904 lines
30 KiB
Markdown
904 lines
30 KiB
Markdown
Bunyan is **a simple and fast JSON logging library** for node.js services:
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var bunyan = require('bunyan');
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var log = bunyan.createLogger({name: "myapp"});
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log.info("hi");
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and **a `bunyan` CLI tool** for nicely viewing those logs:
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![bunyan CLI screenshot](https://raw.github.com/trentm/node-bunyan/master/tools/screenshot1.png)
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Manifesto: Server logs should be structured. JSON's a good format. Let's do
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that. A log record is one line of `JSON.stringify`'d output. Let's also
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specify some common names for the requisite and common fields for a log
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record (see below).
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Also: log4j is way more than you need.
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# Current Status
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Solid core functionality is there. Joyent is using this for a number of
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production services. Bunyan supports node 0.6 and greater. Follow
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<a href="https://twitter.com/intent/user?screen_name=trentmick" target="_blank">@trentmick</a>
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for updates to Bunyan.
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# Installation
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npm install bunyan
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**Tip**: The `bunyan` CLI tool is written to be compatible (within reason) with
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all versions of Bunyan logs. Therefore you might want to `npm install -g bunyan`
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to get the bunyan CLI on your PATH, then use local bunyan installs for
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node.js library usage of bunyan in your apps.
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# Features
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- elegant [log method API](#log-method-api)
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- extensible [streams](#streams) system for controlling where log records
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go (to a stream, to a file, [log file rotation](#stream-type-rotating-file),
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etc.)
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- [`bunyan` CLI](#cli-usage) for pretty-printing and filtering of Bunyan logs
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- simple include of log call source location (file, line, function) with
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[`src: true`](#src)
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- light-weight specialization of Logger instances with [`log.child`](#logchild)
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- custom rendering of logged objects with ["serializers"](#serializers)
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- [Dtrace support](#dtrace-support)
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# Introduction
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Like most logging libraries you create a Logger instance and call methods
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named after the logging levels:
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$ cat hi.js
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var bunyan = require('bunyan');
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var log = bunyan.createLogger({name: 'myapp'});
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log.info('hi');
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log.warn({lang: 'fr'}, 'au revoir');
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All loggers must provide a "name". This is somewhat akin to the log4j logger
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"name", but Bunyan doesn't do hierarchical logger names.
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**Bunyan log records are JSON.** A few fields are added automatically:
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"pid", "hostname", "time" and "v".
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$ node hi.js
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{"name":"myapp","hostname":"banana.local","pid":40161,"level":30,"msg":"hi","time":"2013-01-04T18:46:23.851Z","v":0}
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{"name":"myapp","hostname":"banana.local","pid":40161,"level":40,"lang":"fr","msg":"au revoir","time":"2013-01-04T18:46:23.853Z","v":0}
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## Log Method API
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The example above shows two different ways to call `log.info(...)`. The
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full API is:
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log.info(); // Returns a boolean: is the "info" level enabled?
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// This is equivalent to `log.isInfoEnabled()` or
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// `log.isEnabledFor(INFO)` in log4j.
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log.info('hi'); // Log a simple string message.
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log.info('hi %s', bob, anotherVar); // Uses `util.format` for msg formatting.
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log.info({foo: 'bar'}, 'hi');
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// Adds "foo" field to log record. You can add any number
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// of additional fields here.
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log.info(err); // Special case to log an `Error` instance to the record.
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// This adds an "err" field with exception details
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// (including the stack) and sets "msg" to the exception
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// message.
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log.info(err, 'more on this: %s', more);
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// ... or you can specify the "msg".
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Note that this implies **you cannot pass any object as the first argument
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to log it**. IOW, `log.info(mywidget)` may not be what you expect. Instead
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of a string representation of `mywidget` that other logging libraries may
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give you, Bunyan will try to JSON-ify your object. It is a Bunyan best
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practice to always give a field name to included objects, e.g.:
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log.info({widget: mywidget}, ...)
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This will dove-tail with [Bunyan serializer support](#serializers), discussed
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later.
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The same goes for all of Bunyan's log levels: `log.trace`, `log.debug`,
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`log.info`, `log.warn`, and `log.fatal`. See the [levels section](#levels)
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below for details and suggestions.
