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Highly configurable logging utility

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Signales

Highly configurable logging utility

Header

History

Initially Signales was forked form signale and then later from signale in order to solve issue with logging levels. It was solved via #105 MR merged in main codebase of Signales repository.

Besides that Signales:

  • Was rewritten in Typescript entirely, so Signales typings are generated by the compiler, not written by hand. This gives 100% consistency between the types and the actual runtime.
  • New methods: child, clone.
  • New options: scopeFormatter.
  • stderr stream by default instead of stdout.

Incompatible behaviors in signales in compare of signale

You can't require directly signales instance in commonjs module. Code below DOESN'T work:

const signale = require("signales"); // not ok

signale.error(`doesn't work`);

Instead, use ES imports or named imports:

const { signales } = require("signales"); // ok
const { signale } = require("signale"); // same as above
import signales from "signales"; // ok
import { Signales } from "signales"; // ok
import { Signale } from "signales"; // same as above

Description

Hackable and configurable to the core, signales can be used for logging purposes, status reporting, as well as for handling the output rendering process of other node modules and applications.

Come over Twitter to share your thoughts on the project.

Highlights

  • 19 out-of-the-box loggers
  • Hackable to the core
  • Clean and beautiful output
  • Integrated timers
  • Custom pluggable loggers
  • TypeScript support
  • Interactive and regular modes
  • Secrets & sensitive information filtering
  • Filename, date and timestamp support
  • Scoped loggers and timers
  • Scaled logging levels mechanism
  • String interpolation support
  • Multiple configurable writable streams
  • Simple and minimal syntax
  • Globally configurable through package.json
  • Overridable configuration per file and logger

Contents

Install

Yarn

yarn add @dynamicabot/signales

NPM

npm install @dynamicabot/signales

Usage

Default Loggers

Import signales and start using any of the default loggers.

View all of the available loggers.
  • await
  • complete
  • error
  • alert
  • debug
  • fatal
  • fav
  • info
  • note
  • pause
  • pending
  • star
  • start
  • success
  • wait
  • warn
  • watch
  • log

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.success("Operation successful");
signale.debug("Hello", "from", "L59");
signale.pending("Write release notes for %s", "1.2.0");
signale.fatal(new Error("Unable to acquire lock"));
signale.watch("Recursively watching build directory...");
signale.complete({
  prefix: "[task]",
  message: "Fix issue #59",
  suffix: "(@klauscfhq)",
});
Default Loggers

Custom Loggers

To create a custom logger define an options object yielding a types field with the logger data and pass it as argument to a new signale instance.

const { Signale } = require("signales");

const options = {
  disabled: false,
  interactive: false,
  logLevel: "debug",
  scope: "custom",
  secrets: [],
  stream: process.stdout,
  types: {
    remind: {
      badge: "**",
      color: "yellow",
      label: "reminder",
      logLevel: "info",
    },
    santa: {
      badge: "🎅",
      color: "red",
      label: "santa",
      logLevel: "info",
    },
  },
};

const custom = new Signale(options);
custom.remind("Improve documentation.");
custom.santa("Hoho! You have an unused variable on L45.");
Custom Loggers

Here is an example where we override the default error and success loggers.

const { Signale } = require("signales");

const options = {
  types: {
    error: {
      badge: "!!",
      label: "fatal error",
    },
    success: {
      badge: "++",
      label: "huge success",
    },
  },
};

const signale = new Signale();
signale.error("Default Error Log");
signale.success("Default Success Log");

const custom = new Signale(options);
custom.error("Custom Error Log");
custom.success("Custom Success Log");
Default Loggers

The options object can hold any of the following attributes: disabled, interactive, logLevels, logLevel, secrets, stream, scope and types.

disabled
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: false

Disables the logging functionality of all loggers belonging to the created instance.

interactive
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: false

Switches all loggers belonging to the created instance into the interactive mode.

logLevel
  • Type: String
  • Default: 'debug'

Sets the general logging level of the created instance. Can be one of the following:

  • 'debug' - Displays all messages from all loggers.
  • 'info' - Displays messages from all loggers except debug level.
  • 'timer' - Displays messages only from the time, timeEnd, warn, error & fatal loggers.
  • 'warn' - Displays messages only from the warn, error & fatal loggers.
  • 'error' - Displays messages only from the error & fatal loggers.
logLevels
  • Type: Object

Allows you to add or override log levels.

For example, a value of { silly: -1 } will add a level of silly, which will have even lower priority than debug.

Default log levels are:

{
  debug: 0,
  info: 1,
  timer: 2,
  warn: 3,
  error: 4,
}
secrets
  • Type: (String|Number)[]
  • Default: []

An array holding secrets/sensitive-information to be removed from the body and metadata of to-be-logged messages and replaced with the default '[secure]' string.

stream
  • Type: stream.Writable|stream.Writable[]
  • Default: process.stderr

Destination to which the data is written, can be a single valid Writable stream or an array holding multiple valid Writable streams.

scope
  • Type: String|String[]

Name of the scope the logger is reporting from.

scopeFormatter
  • Type: (scopePath: string[]) => string

Formats array of scope to display representation.

types
  • Type:
Record<T, {
  badge: string,
  color: ChalkColor | '',
  label: string,
  logLevel?: LogLevel,
  stream?: WritableStream | WritableStream[],
}>

Holds the configuration of the custom and default loggers.

