NAME
Log::Any::App - An easy way to use Log::Any in applications
VERSION
version 0.43
SYNOPSIS
Most of the time you only need to do this:
# in your script.pl
use Log::Any::App '$log';
$log->warn("blah ...");
if ($log->is_debug) { ... }
# or, in command line
% perl -MLog::Any::App -MModuleThatUsesLogAny -e'...'
Here's the default logging that Log::Any::App sets up for you:
Condition screen file syslog dir
--------------------------------+-------+------------------+-------------+---
-e (one-liners) y - - -
Scripts running as normal user y ~/NAME.log - -
Scripts running as root y /var/log/NAME.log - -
Daemons - y y -
You can customize level from outside the script, using environment
variables or command-line options (won't interfere with command-line
processing modules like Getopt::Long etc):
% DEBUG=1 script.pl
% LOG_LEVEL=trace script.pl
% script.pl --verbose
And to customize other stuffs:
use Log::Any::App '$log',
-syslog => 1, # turn on syslog logging explicitly
-screen => 0, # turn off screen logging explicitly
-file => {path=>'/foo/bar', max_size=>'10M', histories=>10};
# customize file logging
For more customization like categories, per-category level, per-output
level, multiple outputs, string patterns, etc see "USING AND EXAMPLES"
and init().
DESCRIPTION
IMPORTANT: Please read "ROAD TO 1.0" on some incompatibilities in the
near future, before 1.0 is released.
Log::Any::App is a convenient combo for Log::Any and Log::Log4perl
(although alternative backends beside Log4perl might be considered in
the future). To use Log::Any::App you need to be sold on the idea of
Log::Any first, so please do a read up on that first.
The goal of Log::Any::App is to provide developers an easy and concise
way to add logging to their **applications**. That is, instead of
modules; modules remain using Log::Any to produce logs. Applications can
upgrade to full Log4perl later when necessary, although in my
experience, they usually don't.
With Log::Any::App, you can replace this code in your application:
use Log::Any '$log';
use Log::Any::Adapter;
use Log::Log4perl;
my $log4perl_config = '
some
long
multiline
config...';
Log::Log4perl->init(\$log4perl_config);
Log::Any::Adapter->set('Log4perl');
with just this:
use Log::Any::App '$log'; # plus some other options when necessary
Most of the time you don't need to configure anything as Log::Any::App
will construct the most appropriate default Log4perl configuration for
your application.
USING AND EXAMPLES
To use Log::Any::App, just do:
use Log::Any::App '$log';
or from the command line:
% perl -MLog::Any::App -MModuleThatUsesLogAny -e ...
This will send logs to screen as well as file (unless -e scripts, which
only log to screen). Default log file is ~/$SCRIPT_NAME.log, or
/var/log/$SCRIPT_NAME.log if script is running as root. Default level is
'warn'.
The 'use Log::Any::App' statement can be issued before or after the
modules that use Log::Any, it doesn't matter. Logging will be
initialized in the INIT phase by Log::Any::App.
You are not required to import '$log', and don't need to if you do not
produce logs in your application (only in the modules).
Changing logging level
Since one of the most commonly tweaked logging setting is level (for
example: increasing level when debugging problems), Log::Any::App
provides several mechanisms to change log level, either from the script
or from outside the script, for your convenience. Below are the
mechanisms, ordered from highest priority:
* import argument (inside the script)
* command line arguments (outside the script)
* environment variables (outside the script)
* level flag files (outside the script)
* variables in 'main' package (inside the script)
These mechanisms are explained in more details in the documentation for
the init() function. But below are some examples.
To change level from inside the script:
use Log::Any::App '$log', -level => 'debug';
This is useful if you want a fixed level that cannot be overriden by
other mechanisms (since setting level using import argument has the
highest priority). But oftentimes what you want is changing level
without modifying the script itself. Thereby, just write:
use Log::Any::App '$log';
and then you can use environment variables to change level:
TRACE=1 script.pl; # setting level to trace
DEBUG=1 script.pl; # setting level to debug
VERBOSE=1 script.pl; # setting level to info
QUIET=1 script.pl; # setting level to error
LOG_LEVEL=trace script.pl; # setting a specific log level
or command-line options:
script.pl --trace
script.pl --debug
script.pl --verbose
script.pl --quiet
script.pl --log_level=debug; # '--log-level debug' will also do
Regarding command-line options: Log::Any::App won't consume the
command-line options from @ARGV and thus won't interfere with
command-line processing modules like Getopt::Long or App::Options. If
you use a command-line processing module and plan to use command-line
options to set level, you might want to define these level options, or
your command-line processing module will complain about unknown options.