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## CLI Usage
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Bunyan log output is a stream of JSON objects. This is great for processing,
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but not for reading directly. A **`bunyan` tool** is provided **for
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pretty-printing bunyan logs** and for **filtering** (e.g.
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`| bunyan -c 'this.foo == "bar"'`). Using our example above:
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$ node hi.js | ./bin/bunyan
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[2013-01-04T19:01:18.241Z] INFO: myapp/40208 on banana.local: hi
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[2013-01-04T19:01:18.242Z] WARN: myapp/40208 on banana.local: au revoir (lang=fr)
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See the screenshot above for an example of the default coloring of rendered
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log output. That example also shows the nice formatting automatically done for
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some well-known log record fields (e.g. `req` is formatted like an HTTP request,
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`res` like an HTTP response, `err` like an error stack trace).
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One interesting feature is **filtering** of log content, which can be useful
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for digging through large log files or for analysis. We can filter only
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records above a certain level:
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$ node hi.js | bunyan -l warn
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[2013-01-04T19:08:37.182Z] WARN: myapp/40353 on banana.local: au revoir (lang=fr)
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Or filter on the JSON fields in the records (e.g. only showing the French
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records in our contrived example):
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$ node hi.js | bunyan -c 'this.lang == "fr"'
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[2013-01-04T19:08:26.411Z] WARN: myapp/40342 on banana.local: au revoir (lang=fr)
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See `bunyan --help` for other facilities.
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## Streams Introduction
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By default, log output is to stdout and at the "info" level. Explicitly that
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looks like:
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var log = bunyan.createLogger({
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name: 'myapp',
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stream: process.stdout,
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level: 'info'
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});
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That is an abbreviated form for a single stream. **You can define multiple
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streams at different levels**.
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var log = bunyan.createLogger({
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name: 'myapp',
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streams: [
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{
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level: 'info',
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stream: process.stdout, // log INFO and above to stdout
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},
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{
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level: 'error',
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path: '/var/log/myapp-error.log' // log ERROR and above to a file
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}
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]
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});
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More on streams in the [Streams section](#streams) below.
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## log.child
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Bunyan has a concept of a child logger to **specialize a logger for a
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sub-component of your application**, i.e. to create a new logger with
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additional bound fields that will be included in its log records. A child
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logger is created with `log.child(...)`.
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In the following example, logging on a "Wuzzle" instance's `this.log` will
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be exactly as on the parent logger with the addition of the `widget_type`
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field:
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var bunyan = require('bunyan');
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var log = bunyan.createLogger({name: 'myapp'});
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function Wuzzle(options) {
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this.log = options.log.child({widget_type: 'wuzzle'});
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this.log.info('creating a wuzzle')
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}
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Wuzzle.prototype.woos = function () {
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this.log.warn('This wuzzle is woosey.')
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}
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log.info('start');
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var wuzzle = new Wuzzle({log: log});
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wuzzle.woos();
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log.info('done');
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Running that looks like (raw):
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$ node myapp.js
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{"name":"myapp","hostname":"myhost","pid":34572,"level":30,"msg":"start","time":"2013-01-04T07:47:25.814Z","v":0}
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{"name":"myapp","hostname":"myhost","pid":34572,"widget_type":"wuzzle","level":30,"msg":"creating a wuzzle","time":"2013-01-04T07:47:25.815Z","v":0}
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{"name":"myapp","hostname":"myhost","pid":34572,"widget_type":"wuzzle","level":40,"msg":"This wuzzle is woosey.","time":"2013-01-04T07:47:25.815Z","v":0}
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{"name":"myapp","hostname":"myhost","pid":34572,"level":30,"msg":"done","time":"2013-01-04T07:47:25.816Z","v":0}
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And with the `bunyan` CLI (using the "short" output mode):
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$ node myapp.js | bunyan -o short
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07:46:42.707Z INFO myapp: start
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07:46:42.709Z INFO myapp: creating a wuzzle (widget_type=wuzzle)
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07:46:42.709Z WARN myapp: This wuzzle is woosey. (widget_type=wuzzle)
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07:46:42.709Z INFO myapp: done
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A more practical example is in the
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[node-restify](https://github.com/mcavage/node-restify) web framework.
