a smartlog destination targeting the local console
Go to file
2016-09-02 12:50:07 +02:00
dist imrpove some variable naming 2016-07-24 01:47:35 +02:00
docs integrate npmpage 2016-09-02 12:50:07 +02:00
test now has working logging 2016-07-24 01:17:38 +02:00
ts imrpove some variable naming 2016-07-24 01:47:35 +02:00
.bithoundrc small fix for better pipelog support 2015-12-02 16:23:39 +01:00
.gitignore integrate npmpage 2016-09-02 12:50:07 +02:00
.gitlab-ci.yml integrate npmpage 2016-09-02 12:50:07 +02:00
.npmignore integrate npmpage 2016-09-02 12:50:07 +02:00
code.css add code function 2016-01-30 06:19:44 +01:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2015-09-20 17:42:50 +02:00
npmts.json update smartenv dependency 2016-02-20 10:29:35 +01:00
package.json integrate npmpage 2016-09-02 12:50:07 +02:00
README.md integrate npmpage 2016-09-02 12:50:07 +02:00

beautylog

beautiful logging, TypeScript ready

Availabililty

npm git git docs

Status for master

build status coverage report Dependency Status bitHound Dependencies bitHound Code TypeScript node

Usage

var beautylog = require("beautylog");

beautylog.log("some log message"); // normal console log message
beautylog.info("some log message") // info console log message
beautylog.ok("some log message"); // ok console log message
beautylog.warn("some log message"); // warn console log message
beautylog.success("some success message"); // success console log message
beautylog.error("some error message"); // error console log message

The plugin produces beautiful output like this: console.png

Ora Integration

beautylog wraps the excellent ora module from npm to better work with beautylog. In general that means that you can log persistent messages WHILE you are actually having an active Ora object. beautylog handles all the fuss for you.

var myOra = new beautylog.Ora("my awesome text", "blue");
myOra.start();
beautylog.info("some persistent text") //does not disturb myOra
console.log("something") // even this works because console.log is monkeypatched by beautylog
myOra.text("some updated text");
myOra.stop();

Console Tables

beautylog allows displaying data in nice tables for better overview.

Note: This only works only in nodejs for now.

There are different types of tables.

Custom

var beautylog = require("beautylog");
var myTable = beautylog.table.new("custom",["Heading1".blue,"Heading2".blue,"Heading3".blue]); // type "custom"
myTable.push(["check 1","success"]); // adds a row the myTable
myTable.push(["check 2","error"]); // adds a row the myTable
myTable.push(["check 3","error"]); // adds a row the myTable
myTable.print(); //prints myTable to the console

Checks

var beautylog = require("beautylog");
var myTable = beautylog.table.new("checks"); // type checks
myTable.push(["check 1","success"]); // adds a row to myTable
myTable.push(["check 2","error"]); // adds a row to myTable
myTable.push(["check 3","error"]); // adds a row to myTable
myTable.print(); //prints myTable to console

The table from the code with type "checks" above looks like this: table.png

Centralized remote logging

Beautylog makes it easy to have all your node applications log to a remote location.

Currently supported remote providers:

  • loggly.com
beautylog.remote.loggly({
    token: "loggly-token",
    subdomain: "loggly-subdomain",
    appName: "some App Name",
    serverName: "some Server Name"
});

Note: since beautylog monkeypatches all console log methods. There is no need to change anything in your code. Everything that is getting logged to your console by node will get logged to loggly as well.

For more information read the docs!

npm