Tripitaka is a low dependency, no frills logger, designed to play nicely with tools like fluentd and Elasticsearch. It is named after the buddhist monk from the TV series, Monkey due to shared values of simplicity and mindfulness, and also because Tripitaka is a term given to ancient collections of Buddhist scriptures, which loosely connects with logging. I wrote Tripitaka because, sadly my previous logger of choice, winston has fallen into disrepair.
const { Logger } = require('tripitaka');
const logger = new Logger();
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing', { env: process.env.NODE_ENV });
{"env":"production","timestamp":"2021-03-27T23:43:10.023Z","message":"How blissful it is, for one who has nothing","level":"INFO"}
Tripitaka intentionally ships with only two transports. A streams-based transport which will write to stdout
and stderr
(or other streams which you supply), and an event emitter based transport which will emit events using the global process object (or another emitter which you supply). This library holds the opinion that external files, database and message brokers are all far better handled with a data collector such as fluentd, but you can write your own transports if you so wish. Tripitaka also eschews child loggers. These were useful for stashing context, but are more elegantly implemented via AsyncLocalStorage or continuation-local-storage. See the express example for how.
Tripitaka supports the same logging levels as console, i.e.
- logger.trace(...)
- logger.debug(...)
- logger.info(...)
- logger.warn(...)
- logger.error(...)
The function arguments are always the same, a mandatory message and an optional context, e.g.
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing', { env: process.env.NODE_ENV });
Assuming the default configuration, this will write the following to stdout
{"env":"production","message":"How blissful it is, for one who has nothing","level":"INFO"}
If you use the error processor (enabled by default), Tripitaka also supports logging errors in place of the context, or even the message, e.g.
logger.error('I forbid it!', new Error('Oooh, Demons!'));
logger.error(new Error('Oooh, Demons!'));
logger.info(new Error('Oooh, Demons!'));
Under these circumstances the error will be nested to avoid clashing with any message attribute, e.g.
{"error":{"message":"Oooh, Demons!","stack":"..."},"message":"I forbid it!","level":"ERROR"}
{"error":{"message":"Oooh, Demons!","stack":"..."},"level":"ERROR"}
{"error":{"message":"Oooh, Demons!","stack":"..."},level":"INFO"}
You can customise this output through the use of processors and transports. By default Tripitaka ships with the following configuration.
const { Logger, Level, processors, transports, } = require('tripitaka');
const { error, timestamp, json, human } = processors;
const { stream } = transports;
const logger = new Logger({
level: Level.INFO,
processors: [
error(),
timestamp(),
process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production' ? json() : human(),
],
transports: [
stream(),
],
})
You can suppress logs by setting the logging level as when you create a Logger
instance as above, or by calling logger.disable()
. You can re-enable the logger by calling logger.enable()
.
A processor is a function you can use to mutate the Tripitaka record before it is delivered to the transports. Since processors are chained together in an array, the record can be mutated over a series of steps. Any truthy value that you return from a processor will be passed to the next processor.
The processor is called with a single object containing the following properties:
name | type | notes |
---|---|---|
level | Level | |
message | string | |
ctx | object | |
record | any | Initialised to a shallow clone of the context. Be careful not to mutate nested attributes |
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
error(),
({ record }) => {
return { ...record, timestamp: new Date() } };
},
json(),
],
});
The out-of-the-box processors are as follows...
Augments the record with the supplied source. If attributes are common to both the record and the source, the source wins. Use with AsyncLocalStorage as a substitute for child loggers. See the express example for how.
name | type | required | default | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
source | object or function | yes |
const source = { env: process.env.NODE_ENV };
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
error(),
augment({ source }),
json(),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing');
{"env":"production","message":"How blissful it is, for one who has nothing","level":"INFO"}
const source = () => ({ timestamp: new Date() });
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
error(),
augment({ source }),
json(),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing');
{"timestamp":"2021-03-28T17:43:12.012Z","message":"How blissful it is, for one who has nothing","level":"INFO"}
The buffer processor outputs the record as a buffer, optionally encoding it before doing so. For this processor to work, the record must previously have been converted to a string.
name | type | required | default | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
inputEncoding | string | no | ||
outputEncoding | string | no |
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
error(),
json(),
buffer({ outputEncoding: 'hex' }),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing');
5a656e48756220526f636b7321
Performs a shallow copy of the context into the record. You should prefer the error processor as it has the same behaviour, but also prepares Error instances for serialisation.
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
context(),
json(),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing', { env: process.env.NODE_ENV });
{"env":"production","message":"How blissful it is, for one who has nothing","level":"INFO"}
The error processor is important for logging errors - without it they will not serialize correctly. It is best to put this processor first in the list of processors, as if another processor fires first, it may incorrectly handle the error object. If you use the error processor there is no need to also use the context processor.