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Restify uses Bunyan for its logging. One feature of its integration, is that
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each restify request handler includes a `req.log` logger that is:
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log.child({req_id: <unique request id>}, true)
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Apps using restify can then use `req.log` and have all such log records
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include the unique request id (as "req_id"). Handy.
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## Serializers
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Bunyan has a concept of **"serializers" to produce a JSON-able object from a
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JavaScript object**, so you can easily do the following:
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log.info({req: <request object>}, 'something about handling this request');
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Serializers is a mapping of log record field name, "req" in this example, to
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a serializer function. That looks like this:
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function reqSerializer(req) {
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return {
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method: req.method,
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url: req.url,
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headers: req.headers
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}
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}
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var log = bunyan.createLogger({
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name: 'myapp',
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serializers: {
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req: reqSerializer
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}
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});
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Or this:
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var log = bunyan.createLogger({
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name: 'myapp',
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serializers: {req: bunyan.stdSerializers.req}
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});
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because Buyan includes a small set of standard serializers. To use all the
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standard serializers you can use:
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var log = bunyan.createLogger({
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...
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serializers: bunyan.stdSerializers
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});
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**Note**: Your own serializers should never throw, otherwise you'll get an
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ugly message on stderr from Bunyan (along with the traceback) and the field
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in your log record will be replaced with a short error message.
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## src
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The **source file, line and function of the log call site** can be added to
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log records by using the `src: true` config option:
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var log = bunyan.createLogger({src: true, ...});
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This adds the call source info with the 'src' field, like this:
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{
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"name": "src-example",
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"hostname": "banana.local",
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"pid": 123,
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"component": "wuzzle",
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"level": 4,
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"msg": "This wuzzle is woosey.",
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"time": "2012-02-06T04:19:35.605Z",
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"src": {
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"file": "/Users/trentm/tm/node-bunyan/examples/src.js",
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"line": 20,
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"func": "Wuzzle.woos"
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},
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"v": 0
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}
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**WARNING: Determining the call source info is slow. Never use this option
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in production.**
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# Levels
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The log levels in bunyan are as follows. The level descriptions are best
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practice *opinions*.
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- "fatal" (60): The service/app is going to stop or become unusable now.
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An operator should definitely look into this soon.
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- "error" (50): Fatal for a particular request, but the service/app continues
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servicing other requests. An operator should look at this soon(ish).
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- "warn" (40): A note on something that should probably be looked at by an
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operator eventually.
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- "info" (30): Detail on regular operation.
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- "debug" (20): Anything else, i.e. too verbose to be included in "info" level.
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- "trace" (10): Logging from external libraries used by your app or *very*
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detailed application logging.
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Suggestions: Use "debug" sparingly. Information that will be useful to debug
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errors *post mortem* should usually be included in "info" messages if it's
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generally relevant or else with the corresponding "error" event. Don't rely
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on spewing mostly irrelevant debug messages all the time and sifting through
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them when an error occurs.
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Integers are used for the actual level values (10 for "trace", ..., 60 for
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"fatal") and constants are defined for the (bunyan.TRACE ... bunyan.DEBUG).
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The lowercase level names are aliases supported in the API.
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Here is the API for changing levels in an existing logger:
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log.level() -> INFO // gets current level (lowest level of all streams)
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log.level(INFO) // set all streams to level INFO
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log.level("info") // set all streams to level INFO
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log.levels() -> [DEBUG, INFO] // get array of levels of all streams
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log.levels(0) -> DEBUG // get level of stream at index 0
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log.levels("foo") // get level of stream with name "foo"
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log.levels(0, INFO) // set level of stream 0 to INFO
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log.levels(0, "info") // can use "info" et al aliases
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log.levels("foo", WARN) // set stream named "foo" to WARN
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# Log Record Fields
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This section will describe *rules* for the Bunyan log format: field names,
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field meanings, required fields, etc. However, a Bunyan library doesn't
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strictly enforce all these rules while records are being emitted. For example,
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Bunyan will add a `time` field with the correct format to your log records,
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but you can specify your own. It is the caller's responsibility to specify
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the appropriate format.