Changing default level
The default log level is 'warn'. To change the default level, you can
use 'main' package variables (since they have the lowest priority):
use Log::Any::App '$log';
BEGIN { our $Log_Level = 'info' } # be more verbose by default
Then you will still be able to use level flag files or environment
variables or command-line options to override this setting.
Changing per-output level
Logging level can also be specified on a per-output level. For example,
if you want your script to be chatty on the screen but still logs to
file at the default 'warn' level:
SCREEN_VERBOSE=1 script.pl
SCREEN_DEBUG=1 script.pl
SCREEN_TRACE=1 script.pl
SCREEN_LOG_LEVEL=info script.pl
script.pl --screen_verbose
script.pl --screen-debug
script.pl --screen-trace=1
script.pl --screen-log-level=info
Similarly, to set only file level, use FILE_VERBOSE, FILE_LOG_LEVEL,
--file-trace, and so on.
Setting default per-output level
As with setting default level, you can also set default level on a
per-output basis:
use Log::Any::App '$log';
BEGIN {
our $Screen_Log_Level = 'off';
our $File_Quiet = 1; # setting file level to 'error'
# and so on
}
If a per-output level is not specifed, it will default to the general
log level.
Enabling/disabling output
To disable a certain output, you can do this:
use Log::Any::App '$log', -file => 0;
or:
use Log::Any::App '$log', -screen => {level=>'off'};
and this won't allow the output to be reenabled from outside the script.
However if you do this:
use Log::Any::App;
BEGIN { our $Screen_Log_Level = 'off' }
then by default screen logging is turned off but you will be able to
override the screen log level using level flag files or environment
variables or command-line options (SCREEN_DEBUG, --screen-verbose, and
so on).
Changing log level of cron scripts
Environment variables and command-line options allow changing log level
without modifying the script. But for scripts specified in crontab, they
still require changing crontab entries, e.g.:
# turn on debugging
*/5 * * * * DEBUG=1 foo
# be silent
*/5 * * * * bar --quiet
Another mechanism, level flag file, is useful in this case. By doing:
$ echo debug > ~/foo.log_level
# touch /etc/bar.QUIET
you can also change log levels without modifying your crontab.
Changing log file name/location
By default Log::Any::App will log to file to ~/$NAME.log (or
/var/log/$NAME.log if script is running as root), where $NAME is taken
from the basename of $0. But this can be changed using:
use Log::Any::App '$log', -name => 'myprog';
Or, using custom path:
use Log::Any::App '$log', -file => '/path/to/file';
Changing other output parameters
Each output argument can accept a hashref to specify various options.
For example:
use Log::Any::App '$log',
-screen => {color=>0}, # never use color
-file => {path=>'/var/log/foo',
max_size=>'10M',
histories=>10,
},
For all the available options of each output, see the init() function.
Logging to syslog
Logging to syslog is enabled by default if your script looks like or
declare that it is a daemon, e.g.:
use Net::Daemon; # this indicate your program is a daemon
use Log::Any::App; # syslog logging will be turned on by default
use Log::Any::App -daemon => 1; # script declares that it is a daemon
# idem
package main;
our $IS_DAEMON = 1;
But if you are certain you don't want syslog logging:
use Log::Any::App -syslog => 0;
Logging to directory
This is done using Log::Dispatch::Dir where each log message is logged
to a different file in a specified directory. By default logging to dir
is not turned on, to turn it on:
use Log::Any::App '$log', -dir => 1;
For all the available options of directory output, see the init()
function.
