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Bragi : Javascript Logger - Browser

Bragi

This is for the browser. View the NodeJS version

NOTE : This is an early release and the API is subject to change. This is designed for Chrome and some features (e.g., color) will not work in all browsers. The API is likely to change. Improvements and pull requests are welcome. View the post which describes the purpose behind this library and some of its features

Bragi is javascript logging library with colors, custom log levels, and server reporting functionality. Bragi allows you to write log messages that you can leave in your code, and allows you to specify what logs get output to the console.

This repository is for the Web Browser version of Bragi. Access the NodeJS version

Bragi

Bragi is the Norse god of Poetry

Installation and Usage

Pre-built Bragi files are located in dist. Bragi supports CommonJS, RequireJS, or just including the script in your code.

Base usage (without CommonJS / Browserify or RequireJS)

If CommonJS or RequireJS are not used, when including Bragi a global BRAGI object will be exposed globally.

// If exposed globally
BRAGI.log('groupname', 'message');

Browserify / CommonJS

If using Browserify, install this with NPM: npm install bragi-browser. Then, you can

var logger = require('bragi-browser');
logger.log('group', 'hello there');

RequireJS

You can require it and use it like other modules (use bragi.js or bragi.min.js).

Logging

Calls to log take in two required parameters: groupName and message. Any additional parameters (such as object info) will be included in the log message also. For instance:

BRAGI.log('groupname', 'Here is some user info', { name: 'Ironman', weaknesses: null });

One of the benefits Bragi provides is the ability to supply arbitrary group names and namespace for groups (separated by a colon). For instance:

BRAGI.log('userController:fetchInfo', 'fetching user information...');

Because the groupname is a string, you can dynamically create it:

BRAGI.log('userController:fetchInfo:ironman', 'fetching user information...');

With group names, we're able to filter messages by groups and their namespaces, or by a regular expression (e.g., we have the ability to show ALL logs for the ironman user)

Log Groups (log levels)

Unlike other libraries where log levels are linear, in Bragi log levels are discrete and arbitrary. You can have nested log levels, e.g.: BRAGI.log("group1:subgroup1", "Log message %O", {key: 42});.

By having arbitrary log levels, you can have fine grain control over what log messages are outputted.

Specifying what to log

groupsEnabled: An {Array} of {String}s or {RegExp} regular expressions, specifying which groups can be logged. NOTE: Can also be a {Boolean} : if true, everything is logged; if false, nothing is logged

groupsDisabled: An {Array} of {String}s {RegExp} regular expressions, specifying which groups to exclude from logging. This is useful if you want to log everything except some particular groups.

These properties can be accessed directly via BRAGI.options.groupsEnabled or BRAGI.options.groupsDisabled.

addGroup() and removeGroup()

It's possible to modify the groups directly, but often it's simpler to call addGroup or removeGroup. You can pass in either a string or a regular expression. For instance:

BRAGI.addGroup('myGroup');
BRAG.removeGroup('myGroup');

Note that the first time addGroup is called, Bragi will no longer log everything by default.

Examples: Now, let's enable all group1:subgroup1 logs and any log message that contains the user ironman, denoted by :ironman:

BRAGI.options.groupsEnabled = [ 'group1:subgroup1', '.*:ironman' ]

The this would log all group1:subgroup1 logs, including nested subgroups: for instance, group1:subgroup1:subsubgroup1.

.*:ironman would match anything that contained ":ironman" (You could even dynamically build this to look for logs based on some variable).

To specify a blacklist, use groupsDisabled. This would log everything except group1:

BRAGI.options.groupsEnabled = true; 
BRAGI.options.groupsDisabled = ['group1'];

Built in log types

Currently only two built in log types exist: error and warn. These types can also be namespaced (e.g., error:group1:subgroup1 is valid). For error messages, the background will always be red and the foreground white. For warn messages, the background is yellow and foreground is white. The text will also blink. These are reserved colors, so anywhere a red background and white text exist you can immediately know an error has been logged.

Note that if you want to include these, you'll need to specify "error" and "warn" in the groupsEnabled array.