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The reason for the above leniency is because IMO logging a message should
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never break your app. This leads to this rule of logging: **a thrown
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exception from `log.info(...)` or equivalent (other than for calling with the
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incorrect signature) is always a bug in Bunyan.**
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A typical Bunyan log record looks like this:
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{"name":"myserver","hostname":"banana.local","pid":123,"req":{"method":"GET","url":"/path?q=1#anchor","headers":{"x-hi":"Mom","connection":"close"}},"level":3,"msg":"start request","time":"2012-02-03T19:02:46.178Z","v":0}
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Pretty-printed:
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{
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"name": "myserver",
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"hostname": "banana.local",
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"pid": 123,
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"req": {
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"method": "GET",
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"url": "/path?q=1#anchor",
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"headers": {
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"x-hi": "Mom",
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"connection": "close"
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},
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"remoteAddress": "120.0.0.1",
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"remotePort": 51244
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},
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"level": 3,
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"msg": "start request",
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"time": "2012-02-03T19:02:57.534Z",
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"v": 0
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}
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Core fields:
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- `v`: Required. Integer. Added by Bunion. Cannot be overriden.
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This is the Bunyan log format version (`require('bunyan').LOG_VERSION`).
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The log version is a single integer. `0` is until I release a version
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"1.0.0" of node-bunyan. Thereafter, starting with `1`, this will be
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incremented if there is any backward incompatible change to the log record
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format. Details will be in "CHANGES.md" (the change log).
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- `level`: Required. Integer. Added by Bunion. Cannot be overriden.
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See the "Levels" section.
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- `name`: Required. String. Provided at Logger creation.
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You must specify a name for your logger when creating it. Typically this
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is the name of the service/app using Bunyan for logging.
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- `hostname`: Required. String. Provided or determined at Logger creation.
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You can specify your hostname at Logger creation or it will be retrieved
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vi `os.hostname()`.
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- `pid`: Required. Integer. Filled in automatically at Logger creation.
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- `time`: Required. String. Added by Bunion. Can be overriden.
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The date and time of the event in [ISO 8601
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Extended Format](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601) format and in UTC,
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as from
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[`Date.toISOString()`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date/toISOString).
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- `msg`: Required. String.
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Every `log.debug(...)` et al call must provide a log message.
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- `src`: Optional. Object giving log call source info. This is added
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automatically by Bunyan if the "src: true" config option is given to the
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Logger. Never use in production as this is really slow.
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Go ahead and add more fields, and nested ones are fine (and recommended) as
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well. This is why we're using JSON. Some suggestions and best practices
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follow (feedback from actual users welcome).
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Recommended/Best Practice Fields:
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- `err`: Object. A caught JS exception. Log that thing with `log.info(err)`
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to get:
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...
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"err": {
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"message": "boom",
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"name": "TypeError",
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"stack": "TypeError: boom\n at Object.<anonymous> ..."
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},
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"msg": "boom",
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...
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Or use the `bunyan.stdSerializers.err` serializer in your Logger and
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do this `log.error({err: err}, "oops")`. See "examples/err.js".
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- `req_id`: String. A request identifier. Including this field in all logging
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tied to handling a particular request to your server is strongly suggested.
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This allows post analysis of logs to easily collate all related logging
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for a request. This really shines when you have a SOA with multiple services
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and you carry a single request ID from the top API down through all APIs
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(as [node-restify](https://github.com/mcavage/node-restify) facilitates
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with its 'X-Request-Id' header).
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- `req`: An HTTP server request. Bunyan provides `bunyan.stdSerializers.req`
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to serialize a request with a suggested set of keys. Example:
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{
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"method": "GET",
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"url": "/path?q=1#anchor",
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"headers": {
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"x-hi": "Mom",
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"connection": "close"
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},
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"remoteAddress": "120.0.0.1",
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"remotePort": 51244
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}
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- `res`: An HTTP server response. Bunyan provides `bunyan.stdSerializers.res`
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to serialize a response with a suggested set of keys. Example:
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{
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"statusCode": 200,
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"header": "HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\nContent-Type: text/plain\r\nConnection: keep-alive\r\nTransfer-Encoding: chunked\r\n\r\n"
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}
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Other fields to consider:
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- `req.username`: Authenticated user (or for a 401, the user attempting to
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auth).
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- Some mechanism to calculate response latency. "restify" users will have
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a "X-Response-Time" header. A `latency` custom field would be fine.