Multiple outputs
Each output argument can accept an arrayref to specify more than one
output. For example below is a code to log to three files:
use Log::Any::App '$log',
-file => [1, # default, to ~/$NAME.log or /var/log/$NAME.log
"/var/log/log1",
{path=>"/var/log/debug_foo", category=>'Foo', level=>'debug'}];
Changing level of certain module(s)
Suppose you want to shut up logs from modules Foo, Bar::Baz, and Qux
(and their submodules as well, e.g. Foo::Alpha, Bar::Baz::Beta::Gamma)
because they are too noisy:
use Log::Any::App '$log',
-category_level => { Foo => 'off', 'Bar::Baz' => 'off', Qux => 'off' };
or (same thing):
use Log::Any::App '$log',
-category_alias => { -noisy => [qw/Foo Bar::Baz Qux/] },
-category_level => { -noisy => 'off' };
You can even specify this on a per-output basis. Suppose you only want
to shut up the noisy modules on the screen, but not on the file:
use Log::Any::App '$log',
-category_alias => { -noisy => [qw/Foo Bar::Baz Qux/] },
-screen => { category_level => { -noisy => 'off' } };
Or perhaps, you want to shut up the noisy modules everywhere, except on
the screen:
use Log::Any::App '$log',
-category_alias => { -noisy => [qw/Foo Bar::Baz Qux/] },
-category_level => { -noisy => 'off' },
-syslog => 1, # uses general -category_level
-file => "/var/log/foo", # uses general -category_level
-screen => { category_level => {} }; # overrides general -category_level
You can also do this from the outside the script using environment
variable, which is more flexible. Encode data structure using JSON:
% LOG_SHOW_CATEGORY=1 \
LOG_CATEGORY_ALIAS='{"-noisy":["Foo","Bar::Baz","Quz"]}' \
LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL='{"-noisy":"off"}' script.pl ...
Only displaying log from certain module(s)
Use a combination of LOG_LEVEL and LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL. For example:
% LOG_LEVEL=off LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL='{"Foo.Bar":"trace", "Baz":"info"}' \
script.pl ...
Displaying category name
% LOG_SHOW_CATEGORY=1 script.pl ...
Now instead of:
[25] Starting baz ritual ...
now log messages will be prefixed with category:
[cat Foo.Bar][25] Starting baz ritual ...
Displaying location name
% LOG_SHOW_LOCATION=1 script.pl ...
Now log messages will be prefixed with location (function/file/line
number) information:
[loc Foo::Bar lib/Foo/Bar.pm (12)][25] Starting baz ritual ...
Preventing logging level to be changed from outside the script
Sometimes, for security/audit reasons, you don't want to allow script
caller to change logging level. As explained previously, you can use the
'level' import argument (the highest priority of level-setting):
use Log::Any::App '$log', -level => 'debug'; # always use debug level
TODO: Allow something like 'debug+' to allow other mechanisms to
*increase* the level but not decrease it. Or 'debug-' to allow other
mechanisms to decrease level but not increase it. And finally
'debug,trace' to specify allowable levels (is this necessary?)
Debugging
To see the Log4perl configuration that is generated by Log::Any::App and
how it came to be, set environment LOGANYAPP_DEBUG to true.
FUNCTIONS
None is exported.
init(\@args)
This is the actual function that implements the setup and configuration
of logging. You normally need not call this function explicitly (but see
below), it will be called once in an INIT block. In fact, when you do:
use Log::Any::App 'a', 'b', 'c';
it is actually passed as:
init(['a', 'b', 'c']);
You will need to call init() manually if you require Log::Any::App at
runtime, in which case it is too late to run INIT block. If you want to
run Log::Any::App in runtime phase, do this:
require Log::Any::App;
Log::Any::App::init(['a', 'b', 'c']);
Arguments to init can be one or more of:
-log => BOOL
Whether to do log at all. Default is from LOG environment variable,
or 1. This option is only to allow users to disable Log::Any::App
(thus speeding up startup by avoiding loading Log4perl, etc) by
passing LOG=1 environment when running programs. However, if you
explicitly set this option to 1, Log::Any::App cannot be disabled
this way.
-init => BOOL
Whether to call Log::Log4perl->init() after setting up the Log4perl
configuration. Default is true. You can set this to false, and you
can initialize Log4perl yourself (but then there's not much point in
using this module, right?)
