatal' && jest.fn())
NOTE: Any instance of consola that inherits the mocked instance, will apply provided callback again.
This way, mocking works for withTag
scoped loggers without need to extra efforts.
reporters
An array of active reporters.
level
The level to display logs. Any logs at or above this level will be displayed. List of available levels here.
You can set the log level using the CONSOLA_LEVEL
environment variable, which must have the numeric log level as its value.
logObject
The logObject
is a free-to-extend object which will be passed to reporters.
Standard fields:
message
additional
args
date
tag
Extra fields:
badge
Choose between one of the built-in reporters or bring in your own one.
By default FancyReporter
is registered for modern terminals or BasicReporter
will be used if running in limited environments such as CIs.
Available reporters:
A reporter (class or object) exposes log(logObj)
method.
To get more info about how to write your own reporter, take a look into the linked implementations above.
Types are used to actually log messages to the reporters. Each type is attached to a logging level.
A list of all available default types is here.
Consola has a global instance and is recommended to use everywhere. In case more control is needed, create a new instance.
import consola from 'consola'
const logger = consola.create({
// level: 4,
reporters: [
new consola.JSONReporter()
],
defaults: {
additionalColor: 'white'
}
})
describe('your-consola-mock-test', () => {
beforeAll(() => {
// Redirect std and console to consola too
// Calling this once is sufficient
consola.wrapAll()
})
beforeEach(() => {
// Re-mock consola before each test call to remove
// calls from before
consola.mockTypes(() => jest.fn())
})
test('your test', async () => {
// Some code here
// Let's retrieve all messages of `consola.log`
// Get the mock and map all calls to their first argument
const consolaMessages = consola.log.mock.calls.map(c => c[0])
expect(consolaMessages).toContain('your message')
})
})
{
virtualConsole: new jsdom.VirtualConsole().sendTo(consola)
}
MIT - Made with 💖 By Nuxt.js team!
FAQs
Elegant Console Wrapper
The npm package consola receives a total of 9,763,514 weekly downloads. As such, consola popularity was classified as popular.
We found that consola demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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