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- `req.body`: If you know that request bodies are small (common in APIs,
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for example), then logging the request body is good.
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|
|
|
# Streams
|
|
|
|
A "stream" is Bunyan's name for an output for log messages (the equivalent
|
|
to a log4j Appender). Ultimately Bunyan uses a
|
|
[Writable Stream](http://nodejs.org/docs/latest/api/all.html#writable_Stream)
|
|
interface, but there are some additional attributes used to create and
|
|
manage the stream. A Bunyan Logger instance has one or more streams.
|
|
In general streams are specified with the "streams" option:
|
|
|
|
var bunyan = require('bunyan');
|
|
var log = bunyan.createLogger({
|
|
name: "foo",
|
|
streams: [
|
|
{
|
|
stream: process.stderr,
|
|
level: "debug"
|
|
},
|
|
...
|
|
]
|
|
});
|
|
|
|
For convenience, if there is only one stream, it can specified with the
|
|
"stream" and "level" options (internally converted to a `Logger.streams`).
|
|
|
|
var log = bunyan.createLogger({
|
|
name: "foo",
|
|
stream: process.stderr,
|
|
level: "debug"
|
|
});
|
|
|
|
Note that "file" streams do not support this shortcut (partly for historical
|
|
reasons and partly to not make it difficult to add a literal "path" field
|
|
on log records).
|
|
|
|
If neither "streams" nor "stream" are specified, the default is a stream of
|
|
type "stream" emitting to `process.stdout` at the "info" level.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## stream errors
|
|
|
|
Bunyan re-emits error events from the created `WriteStream`. So you can
|
|
do this:
|
|
|
|
var log = bunyan.createLogger({name: 'mylog', streams: [{path: LOG_PATH}]});
|
|
log.on('error', function (err, stream) {
|
|
// Handle stream write or create error here.
|
|
});
|
|
|
|
|
|
## stream type: `stream`
|
|
|
|
A `type === 'stream'` is a plain ol' node.js [Writable
|
|
Stream](http://nodejs.org/docs/latest/api/all.html#writable_Stream). A
|
|
"stream" (the writeable stream) field is required. E.g.: `process.stdout`,
|
|
`process.stderr`.
|
|
|
|
var log = bunyan.createLogger({
|
|
name: 'foo',
|
|
streams: [{
|
|
stream: process.stderr
|
|
// `type: 'stream'` is implied
|
|
}]
|
|
});
|
|
|
|
<table>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<th>Field</th>
|
|
<th>Required?</th>
|
|
<th>Default</th>
|
|
<th>Description</th>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>stream</td>
|
|
<td>Yes</td>
|
|
<td>-</td>
|
|
<td>A "Writable Stream", e.g. a std handle or an open file write stream.</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>type</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>n/a</td>
|
|
<td>`type == 'stream'` is implied if the `stream` field is given.</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>level</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>info</td>
|
|
<td>The level at which logging to this stream is enabled. If not
|
|
specified it defaults to "info". If specified this can be one of the
|
|
level strings ("trace", "debug", ...) or constants (`bunyan.TRACE`,
|
|
`bunyan.DEBUG`, ...).</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>name</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>-</td>
|
|
<td>A name for this stream. This may be useful for usage of `log.level(NAME,
|
|
LEVEL)`. See the [Levels section](#levels) for details. A stream "name" isn't
|
|
used for anything else.</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
</table>
|
|
|
|
|
|
## stream type: `file`
|
|
|
|
A `type === 'file'` stream requires a "path" field. Bunyan will open this
|
|
file for appending. E.g.:
|
|
|
|
var log = bunyan.createLogger({
|
|
name: 'foo',
|
|
streams: [{
|
|
path: '/var/log/foo.log',
|
|
// `type: 'file'` is implied
|
|
}]
|
|
});
|
|
|
|
<table>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<th>Field</th>
|
|
<th>Required?</th>
|
|
<th>Default</th>
|
|
<th>Description</th>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>path</td>
|
|
<td>Yes</td>
|
|
<td>-</td>
|
|
<td>A file path to which to log.</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>type</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>n/a</td>
|
|
<td>`type == 'file'` is implied if the `path` field is given.</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>level</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>info</td>
|
|
<td>The level at which logging to this stream is enabled. If not
|
|
specified it defaults to "info". If specified this can be one of the
|
|
level strings ("trace", "debug", ...) or constants (`bunyan.TRACE`,
|
|
`bunyan.DEBUG`, ...).</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>name</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>-</td>
|
|
<td>A name for this stream. This may be useful for usage of `log.level(NAME,
|
|
LEVEL)`. See the [Levels section](#levels) for details. A stream "name" isn't
|
|
used for anything else.</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
</table>
|
|
|
|
|
|
## stream type: `rotating-file`
|
|
|
|
A `type === 'rotating-file'` is a file stream that handles file automatic
|
|
rotation.
