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

logrotate-stream

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
13
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

logrotate-stream

Pipe log data to a stream, fuggetabout rotation

  • 0.2.9
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
1
Created
Source

logrotate-stream

A Writable Stream that supports linux logrotate style options

Build Status Donate
NPM

example

On the command line:

  node app.js 2>&1 | logrotate-stream app.log --keep 3 --size '50m' --compress

As a module:

var stream = require('logrotate-stream')
  , toLogFile = stream({ file: './test.log', size: '100k', keep: 3 });

someStream.pipe(toLogFile);

the problem

Rotating logs that are being written to with stdio redirection sucks. Using a utility like logrotate doesn't automagically update your processes log file descriptor and you end up with several empty logs and one mega rotated log.

There's a couple ways to try and deal with this, but they all fall short:

1. Use winston's log rotation feature for nodejs apps

This requires adding a new dependency and possibly code changes around logging logic.

2. Restart your app on a process signal

Often times, production apps can't be restarted willy-nilly

3. Use the copytruncate feature of logrotate

This only works if you don't need to guarantee that all of your log lines are persisted. copytruncate performs a non-atomic copy before truncating the original log, which means you can lose data in the process if the copy is slow.

logrotate-stream tries to remedy this situation by acting as an intermediary between the application and the file system, piping stdin to log files and rotating those logfiles when necessary.

upstart woes

If you find yourself using logrotate-stream with upstart, there's a few things to consider. Piping to logrotate-stream in your exec line will cause upstart to track the pid of the logrotate process rather than your app. While stopping will still work (most likely emitting an EPIPE error on your app before exiting), it would be better if you used a named pipe to redirect your apps output:

chdir /path/to/app

pre-start script
  # create a named pipe
  mkfifo logpipe
  # create a backgrounded logrotate-stream process and
  # redirect the named pipe data to it
  logrotate-stream app.log --keep 3 --size 50m < logpipe &
end script

# start the app, redirecting stdout & stderr to the named pipe
exec /usr/local/bin/node index.js > logpipe 2>&1

This setup will register the correct pid with upstart, make sure your stdio is forwarded to logrotate-stream, and will properly kill the logrotate-stream process when your app is stopped.

options

file

The file log file to write data to.

size

The max file size of a log before rotation occurs. Supports 1024, 1k, 1m, 1g

keep

The number of rotated log files to keep (including the primary log file). Additional logs are deleted no rotation.

compress

Optionally compress rotated files with gzip.

install

With npm do:

npm install logrotate-stream

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 14 Feb 2023

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