Log::Dispatch - Dispatches messages to one or more outputs
version 2.71
use Log::Dispatch;
# Simple API
#
my $log = Log::Dispatch->new(
outputs => [
[ 'File', min_level => 'debug', filename => 'logfile' ],
[ 'Screen', min_level => 'warning' ],
],
);
$log->info('Blah, blah');
# More verbose API
#
my $log = Log::Dispatch->new();
$log->add(
Log::Dispatch::File->new(
name => 'file1',
min_level => 'debug',
filename => 'logfile'
)
);
$log->add(
Log::Dispatch::Screen->new(
name => 'screen',
min_level => 'warning',
)
);
$log->log( level => 'info', message => 'Blah, blah' );
my $sub = sub { my %p = @_; return reverse $p{message}; };
my $reversing_dispatcher = Log::Dispatch->new( callbacks => $sub );
This module manages a set of Log::Dispatch::* output objects that can be logged to via a unified interface.
The idea is that you create a Log::Dispatch object and then add various logging
objects to it (such as a file logger or screen logger). Then you call the
log
method of the dispatch object, which passes the message to each of the
objects, which in turn decide whether or not to accept the message and what to
do with it.
This makes it possible to call single method and send a message to a log file, via email, to the screen, and anywhere else, all with very little code needed on your part, once the dispatching object has been created.
This class provides the following methods:
This method takes the following parameters:
-
outputs( [ [ class, params, ... ], [ class, params, ... ], ... ] )
This parameter is a reference to a list of lists. Each inner list consists of a class name and a set of constructor params. The class is automatically prefixed with 'Log::Dispatch::' unless it begins with '+', in which case the string following '+' is taken to be a full classname. e.g.
outputs => [ [ 'File', min_level => 'debug', filename => 'logfile' ], [ '+My::Dispatch', min_level => 'info' ] ]
For each inner list, a new output object is created and added to the dispatcher (via the
add()
method).See "OUTPUT CLASSES" for the parameters that can be used when creating an output object.
-
callbacks( \& or [ \&, \&, ... ] )
This parameter may be a single subroutine reference or an array reference of subroutine references. These callbacks will be called in the order they are given and passed a hash containing the following keys:
( message => $log_message, level => $log_level )
In addition, any key/value pairs passed to a logging method will be passed onto your callback.
The callbacks are expected to modify the message and then return a single scalar containing that modified message. These callbacks will be called when either the
log
orlog_to
methods are called and will only be applied to a given message once. If they do not return the message then you will get no output. Make sure to return the message!
This returns a shallow clone of the original object. The underlying output objects and callbacks are shared between the two objects. However any changes made to the outputs or callbacks that the object contains are not shared.
Sends the message (at the appropriate level) to all the output objects that the
dispatcher contains (by calling the log_to
method repeatedly).
The level can be specified by name or by an integer from 0 (debug) to 7 (emergency).
This method also accepts a subroutine reference as the message argument. This reference will be called only if there is an output that will accept a message of the specified level.
You may call any valid log level (including valid abbreviations) as a method
with a single argument that is the message to be logged. This is converted into
a call to the log
method with the appropriate level.
For example:
$log->alert('Strange data in incoming request');
translates to:
$log->log( level => 'alert', message => 'Strange data in incoming request' );
If you pass an array to these methods, it will be stringified as is:
my @array = ('Something', 'bad', 'is', 'here');
$log->alert(@array);
# is equivalent to
$log->alert("@array");
You can also pass a subroutine reference, just like passing one to the log()
method.
Has the same behavior as calling log()
but calls _die_with_message()
at
the end.
You can throw exception objects by subclassing this method.
If the carp_level
parameter is present its value will be added to the
current value of $Carp::CarpLevel
.
A synonym for $dispatch-
log_and_die()>.
Sends the message only to the named object. Note: this will not properly handle a subroutine reference as the message.
Adds a callback (like those given during construction). It is added to the end of the list of callbacks. Note that this can also be called on individual output objects.
Remove the given callback from the list of callbacks. Note that this can also be called on individual output objects.
Returns a list of the callbacks in a given output.
Returns true or false to indicate whether or not the given string is a valid log level. Can be called as either a class or object method.
Given a log level, returns true or false to indicate whether or not anything would be logged for that log level.
There are methods for every log level: is_debug()
, is_warning()
, etc.
This returns true if the logger will log a message at the given level.
Adds a new output object to the dispatcher. If an object
of the same name already exists, then that object is replaced, with a warning
if $^W
is true.
Removes the output object that matches the name given to the remove method. The return value is the object being removed or undef if no object matched this.
Returns a list of output objects.
Returns the output object of the given name. Returns undef or an empty list, depending on context, if the given output does not exist.
This method is used by log_and_die
and will either die() or croak()
depending on the value of message
: if it's a reference or it ends with a new
line then a plain die will be used, otherwise it will croak.
An output class - e.g. Log::Dispatch::File or Log::Dispatch::Screen - implements a particular way of dispatching logs. Many output classes come with this distribution, and others are available separately on CPAN.
The following common parameters can be used when creating an output class. All are optional. Most output classes will have additional parameters beyond these, see their documentation for details.