|
|
|
|
var log = bunyan.createLogger({
|
|
name: 'foo',
|
|
streams: [{
|
|
type: 'rotating-file',
|
|
path: '/var/log/foo.log',
|
|
period: '1d', // daily rotation
|
|
count: 3 // keep 3 back copies
|
|
}]
|
|
});
|
|
|
|
This will rotate '/var/log/foo.log' every day (at midnight) to:
|
|
|
|
/var/log/foo.log.0 # yesterday
|
|
/var/log/foo.log.1 # 1 day ago
|
|
/var/log/foo.log.2 # 2 days ago
|
|
|
|
*Currently*, there is no support for providing a template for the rotated
|
|
files, or for rotating when the log reaches a threshold size.
|
|
|
|
<table>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<th>Field</th>
|
|
<th>Required?</th>
|
|
<th>Default</th>
|
|
<th>Description</th>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>type</td>
|
|
<td>Yes</td>
|
|
<td>-</td>
|
|
<td>"rotating-file"</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>path</td>
|
|
<td>Yes</td>
|
|
<td>-</td>
|
|
<td>A file path to which to log. Rotated files will be "$path.0",
|
|
"$path.1", ...</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>period</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>1d</td>
|
|
<td>The period at which to rotate. This is a string of the format
|
|
"$number$scope" where "$scope" is one of "h" (hours), "d" (days), "w" (weeks),
|
|
"m" (months), "y" (years). Or one of the following names can be used
|
|
"hourly" (means 1h), "daily" (1d), "weekly" (1w), "monthly" (1m),
|
|
"yearly" (1y). Rotation is done at the "start"</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>count</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>10</td>
|
|
<td>The number of rotated files to keep.</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>level</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>info</td>
|
|
<td>The level at which logging to this stream is enabled. If not
|
|
specified it defaults to "info". If specified this can be one of the
|
|
level strings ("trace", "debug", ...) or constants (`bunyan.TRACE`,
|
|
`bunyan.DEBUG`, ...).</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td>name</td>
|
|
<td>No</td>
|
|
<td>-</td>
|
|
<td>A name for this stream. This may be useful for usage of `log.level(NAME,
|
|
LEVEL)`. See the [Levels section](#levels) for details. A stream "name" isn't
|
|
used for anything else.</td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
</table>
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
## stream type: `raw`
|
|
|
|
- `raw`: Similar to a "stream" writeable stream, except that the write method
|
|
is given raw log record *Object*s instead of a JSON-stringified string.
|
|
This can be useful for hooking on further processing to all Bunyan logging:
|
|
pushing to an external service, a RingBuffer (see below), etc.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
## `raw` + RingBuffer Stream
|
|
|
|
Bunyan comes with a special stream called a RingBuffer which keeps the last N
|
|
records in memory and does *not* write the data anywhere else. One common
|
|
strategy is to log 'info' and higher to a normal log file but log all records
|
|
(including 'trace') to a ringbuffer that you can access via a debugger, or your
|
|
own HTTP interface, or a post-mortem facility like MDB or node-panic.