-name => STRING
Change the program name. Default is taken from $0.
-level_flag_paths => ARRAY OF STRING
Edit level flag file locations. The default is [$homedir, "/etc"].
-daemon => BOOL
Declare that script is a daemon. Default is no. Aside from this, to
declare that your script is a daemon you can also set
$main::IS_DAEMON to true.
-category_alias => {ALIAS=>CATEGORY, ...}
Create category aliases so the ALIAS can be used in place of real
categories in each output's category specification. For example,
instead of doing this:
init(
-file => [category=>[qw/Foo Bar Baz/], ...],
-screen => [category=>[qw/Foo Bar Baz/]],
);
you can do this instead:
init(
-category_alias => {-fbb => [qw/Foo Bar Baz/]},
-file => [category=>'-fbb', ...],
-screen => [category=>'-fbb', ...],
);
You can also specify this from the environment variable
LOG_CATEGORY_ALIAS using JSON encoding, e.g.
LOG_CATEGORY_ALIAS='{"-fbb":["Foo","Bar","Baz"]}'
-category_level => {CATEGORY=>LEVEL, ...}
Specify per-category level. Categories not mentioned on this will
use the general level (-level). This can be used to increase or
decrease logging on certain categories/modules.
You can also specify this from the environment variable
LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL using JSON encoding, e.g.
LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL='{"-fbb":"off"}'
-level => 'trace'|'debug'|'info'|'warn'|'error'|'fatal'|'off'
Specify log level for all outputs. Each output can override this
value. The default log level is determined as follow:
Search in command-line options. If App::Options is present, these
keys are checked in %App::options: log_level, trace (if true then
level is "trace"), debug (if true then level is "debug"), verbose
(if true then level is "info"), quiet (if true then level is
"error").
Otherwise, it will try to scrape @ARGV for the presence of
--log-level, --trace, --debug, --verbose, or --quiet (this usually
works because Log::Any::App does this in the INIT phase, before you
call Getopt::Long's GetOptions() or the like).
Search in environment variables. Otherwise, it will look for
environment variables: LOG_LEVEL, QUIET. VERBOSE, DEBUG, TRACE.
Search in level flag files. Otherwise, it will look for existence of
files with one of these names "$NAME.QUIET", "$NAME.VERBOSE",
"$NAME.TRACE", "$NAME.DEBUG", or content of "$NAME.log_level" in ~
or /etc.
Search in main package variables. Otherwise, it will try to search
for package variables in the "main" namespace with names like
$Log_Level or $LOG_LEVEL or $log_level, $Quiet or $QUIET or $quiet,
$Verbose or $VERBOSE or $verbose, $Trace or $TRACE or $trace, $Debug
or $DEBUG or $debug.
If everything fails, it defaults to 'warn'.
-file => 0 | 1|yes|true | PATH | {opts} | [{opts}, ...]
Specify output to one or more files, using
Log::Dispatch::FileRotate.
If the argument is a false boolean value, file logging will be
turned off. If argument is a true value that matches
/^(1|yes|true)$/i, file logging will be turned on with default path,
etc. If the argument is another scalar value then it is assumed to
be a path. If the argument is a hashref, then the keys of the
hashref must be one of: "level", "path", "max_size" (maximum size
before rotating, in bytes, 0 means unlimited or never rotate),
"histories" (number of old files to keep, excluding the current
file), "date_pattern" (will be passed to DatePattern argument in
FileRotate's constructor), "tz" (will be passed to TZ argument in
FileRotate's constructor), "category" (a string of ref to array of
strings), "category_level" (a hashref, similar to -category_level),
"pattern_style" (see "PATTERN STYLES"), "pattern" (Log4perl
pattern).
If the argument is an arrayref, it is assumed to be specifying
multiple files, with each element of the array as a hashref.
How Log::Any::App determines defaults for file logging:
If program is a one-liner script specified using "perl -e", the
default is no file logging. Otherwise file logging is turned on.
If the program runs as root, the default path is
"/var/log/$NAME.log", where $NAME is taken from $0 (or "-name").
Otherwise the default path is ~/$NAME.log. Intermediate directories
will be made with File::Path.
