rng-logger
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13.0.1 • Public • Published

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RNgLogger

The Reactive Angular Logging framework you wanted!

RNgLogger is a logging API that abstract the log stream from the actual log handler, allowing supporting multiple log targets at the same time within your Angular Application.

Easily switch between platforms (browser, server) with different logging handlers using the same API.

This library does not enforce to adhere to any rigid system, you're free to react and interact with logs your way.

Straightforward replace for console usage!

From console.info("message") To LoggerFactory().info("message")

Features

  • Simple logger interface as a reduced set of window.console
  • Opt-in replacement for your un-wanted console.log statements
  • Configurable level filtering and Log retention
  • RX.JS based log stream handler allow multiple targets at the same time (console, FileSystem, Http Endpoints etc...)
  • Angular Platform Logger allow to use the logger interface by Injection and via LoggerFactory() as most of the Logging frameworks
  • No operation Logger (NOP) is provided by default when the logger it's not provided or cannot be resolved. (can be configured to throw error)
  • Logger can be used anywhere, libraries included, and when the application does not register it's just a NOP implementation
  • Typescript decorators for contextual logging hooks
  • Straightforward testing
  • A built-in window.console handler for Platform browser apps!

Getting started

RNgLogger is an Angular platform tool, to use it you must register the required providers at platform level.

NPM install:

npm i rng-logger

Register the platform Logger

In your Angular application entry (usually main.ts file), add the RNgPlatformLogger factory call.

import {LogLevel, PLATFORM_CONSOLE_LOGGER, RNgPlatformLogger} from "rng-logger";

if (environment.production) {
  enableProdMode();
}

platformBrowserDynamic(
    RNgPlatformLogger(), // platForm
).bootstrapModule(AppModule)
  .catch(err => console.error(err));

RNgPlatformLogger is a factory that returns the providers required for the platform, and accept a configuration if needed.

To Change the default configuration, you can apply like this:

import {LogLevel, PLATFORM_CONSOLE_LOGGER, RNgPlatformLogger} from "rng-logger";

RNgPlatformLogger({
      level: environment.production ? LogLevel.ERROR : LogLevel.TRACE, // log level
      maxBuffer: 100, // max items to retain
      nonResolvedStrategy: "ERROR" // strategy when Logger is not resolved
})

Register a handler or create your own

A handler is an object that subscribe to the logger stream to produce an effect, for instance logging with the console.

To use the provided console logger (browser only), just add the provider to the platform:

import {LogLevel, PLATFORM_CONSOLE_LOGGER, RNgPlatformLogger} from "rng-logger";

platformBrowserDynamic([
    ...RNgPlatformLogger(),
    PLATFORM_CONSOLE_LOGGER // PLATORM CONSOLE LOGGER 
  ]
).bootstrapModule(AppModule)
  .catch(err => console.error(err));

PLATFORM_CONSOLE_LOGGER uses window.console to output the log stream.

You can supply multiple Handlers via PLATFORM_INITIALIZER (by registering at platform creation) or APP_INITIALIZER (in App modules). Also, creating an instance of the handler in the module instantiation is possible, not recommended tough.

An example function of a log handler is like this:

export function myHttpLogHandler(handler: LogStreamHandler, httpClient: HttpClient) {
  return () => {
    handler.last$()
      .pipe(switchMap(e => {
        return httpClient.post(`/api/log-service/${e.time.getTime()}`, {event: e.message, data: e.options})
      }))
      .subscribe(next => {})
  }
}

export const MY_HTTP_LOG_HANDLER: StaticProvider = {
  provide: APP_INITIALIZER,
  multi: true,
  useFactory: myHttpLogHandler,
  deps: [LogStreamHandler, HttpClient]
};

@NgModule({
  providers: [
    MY_HTTP_LOG_HANDLER
  ]
})
export class MyAppModule {}

Using the logger

RNgLogger can be used via injection or by using the LoggerFactory.

The factory is a quite common pattern if you come from SLF4J, Log4j and many others.

The factory can return the root logger (Platform) directly when used with no-args, or an injector logger by providing the injector.

Example of the Platform logger factory:

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./app.component.scss']
})
export class AppComponent implements OnInit{
  private readonly logger: Logger = LoggerFactory(); // get platform logger
  constructor() {}
  ngOnInit(): void {
    this.logger.info("App started");
  }
}

Example of injected logger:

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./app.component.scss']
})
export class AppComponent implements OnInit{
  constructor(private logger: Logger) {}
  ngOnInit(): void {
    this.logger.info("App started");
  }
}

Example of logger factory via Injector:

@Directive({
  selector: 'my-directive',
})
export class MyDirective implements OnInit{
  constructor(private viewRef: ViewContainerRef) {}
  ngOnInit(): void {
    LoggerFactory(this.viewRef.injector).warn("Injector factory")
  }
}

Using decorators

RNgLogger comes with handy decorators to allow your Components or Services methods to being logged when called.

The @Log decorator can be applied to class methods, and the log output takes care of including the originating class, method, arguments and custom message.

Example of using @Log in component methods

export class MyLoggedComponent implements OnInit{
  private toggle = false;
  constructor(){}

  @Log()
  ngOnInit(): void {}

  @Log({
    message: "Toggled!",
    level: LogLevel.INFO
  })
  toggle() {
    this.toggle = !this.toggle;
  }

  @Log({
    level: LogLevel.WARN
  })
  warning(message: MessageObject, scopes: Scope[]): void {}

}

These @Log decorated methods will emit logs messages in the format below for the appropriate level:

MyLoggedComponent::ngOnInit

MyLoggedComponent::toggle Toggled!

MyLoggedComponent::warning  {...}, [...] // values not represented here

For libraries creators

When creating a library only want to add RngLoggerModule as an import to use the Logger interface. It's then the consumer of your library to decide if, when and how to log your library. If you provide rng-logger as a logging dependency, make sure your readme contains the link to this documentation to allow the user to configure the logger.

Versions

rng-logger major version follows to the Angular major version, if there's no target for the release just open an issue.

Known Limitations

  • LoggerFactory cannot be referenced as a static member because the Angular Platform is not available and any call to getPlatform will return null.
    • use private readonly logger: Logger = LoggerFactory(); and not private static readonly logger: Logger = LoggerFactory();

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Install

npm i rng-logger

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Version

13.0.1

License

MIT

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