|
|
|
|
To use a RingBuffer:
|
|
|
|
/* Create a ring buffer that stores the last 100 records. */
|
|
var bunyan = require('bunyan');
|
|
var ringbuffer = new bunyan.RingBuffer({ limit: 100 });
|
|
var log = bunyan.createLogger({
|
|
name: 'foo',
|
|
streams: [
|
|
{
|
|
level: 'info',
|
|
stream: process.stdout
|
|
},
|
|
{
|
|
level: 'trace',
|
|
type: 'raw', // use 'raw' to get raw log record objects
|
|
stream: ringbuffer
|
|
}
|
|
]
|
|
});
|
|
|
|
log.info('hello world');
|
|
console.log(ringbuffer.records);
|
|
|
|
This example emits:
|
|
|
|
[ { name: 'foo',
|
|
hostname: '912d2b29',
|
|
pid: 50346,
|
|
level: 30,
|
|
msg: 'hello world',
|
|
time: '2012-06-19T21:34:19.906Z',
|
|
v: 0 } ]
|
|
|
|
|
|
## third-party streams
|
|
|
|
- syslog:
|
|
[mcavage/node-bunyan-syslog](https://github.com/mcavage/node-bunyan-syslog)
|
|
provides support for directing bunyan logging to a syslog server.
|
|
|
|
- TODO: eventually https://github.com/trentm/node-bunyan-winston
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
# DTrace support
|
|
|
|
On systems that support DTrace (e.g., MacOS, FreeBSD, illumos derivatives
|
|
like SmartOS and OmniOS), Bunyan will create a DTrace provider (`bunyan`)
|
|
that makes available the following probes:
|
|
|
|
log-trace
|
|
log-debug
|
|
log-info
|
|
log-warn
|
|
log-error
|
|
log-fatal
|
|
|
|
Each of these probes has a single argument: the string that would be
|
|
written to the log. Note that when a probe is enabled, it will
|
|
fire whenever the corresponding function is called, even if the level of
|
|
the log message is less than that of any stream.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## DTrace examples
|
|
|
|
Trace all log messages coming from any Bunyan module on the system.
|
|
(The `-x strsize=4k` is to raise dtrace's default 256 byte buffer size
|
|
because log messages are longer than typical dtrace probes.)
|
|
|
|
dtrace -x strsize=4k -qn 'bunyan*:::log-*{printf("%d: %s: %s", pid, probefunc, copyinstr(arg0))}'
|
|
|
|
Trace all log messages coming from the "wuzzle" component:
|
|
|
|
dtrace -x strsize=4k -qn 'bunyan*:::log-*/strstr(this->str = copyinstr(arg0), "\"component\":\"wuzzle\"") != NULL/{printf("%s", this->str)}'
|
|
|
|
Aggregate debug messages from process 1234, by message:
|
|
|
|
dtrace -x strsize=4k -n 'bunyan1234:::log-debug{@[copyinstr(arg0)] = count()}'
|
|
|
|
Have the bunyan CLI pretty-print the traced logs:
|
|
|
|
dtrace -x strsize=4k -qn 'bunyan1234:::log-*{printf("%s", copyinstr(arg0))}' | bunyan
|
|
|
|
A convenience handle has been made for this:
|
|
|
|
bunyan -p 1234
|
|
|
|
|
|
On systems that support the
|
|
[`jstack`](http://dtrace.org/blogs/dap/2012/04/25/profiling-node-js/) action
|
|
via a node.js helper, get a stack backtrace for any debug message that
|
|
includes the string "danger!":
|
|
|
|
dtrace -x strsize=4k -qn 'log-debug/strstr(copyinstr(arg0), "danger!") != NULL/{printf("\n%s", copyinstr(arg0)); jstack()}'
|
|
|
|
Output of the above might be:
|
|
|
|
{"name":"foo","hostname":"763bf293-d65c-42d5-872b-4abe25d5c4c7.local","pid":12747,"level":20,"msg":"danger!","time":"2012-10-30T18:28:57.115Z","v":0}
|
|
|
|
node`0x87e2010