If specified "path" ends with a slash (e.g. "/my/log/"), it is
assumed to be a directory and the final file path is directory
appended with $NAME.log.
Default rotating behaviour is no rotate (max_size = 0).
Default level for file is the same as the global level set by
-level. But App::options, command line, environment, level flag
file, and package variables in main are also searched first (for
FILE_LOG_LEVEL, FILE_TRACE, FILE_DEBUG, FILE_VERBOSE, FILE_QUIET,
and the similars).
You can also specify category level from environment
FILE_LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL.
-dir => 0 | 1|yes|true | PATH | {opts} | [{opts}, ...]
Log messages using Log::Dispatch::Dir. Each message is logged into
separate files in the directory. Useful for dumping content (e.g.
HTML, network dumps, or temporary results).
If the argument is a false boolean value, dir logging will be turned
off. If argument is a true value that matches /^(1|yes|true)$/i, dir
logging will be turned on with defaults path, etc. If the argument
is another scalar value then it is assumed to be a directory path.
If the argument is a hashref, then the keys of the hashref must be
one of: "level", "path", "max_size" (maximum total size of files
before deleting older files, in bytes, 0 means unlimited), "max_age"
(maximum age of files to keep, in seconds, undef means unlimited).
"histories" (number of old files to keep, excluding the current
file), "category", "category_level" (a hashref, similar to
-category_level), "pattern_style" (see "PATTERN STYLES"), "pattern"
(Log4perl pattern), "filename_pattern" (pattern of file name).
If the argument is an arrayref, it is assumed to be specifying
multiple directories, with each element of the array as a hashref.
How Log::Any::App determines defaults for dir logging:
Directory logging is by default turned off. You have to explicitly
turn it on.
If the program runs as root, the default path is "/var/log/$NAME/",
where $NAME is taken from $0. Otherwise the default path is
~/log/$NAME/. Intermediate directories will be created with
File::Path. Program name can be changed using "-name".
Default rotating parameters are: histories=1000, max_size=0,
max_age=undef.
Default level for dir logging is the same as the global level set by
-level. But App::options, command line, environment, level flag
file, and package variables in main are also searched first (for
DIR_LOG_LEVEL, DIR_TRACE, DIR_DEBUG, DIR_VERBOSE, DIR_QUIET, and the
similars).
You can also specify category level from environment
DIR_LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL.
-screen => 0 | 1|yes|true | {opts}
Log messages using Log::Log4perl::Appender::ScreenColoredLevels.
If the argument is a false boolean value, screen logging will be
turned off. If argument is a true value that matches
/^(1|yes|true)$/i, screen logging will be turned on with default
settings. If the argument is a hashref, then the keys of the hashref
must be one of: "color" (default is true, set to 0 to turn off
color), "stderr" (default is true, set to 0 to log to stdout
instead), "level", "category", "category_level" (a hashref, similar
to -category_level), "pattern_style" (see "PATTERN STYLE"),
"pattern" (Log4perl string pattern).
How Log::Any::App determines defaults for screen logging:
Screen logging is turned on by default.
Default level for screen logging is the same as the global level set
by -level. But App::options, command line, environment, level flag
file, and package variables in main are also searched first (for
SCREEN_LOG_LEVEL, SCREEN_TRACE, SCREEN_DEBUG, SCREEN_VERBOSE,
SCREEN_QUIET, and the similars).
Color can also be turned on/off using environment variable COLOR (if
color argument is not set).
You can also specify category level from environment
SCREEN_LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL.
-syslog => 0 | 1|yes|true | {opts}
Log messages using Log::Dispatch::Syslog.
If the argument is a false boolean value, syslog logging will be
turned off. If argument is a true value that matches
/^(1|yes|true)$/i, syslog logging will be turned on with default
level, ident, etc. If the argument is a hashref, then the keys of
the hashref must be one of: "level", "ident", "facility",
"category", "category_level" (a hashref, similar to
-category_level), "pattern_style" (see "PATTERN STYLES"), "pattern"
(Log4perl pattern).
How Log::Any::App determines defaults for syslog logging:
If a program is a daemon (determined by detecting modules like
Net::Server or Proc::PID::File, or by checking if -daemon or
$main::IS_DAEMON is true) then syslog logging is turned on by
default and facility is set to "daemon", otherwise the default is
off.
