NAME
Log::ger::Output::Composite - Composite output
VERSION
version 0.017
SYNOPSIS
use Log::ger::Output Composite => (
outputs => {
# single screen output
Screen => {
conf => { use_color=>1 }, # output config, optional.
level => 'info', # set per-output level. optional.
layout => [Pattern => {format=>'%d (%F:%L)> %m'}], # add per-output layout, optional.
},
# multiple file outputs
File => [
{
conf => { path=>'/var/log/myapp.log' },
level => 'warn',
category_level => { # set per-category, per-output level. optional.
# don't log MyApp::Security messages to this file
'MyApp::Security' => 'off',
...
},
},
{
conf => { path => '/var/log/myapp-security.log' },
level => 'warn',
category_level => {
# only MyApp::Security messages go to this file
'MyApp::Security' => 'warn',
...
},
},
],
},
category_level => { # set per-category level. optional.
'MyApp::SubModule1' => 'info',
'MyApp::SubModule2' => 'debug',
...
},
);
use Log::ger;
log_warn "blah...";
DESCRIPTION
This is a Log::ger output that can multiplex output to several outputs
and do filtering on the basis of per-category level, per-output level,
or per-output per-category level. It can also apply per-output layout.
CONFIGURATION
outputs => hash
Specify outputs. It's a hash with output name as keys and output
specification as values.
Output name is the name of output module without the
"Log::ger::Output::" prefix, e.g. Screen or File.
Output specification is either a hashref or arrayref of hashrefs to
specify multiple outputs per type (e.g. if you want to output to two
File's). Known hashref keys:
* conf => hashref
Specify output configuration. Optional. See each output
documentation for the list of available configuration parameters.
* level => str|int|[min, max]
Specify per-output level. Optional. If specified, logging will be
done at this level instead of the general level. For example, if
this is set to "debug" then debug messages and higher will be sent
to output even though the general level is "warn". Vice versa, if
this is set to "error" then even though the general level is "warn",
warning messages won't be sent to this output; only "error" messages
and higher will be sent.
You can specify a single level (e.g. 1 or "trace") or a two-element
array to specify minimum and maximum level (e.g. "<["trace",
"info"]">). If you accidentally mix up minimum and maximum, this
module will helpfully fix it for you.
* category_level => hash
Specify per-output per-category level. Optional. Hash key is
category name, value is level (which can be a string/numeric level
or a two-element array containing minimum and maximum level).
* layout => [Name => {conf1=>..., conf2=>..., ...}]
Specify per-output layout. Optional. Value is two-element array
containing layout name (without the "Log::ger::Layout::" prefix,
e.g. Pattern) and configuration hash. See each layout module
documentation for the list of available configuration parameters.
Note that if you also use a layout module outside of Composite
configuration, e.g.:
use Log::ger::Output Composite => (...);
use Log::ger::Layout Pattern => (format => '...');
then both layouts will be applied, the general layout will be
applied before the per-output layout.
category_level => hash
Specify per-category level. Optional. Hash key is category name, value
is level (which can be a string/numeric level or a two-element array
containing minimum and maximum level).
FAQS
Why doesn't re-setting log level using Log::ger::Util::set_level() work?
This output plugin sets its own levels and logs using a multilevel
routine (which gets called for all levels). Re-setting log level
dynamically via Log::ger::Util's "set_level" will not work as intended,
which is fortunate or unfortunate depending on your need.
If you want to override all levels settings with a single value, you can
use "Log::ger::Output::Composite::set_level", for example:
Log::ger::Util::set_level('trace'); # also set this too
Log::ger::Output::Composite::set_level('trace');
This sets an internal level setting which is respected and has the
highest precedence so all levels settings will use this instead. If
previously you have:
Log::ger::Output->set(Composite => {
default_level => 'error',
outputs => {
File => {path=>'/foo', level=>'debug'},
Screen => {level=>'info', category_level=>{MyApp=>'warn'}},
},
category_level => {
'MyApp::SubModule1' => 'debug',
},
});
then after the "Log::ger::Output::Composite::set_level('trace')", all
the above per-category and per-output levels will be set to "trace".
ENVIRONMENT
LOG_LOG_GER_OUTPUT_COMPOSITE_CODE
Bool. If set to true will print the generated logger source code to
stderr.
LOG_GER_OUTPUT_COMPOSITE_DEBUG
Bool. If set to true, will print some debugging messages to stderr.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2020, 2019, 2017 by perlancar@cpan.org.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.