Examples

See example.html for example usage.

Util

Bragi provides a utility functions to help you write logs messages that have strong visual cues.

Configuration

Bragi config

To configure bragi, require it then set the properties defined in the options object. For instance:

BRAGI.options.PROPERTY = VALUE;

The available options are:

Output - Transports

The web browser version of Bragi currently supports logging to Console and storing History. Coming soon is the ability to send the file to remote hosts. Other possible transports could include writing logs to LocalStorage or IndexedDB

Changing Transports

Currently, you can use BRAGI.transports.empty(); to remove all transports.

To add a transport, use BRAGI.transports.add( new BRAGI.transportClasses.Transport( {} ) ) (where Transport is a transport, found in lib/bragi/transports/).

Currently available transports are Console and History

Configuring Transports

All transports take in, at a minimum, groupsEnabled and groupsDisabled. This allows transport level configuration of what log messages to use. By default, they will use whatever is set on the global logger object. This is useful, for instance, if you want to send all logs to a remote host but only want to show error logs in the console output.

To configure a transport that is already added to the logger, you can use BRAGI.transports.get("TransportName");. Note that this returns an {Array} of transports (this is because you may have multiple transports of the same type - e.g., it's possible to have multiple File transports).

Setting properties

To set properties, you can:

  1. access a transport object individually (e.g., BRAGI.transports.get('console')[0].PROPERTY= VALUE) or
  2. set options for ALL returned transports by calling .property( key, value ).

For instance, to show the stack trace in the console output: BRAGI.transports.get('console').property('showStackTrace', true);

If only a key is passed in, it acts as getter (and returns an array of values). If key and value are passed in, it will set the property for each returned transports. NOTE: This is useful when you have a single transport, just be aware that if you use this on a file transport and change the output path, and you have multiple files transports, all file transports would log to that file.

See examples/example-simple.json (or test/test.js) for example usage.

Console Transport - Configuration

showMeta: {Boolean} true by default. Specifies whether to show the meta info (caller, time, etc.) as a new line after each message showStackTrace: {Boolean} false by default. If set to true, requires the logger's storeStackTrace to be set to {true}. Will print the stack trace for each log

Writing Custom Transports

All transports must be functions that containg a prototype a prototype name property and log function. The transport function itself must take in an options object and allow groupsEnabled and groupsDisabled to be passed into it. This allows transport level white listing / black listing of log groups (for instance, maybe the console should only capture group1, but the file transport should capture all log messages)

The log function expects a loggedObject to be passed into it, which is an object created after log() is called. It will have a meta property, along with a message (the log message itself), a group (what group the log message belongs to), and a properties key containing any additional arguments passed into BRAGI.log() calls.

NOTE: See examples/example-json.js to see what a loggedObject looks like.

Here is what a simple transport definition looks like:

function MyTransport ( options ){
    options = options || {};

    // Transport must set groupsEnabled and groupsDisabled to provide transport 
    // level support for overriding what groups to log
    // (NOTE - the user does not need to pass in groupsEnabled, but the 
    // transport must set these properties)
    this.groupsEnabled = options.groupsEnabled;
    this.groupsDisabled = options.groupsDisabled;

    // Transport specific settings
    // ------------------------------
    this.spacing = options.spacing === undefined ? 4 : options.spacing;

    return this;
}

MyTransport.prototype.name = 'MyTransport';
MyTransport.prototype.log = function MyTransportLog( loggedObject ){
    // Do something with loggedObject 
    return this;
};

See lib/bragi/transports/ConsoleJSON for a simple example of a working transport.

Running Tests

While Bragi itself has no dependencies, the tests depend on Mocha and Chai. Install dev dependencies (npm install -d). Run npm test

Building Yourself

To build Bragi yourself, run npm install -d to setup the build dependencies. Then, run make. The files will be output to the dist folder.

Ideas Behind Bragi

Some of the core concepts driving Bragi are:

Usefulness of logging

View an overview of how logging can be a powerful tool.

Logging is a powerful and often underused tool. Like anything, there are tradeoffs. Some of the benefits of persisting log statements in your code include:

Happy logging!