Ident is program's name by default ($0, or "-name").
Default level for syslog logging is the same as the global level set
by -level. But App::options, command line, environment, level flag
file, and package variables in main are also searched first (for
SYSLOG_LOG_LEVEL, SYSLOG_TRACE, SYSLOG_DEBUG, SYSLOG_VERBOSE,
SYSLOG_QUIET, and the similars).
You can also specify category level from environment
SYSLOG_LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL.
-dump => BOOL
If set to true then Log::Any::App will dump the generated Log4perl
config. Useful for debugging the logging.
PATTERN STYLES
Log::Any::App provides some styles for Log4perl patterns. You can
specify "pattern_style" instead of directly specifying "pattern".
example:
use Log::Any::App -screen => {pattern_style=>"script_long"};
Name Description Example output
---- ----------- --------------
plain The message, the whole message, Message
and nothing but the message.
Used by dir logging.
Equivalent to pattern: '%m'
plain_nl Message plus newline. The default Message
for screen without
LOG_ELAPSED_TIME_IN_SCREEN.
Equivalent to pattern: '%m%n'
script_short For scripts that run for a short [234] Message
time (a few seconds). Shows just
the number of milliseconds. This
is the default for screen under
LOG_ELAPSED_TIME_IN_SCREEN.
Equivalent to pattern:
'[%r] %m%n'
script_long Scripts that will run for a [2010-04-22 18:01:02] Message
while (more than a few seconds).
Shows date/time.
Equivalent to pattern:
'[%d] %m%n'
daemon For typical daemons. Shows PID [pid 1234] [2010-04-22 18:01:02] Message
and date/time. This is the
default for file logging.
Equivalent to pattern:
'[pid %P] [%d] %m%n'
syslog Style suitable for syslog [pid 1234] Message
logging.
Equivalent to pattern:
'[pid %p] %m'
For each of the above there are also "cat_XXX" (e.g. "cat_script_long")
which are the same as XXX but with "[cat %c]" in front of the pattern.
It is used mainly to show categories and then filter by categories. You
can turn picking default pattern style with category using environment
variable LOG_SHOW_CATEGORY.
And for each of the above there are also "loc_XXX" (e.g. "loc_syslog")
which are the same as XXX but with "[loc %l]" in front of the pattern.
It is used to show calling location (file, function/method, and line
number). You can turn picking default pattern style with location prefix
using environment variable LOG_SHOW_LOCATION.
If you have a favorite pattern style, please do share them.
ENVIRONMENT
Below is summary of environment variables used.
Turning on/off logging:
LOG (bool)
For setting general level:
TRACE (bool) setting general level to trace
DEBUG (bool) setting general level to debug
VERBOSE (bool) setting general level to info
QUIET (bool) setting general level to error (turn off warnings)
LOG_LEVEL (str)
Setting per-output level:
FILE_TRACE, FILE_DEBUG, FILE_VERBOSE, FILE_QUIET, FILE_LOG_LEVEL
SCREEN_TRACE and so on
DIR_TRACE and so on
SYSLOG_TRACE and so on
Setting per-category level:
LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL (hash, json)
LOG_CATEGORY_ALIAS (hash, json)
Setting per-output, per-category level:
FILE_LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL
SCREEN_LOG_CATEGORY_LEVEL
and so on
Controlling extra fields to log:
LOG_SHOW_LOCATION
LOG_SHOW_CATEGORY
Force-enable or disable color:
COLOR (bool)
Turn on Log::Any::App's debugging:
LOGANYAPP_DEBUG (bool)
Turn on showing elapsed time in screen:
LOG_ELAPSED_TIME_IN_SCREEN (bool)
FAQ
Why?
I initially wrote Log::Any::App because I'm sick of having to parse
command-line options to set log level like --verbose, --log-level=debug
for every script. Also, before using Log::Any I previously used Log4perl
directly and modules which produce logs using Log4perl cannot be
directly use'd in one-liners without Log4perl complaining about
uninitialized configuration or some such. Thus, I like Log::Any's
default null adapter and want to settle using Log::Any for any kind of
logging. Log::Any::App makes it easy to output Log::Any logs in your
scripts and even one-liners.