-
name ($)
A name for the object (not the filename!). This is useful if you want to refer to the object later, e.g. to log specifically to it or remove it.
By default a unique name will be generated. You should not depend on the form of generated names, as they may change.
-
min_level ($)
The minimum logging level this object will accept. Required.
-
max_level ($)
The maximum logging level this object will accept. By default the maximum is the highest possible level (which means functionally that the object has no maximum).
-
callbacks( \& or [ \&, \&, ... ] )
This parameter may be a single subroutine reference or an array reference of subroutine references. These callbacks will be called in the order they are given and passed a hash containing the following keys:
( message => $log_message, level => $log_level )
The callbacks are expected to modify the message and then return a single scalar containing that modified message. These callbacks will be called when either the
log
orlog_to
methods are called and will only be applied to a given message once. If they do not return the message then you will get no output. Make sure to return the message! -
newline (0|1)
If true, a callback will be added to the end of the callbacks list that adds a newline to the end of each message. Default is false, but some output classes may decide to make the default true.
The log levels that Log::Dispatch uses are taken directly from the syslog man pages (except that I expanded them to full words). Valid levels are:
- debug
- info
- notice
- warning
- error
- critical
- alert
- emergency
Alternately, the numbers 0 through 7 may be used (debug is 0 and emergency is 7). The syslog standard of 'err', 'crit', and 'emerg' is also acceptable. We also allow 'warn' as a synonym for 'warning'.
This module was designed to be easy to subclass. If you want to handle
messaging in a way not implemented in this package, you should be able to add
this with minimal effort. It is generally as simple as subclassing
Log::Dispatch::Output and overriding the new
and log_message
methods. See
the Log::Dispatch::Output docs for more details.
If you would like to create your own subclass for sending email then it is even
simpler. Simply subclass Log::Dispatch::Email and override the send_email
method. See the Log::Dispatch::Email docs for more details.
The logging levels that Log::Dispatch uses are borrowed from the standard UNIX syslog levels, except that where syslog uses partial words ("err") Log::Dispatch also allows the use of the full word as well ("error").
Written by Tatsuhiko Miyagawa. Log output to a database table.
Written by Mark Pfeiffer. Rotates log files periodically as part of its usage.
Written by Eric Cholet. Stamps log files with date and time information.
Written by Aaron Straup Cope. Logs messages via Jabber.
Written by Dominique Dumont. Logs messages to a Tk window.
Written by Arthur Bergman. Logs messages to the Windows event log.
An implementation of Java's log4j API in Perl. Log messages can be limited by fine-grained controls, and if they end up being logged, both native Log4perl and Log::Dispatch appenders can be used to perform the actual logging job. Created by Mike Schilli and Kevin Goess.
Written by Tatsuhiko Miyagawa. Allows configuration of logging via a text file similar (or so I'm told) to how it is done with log4j. Simpler than Log::Log4perl.
A very different API for doing many of the same things that Log::Dispatch does. Originally written by Raphael Manfredi.
Log::Dispatch::ApacheLog, Log::Dispatch::Email, Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSend, Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSender, Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSendmail, Log::Dispatch::Email::MIMELite, Log::Dispatch::File, Log::Dispatch::File::Locked, Log::Dispatch::Handle, Log::Dispatch::Output, Log::Dispatch::Screen, Log::Dispatch::Syslog
Bugs may be submitted at https://github.com/houseabsolute/Log-Dispatch/issues.
The source code repository for Log-Dispatch can be found at https://github.com/houseabsolute/Log-Dispatch.
If you'd like to thank me for the work I've done on this module, please consider making a "donation" to me via PayPal. I spend a lot of free time creating free software, and would appreciate any support you'd care to offer.
Please note that I am not suggesting that you must do this in order for me to continue working on this particular software. I will continue to do so, inasmuch as I have in the past, for as long as it interests me.
Similarly, a donation made in this way will probably not make me work on this software much more, unless I get so many donations that I can consider working on free software full time (let's all have a chuckle at that together).
To donate, log into PayPal and send money to [email protected], or use the button at https://houseabsolute.com/foss-donations/.
Dave Rolsky [email protected]
- Anirvan Chatterjee [email protected]
- Carsten Grohmann [email protected]
- Doug Bell [email protected]
- Graham Knop [email protected]
- Graham Ollis [email protected]
- Gregory Oschwald [email protected]
- hartzell [email protected]
- Joelle Maslak [email protected]
- Johann Rolschewski [email protected]
- Jonathan Swartz [email protected]
- Karen Etheridge [email protected]
- Kerin Millar [email protected]
- Kivanc Yazan [email protected]
- Konrad Bucheli [email protected]
- Michael Schout [email protected]
- Olaf Alders [email protected]
- Olivier Mengué [email protected]
- Rohan Carly [email protected]
- Ross Attrill [email protected]
- Salvador Fandiño [email protected]
- Sergey Leschenko [email protected]
- Slaven Rezic [email protected]
- Steve Bertrand [email protected]
- Whitney Jackson [email protected]
This software is Copyright (c) 2023 by Dave Rolsky.
This is free software, licensed under:
The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)
The full text of the license can be found in the
LICENSE
file included with this distribution.