|
|
DTraceProviderBindings.node`usdt_fire_probe+0x32
|
|
DTraceProviderBindings.node`_ZN4node11DTraceProbe5_fireEN2v85LocalINS1_5ValueEEE+0x32d
|
|
DTraceProviderBindings.node`_ZN4node11DTraceProbe4FireERKN2v89ArgumentsE+0x77
|
|
<< internal code >>
|
|
(anon) as (anon) at /root/node-bunyan/lib/bunyan.js position 40484
|
|
<< adaptor >>
|
|
(anon) as doit at /root/my-prog.js position 360
|
|
(anon) as list.ontimeout at timers.js position 4960
|
|
<< adaptor >>
|
|
<< internal >>
|
|
<< entry >>
|
|
node`_ZN2v88internalL6InvokeEbNS0_6HandleINS0_10JSFunctionEEENS1_INS0_6ObjectEEEiPS5_Pb+0x101
|
|
node`_ZN2v88internal9Execution4CallENS0_6HandleINS0_6ObjectEEES4_iPS4_Pbb+0xcb
|
|
node`_ZN2v88Function4CallENS_6HandleINS_6ObjectEEEiPNS1_INS_5ValueEEE+0xf0
|
|
node`_ZN4node12MakeCallbackEN2v86HandleINS0_6ObjectEEENS1_INS0_8FunctionEEEiPNS1_INS0_5ValueEEE+0x11f
|
|
node`_ZN4node12MakeCallbackEN2v86HandleINS0_6ObjectEEENS1_INS0_6StringEEEiPNS1_INS0_5ValueEEE+0x66
|
|
node`_ZN4node9TimerWrap9OnTimeoutEP10uv_timer_si+0x63
|
|
node`uv__run_timers+0x66
|
|
node`uv__run+0x1b
|
|
node`uv_run+0x17
|
|
node`_ZN4node5StartEiPPc+0x1d0
|
|
node`main+0x1b
|
|
node`_start+0x83
|
|
|
|
node`0x87e2010
|
|
DTraceProviderBindings.node`usdt_fire_probe+0x32
|
|
DTraceProviderBindings.node`_ZN4node11DTraceProbe5_fireEN2v85LocalINS1_5ValueEEE+0x32d
|
|
DTraceProviderBindings.node`_ZN4node11DTraceProbe4FireERKN2v89ArgumentsE+0x77
|
|
<< internal code >>
|
|
(anon) as (anon) at /root/node-bunyan/lib/bunyan.js position 40484
|
|
<< adaptor >>
|
|
(anon) as doit at /root/my-prog.js position 360
|
|
(anon) as list.ontimeout at timers.js position 4960
|
|
<< adaptor >>
|
|
<< internal >>
|
|
<< entry >>
|
|
node`_ZN2v88internalL6InvokeEbNS0_6HandleINS0_10JSFunctionEEENS1_INS0_6ObjectEEEiPS5_Pb+0x101
|
|
node`_ZN2v88internal9Execution4CallENS0_6HandleINS0_6ObjectEEES4_iPS4_Pbb+0xcb
|
|
node`_ZN2v88Function4CallENS_6HandleINS_6ObjectEEEiPNS1_INS_5ValueEEE+0xf0
|
|
node`_ZN4node12MakeCallbackEN2v86HandleINS0_6ObjectEEENS1_INS0_8FunctionEEEiPNS1_INS0_5ValueEEE+0x11f
|
|
node`_ZN4node12MakeCallbackEN2v86HandleINS0_6ObjectEEENS1_INS0_6StringEEEiPNS1_INS0_5ValueEEE+0x66
|
|
node`_ZN4node9TimerWrap9OnTimeoutEP10uv_timer_si+0x63
|
|
node`uv__run_timers+0x66
|
|
node`uv__run+0x1b
|
|
node`uv_run+0x17
|
|
node`_ZN4node5StartEiPPc+0x1d0
|
|
node`main+0x1b
|
|
node`_start+0x83
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Versioning
|
|
|
|
The scheme I follow is most succintly described by the bootstrap guys
|
|
[here](https://github.com/twitter/bootstrap#versioning).
|
|
|
|
tl;dr: All versions are `<major>.<minor>.<patch>` which will be incremented for
|
|
breaking backward compat and major reworks, new features without breaking
|
|
change, and bug fixes, respectively.
|
|
|
|
|
|
# License
|
|
|
|
MIT. See "LICENSE.txt".
|
|
|
|
|
|
# See Also
|
|
|
|
- Bunyan syslog support: <https://github.com/mcavage/node-bunyan-syslog>.
|
|
- An example of a Bunyan shim to the Winston logging system:
|
|
<https://github.com/trentm/node-bunyan-winston>.
|
|
- [Bunyan for Bash](https://github.com/trevoro/bash-bunyan).
|
|
- TODO: `RequestCaptureStream` example from restify.
|