What's the benefit of using Log::Any::App?
You get all the benefits of Log::Any, as what Log::Any::App does is just
wrap Log::Any and Log4perl with some nice defaults. It provides you with
an easy way to consume Log::Any logs and customize level/some other
options via various ways.
And what's the benefit of using Log::Any?
This is better described in the Log::Any documentation itself, but in
short: Log::Any frees your module users to use whatever logging
framework they want. It increases the reusability of your modules.
Do I need Log::Any::App if I am writing modules?
No, if you write modules just use Log::Any.
Why use Log4perl?
Log::Any::App uses the Log4perl adapter to display the logs because it
is mature, flexible, featureful. The other alternative adapter is
Log::Dispatch, but you can use Log::Dispatch::* output modules in
Log4perl and (currently) not vice versa.
Other adapters might be considered in the future, for now I'm fairly
satisfied with Log4perl. It does have a slightly heavy startup cost for
my taste, but it is still bearable.
Are you coupling adapter with Log::Any (thus defeating Log::Any's purpose)?
No, producing logs are still done with Log::Any as usual and not tied to
Log4perl in any way. Your modules, as explained above, only 'use
Log::Any' and do not depend on Log::Any::App at all.
Should portions of your application code get refactored into modules
later, you don't need to change the logging part. And if your
application becomes more complex and Log::Any::App doesn't suffice your
custom logging needs anymore, you can just replace 'use Log::Any::App'
line with something more adequate.
How do I create extra logger objects?
The usual way as with Log::Any:
my $other_log = Log::Any->get_logger(category => $category);
My needs are not met by the simple configuration system of Log::Any::App!
You can use the Log4perl adapter directly and write your own Log4perl
configuration (or even other adapters). Log::Any::App is meant for quick
and simple logging output needs anyway (but do tell me if your logging
output needs are reasonably simple and should be supported by
Log::Any::App).
BUGS/TODOS
Need to provide appropriate defaults for Windows/other OS.
ROAD TO 1.0
Here are some planned changes/development before 1.0 is reached. There
might be some incompatibilities, please read this section carefully.
* Everything is configurable via environment/command-line/option file
As I *love* specifying log options from environment, I will make
*every* init() options configurable from outside the script
(environment/command-line/control file). Of course, init() arguments
still take precedence for authors that do not want some/all options
to be overriden from outside.
* Reorganization of command-line/environment names
Aside from the handy and short TRACE (--trace), DEBUG, VERBOSE,
QUIET, all the other environment names will be put under LOG_
prefix. This means FILE_LOG_LEVEL will be changed to LOG_FILE_LEVEL,
and so on. SCREEN_VERBOSE will be changed to VERBOSE_SCREEN.
This is meant to reduce "pollution" of the environment variables
namespace.
Log option file (option file for short, previously "flag file") will
be searched in <PROG>.log_options. Its content is in JSON and will
become init() arguments. For example:
{"file": 1, "screen":{"level":"trace"}}
or more akin to init() (both will be supported):
["-file": 1, "-screen":{"level":"trace"}]
* Possible reorganization of package variable names
To be more strict and reduce confusion, case variation might not be
searched.
* Pluggable backend
This is actually the main motivator to reach 1.0 and all these
changes. Backends will be put in Log::Any::App::Backend::Log4perl,
and so on.
* Pluggable output
Probably split to Log::Any::App::Output::file, and so on. Each
output needs its backend support.
* App::Options support will probably be dropped
I no longer use App::Options these days, and I don't know of any
Log::Any::App user who does.
* Probably some hooks to allow for more flexibility.
For example, if user wants to parse or detect levels/log file
paths/etc from some custom logic.
SEE ALSO
Log::Any and Log::Log4perl
Some alternative logging modules: Log::Dispatchouli (based on
Log::Dispatch), Log::Fast, Log::Log4perl::Tiny. Really, there are 7,451
of them (roughly one third of CPAN) at the time of this writing.
AUTHOR
Steven Haryanto <stevenharyanto@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Steven Haryanto.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.