winston-console-transport
v1.1.9
Published
provides a console transport for winston logger
Downloads
1,986
Maintainers
Readme
winston-console-transport
provides a console transport for winston logger.
🇺🇦 Help Ukraine
I woke up on my 26th birthday at 5 am from the blows of russian missiles. They attacked the city of Kyiv, where I live, as well as the cities in which my family and friends live. Now my country is a war zone.
We fight for democratic values, for freedom, for our future! I am stopping any support of my packages by the time until all russians leave my country on trucks or in boxes.
💛💙 Help Ukraine! We need your support! There are dozen ways to help us, just do it!
Table of Contents
Motivation
Winston has its own console transport. But if you'll try to use it in the browser, you will find out its inconvenience. You can't access native browser console levels (ex. verbose), so it is impossible to filter those levels using the browser console.
Requirements
To use library you need to have node and npm installed in your machine:
- node
>=10
- npm
>=6
Package is continuously tested on darwin, linux and win32 platforms. All active and maintenance LTS node releases are supported.
Installation
To install the library, run the following command:
npm i --save winston-console-transport
Usage
To use new transport, just add it to the transports option of your winston logger.
import { createLogger } from 'winston';
import Console from 'winston-console-transport';
const logger = createLogger({
level : 'debug',
transports : [ new Console() ]
});
logger.verbose('VERBOSE TEXT');
Attributes
Some attributes can be passed to new Console({})
- name - name of a transport (default 'console')
- eol - end of line (default os.EOL)
- logger - custom logger (default console)
- levels - custom level handlers (default {})
- fallBackLogger - default level handler (default console.log)
- sanitizer - input data sanitizer and transformator (default data => data)
- maxListeners - max number of listeners (default 30)
Contribute
Make the changes to the code and tests. Then commit to your branch. Be sure to follow the commit message conventions. Read Contributing Guidelines for details.