The processor operates with the following logic:
- If the message is an instance of Error, it will be treated as the context object (see below).
- If the context is an instance of Error, it will be converted it to a plain object and assigned to the property specified by the field option.
- Otherwise if any top level context properties are instances of Error, they will be converted to plain objects
It has the following options:
name | type | required | default | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
field | string | no | error | If the context is an instance of Error, it will be nested under an attribute with this name |
stack | boolean | no | true | Controls whether the stack trace will be logged |
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
error({ field: 'err', stack: false }),
json(),
],
});
logger.error("I forbid it!", new Error('Oh Noes'));
"error":{"message":"Oooh, Demons!"}},"message":"I forbid it!","level":"ERROR"
Converts the record into a human readable form. Only intended for use locally since it does not log the context.
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
error(),
human(),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing', { timestamp: new Date(), pid: process.pid })
2021-03-28 18:15:23 [INFO] How blissful it is, for one who has nothing
Creates a sub document of simple values from the specified paths. This is useful to avoid mapping explosion when writing logs to Elasticsearch. The idea is to disable dynamic mapping by default in your Elasticsearch configuration, and specifically enable it only for the named sub document. Since the processor only copies fields with simple values into the index, you should remain in control of the Elasticsearch index, but still be able to search by key terms and inspect the full log context.
It has the following options:
name | type | required | default | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
field | string | no | 'fields' | Specifies the name of the sub document |
paths | array | no | [] | Specifies the paths of the fields to map |
reportComplexTypes | boolean | no | false | Causes the processor to throw an error if value type is an object, function or symbol |
NaN and Infinite values are always silently dropped as they could cause the field to by dynamically mapped as a string instead of a number.
const reportComplexTypes = process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production';
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
error(),
index({ field:"@fields", paths: ['character.name'], reportComplexTypes }),
json(),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing', { character: { name: 'Monkey', nature: 'Irrepressible' } });
{"message":"How blissful it is, for one who has nothing","level":"INFO","character":{"name":"Monkey","nature":"Irrepresible"},"@fields":{"name":"Monkey"}}
Uses json-stringify-safe to safely convert the Tripitaka record to a json string.
It has the following options:
name | type | required | default | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
serializer | function | no | null | |
indent | number | no | undefined | |
decycler | function | no | () => {} | Determines how circular references are handled. The default behaviour is to silently drop the attribute |
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
error(),
json(),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing', { env: process.env.NODE_ENV });
{"env":"production","message":"How blissful it is, for one who has nothing","level":"INFO"}
Adds a timestamp. It has the following options:
name | type | required | default | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
field | string | no | 'timestamp' | Specifies the name of the timestamp attribute |
getTimestamp | function | no | () => new Date(); | Overrides how the timestamp is aquired (useful for fixing the timestamp when testing) |
const logger = new Logger({
processors: [
error(),
timestamp({ field: 'ts' }),
json(),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing', { env: process.env.NODE_ENV });
{"ts":"2021-03-28T18:31:21.035Z","env":"production","message":"How blissful it is, for one who has nothing","level":"INFO"}
Transports are functions which write the Tripitaka record somewhere. The only parameter is an object, which should container the following properties.
name | type | notes |
---|---|---|
level | Level | |
record | any | Likely to be an object, string or a Buffer. It all depends on the processors you have selected |
The available transports are
The stream transport writes a string to an output stream based on the level. It has the following options:
name | type | required | default | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
level | Level | no | Level.TRACE | The minimum log level for this transport |
streams | object | no | See notes | By default TRACE, DEBUG and INFO messages will be output to stdout, while WARN and ERROR messages routed to stderr |
const logger = new Logger({
transports: [
stream({
streams: {
[Level.TRACE.name]: process.stdout,
[Level.DEBUG.name]: process.stdout,
[Level.INFO.name]: process.stdout,
[Level.WARN.name]: process.stdout,
[Level.ERROR.name]: process.stderr,
}
}),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing', { env: process.env.NODE_ENV });
The emitter transport emits a Tripitaka record as an event, which can be useful when testing. It has the following options:
name | type | required | default | notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
level | Level | no | Level.TRACE | The minimum log level for this transport |
emitter | EventEmitter | no | process | Specify your own event emitter rather than the global process object |
events | object | no | See notes | By default all log levels will be emitted with the 'log' event. Think twice about changing this to 'error', since unhandled error events will kill your node process. |
const logger = new Logger({
transports: [
emitter({
events: {
[Level.TRACE.name]: 'log_trace',
[Level.DEBUG.name]: 'log_debug',
[Level.INFO.name]: 'log_info',
[Level.WARN.name]: 'log_warn',
[Level.ERROR.name]: 'log_error',
}
}),
],
});
logger.info('How blissful it is, for one who has nothing', { env: process.env.NODE_ENV });