Additionally, the configuration object of each custom/default logger type, defined in the types option, can hold any of the following attributes: badge, label, color, logLevel & stream.

badge
  • Type: String

The icon corresponding to the logger.

label
  • Type: String

The label used to identify the type of the logger.

color
  • Type: String

The color of the label, can be any of the foreground colors supported by chalk.

logLevel
  • Type: String
  • Default: 'debug'

The log level corresponding to the logger. Messages originating from the logger are displayed only if the log level is greater or equal to the above described general logging level logLevel of the Signale instance.

stream
  • Type: stream.Writable|stream.Writable[]
  • Default: process.stderr

Destination to which the data is written, can be a single valid Writable stream or an array holding multiple valid Writable streams.

Scoped Loggers

To create a scoped logger from scratch, define the scope field inside the options object and pass it as argument to a new signale instance.

const { Signale } = require("signales");

const options = {
  scope: "global scope",
};

const global = new Signale(options);
global.success("Successful Operation");
Scope Vanilla

To create a scoped logger based on an already existing one, use the scope() function, which will return a new signale instance, inheriting all custom loggers, timers, secrets, streams, configuration, log level, interactive mode & disabled statuses from the initial one.

const { signale } = require("signales");

const global = signale.scope("global scope");
global.success("Hello from the global scope");

function foo() {
  const outer = global.scope("outer", "scope");
  outer.success("Hello from the outer scope");

  setTimeout(() => {
    const inner = outer.scope("inner", "scope");
    inner.success("Hello from the inner scope");
  }, 500);
}

foo();
Scope Existing

Child loggers

You can also create a new child logger which will have a parent scope and a passed one.

const { signale } = require('signales');

const systemLogger = signale.scope('system')
systemLogger.success('Hello from system logger')

> [system]    success   Hello from system logger

const childLogger = systemLogger.child('net')
childLogger.success('Hello from child logger')

> [system::net]    success   Hello from child logger

Interactive Loggers

To initialize an interactive logger, create a new signale instance with the interactive attribute set to true. While into the interactive mode, previously logged messages originating from an interactive logger, will be overridden only by new ones originating from the same or a different interactive logger. Note that regular messages originating from regular loggers are not overridden by the interactive ones.

const { Signale } = require("signales");

const interactive = new Signale({ interactive: true, scope: "interactive" });

interactive.await("[%d/4] - Process A", 1);

setTimeout(() => {
  interactive.success("[%d/4] - Process A", 2);
  setTimeout(() => {
    interactive.await("[%d/4] - Process B", 3);
    setTimeout(() => {
      interactive.error("[%d/4] - Process B", 4);
      setTimeout(() => {}, 1000);
    }, 1000);
  }, 1000);
}, 1000);
Interactive Mode

Writable Streams

By default, all signale instances log their messages to the process.stderr stream. This can be modified, to match your own preference, through the stream property, where you can define a single or multiple valid Writable streams, which will be used by all logger types to log your data. Additionally, it is possible to define one or more Writable streams exclusively for a specific logger type, thus write data independently from the rest logger types.

const { Signale } = require("signales");

const options = {
  stream: process.stderr, // All loggers will now write to `process.stderr`
  types: {
    error: {
      // Only `error` will write to both `process.stdout` & `process.stderr`
      stream: [process.stdout, process.stderr],
    },
  },
};

const signale = new Signale(options);
signale.success("Message will appear on `process.stderr`");
signale.error(
  "Message will appear on both `process.stdout` & `process.stderr`"
);
Writable Streams

Secrets Filtering

By utilizing the secrets option, secrets and other sensitive information can be filtered out from the body as well as the metadata, i.e. scope names etc, of to-be-logged messages. The option is part of the configuration object passed to a Signale instance on its initialization, and is of type Array<String|Number>. The array can hold multiple secrets, all of which are removed, if present, from the to-be-logged messages and are replaced with the default '[secure]' string. Additionally, when the unary signale.scope(name) function is used, the returned Signale instance inherits all the secrets belonging to its parent. The secrets checking process is performed in a case-sensitive manner. Also, the unary signale.addSecrets() and the nullary signale.clearSecrets() functions are available through the API for adding and clearing secrets respectively.

It is critical and highly recommended to not type directly secrets in your code, thus the following example serves only as a simple & easily reproducible usage demonstration.

const { Signale } = require("signales");

// In reality secrets could be securely fetched/decrypted through a dedicated API
const [USERNAME, TOKEN] = ["klaussinani", "token"];

const logger1 = new Signale({
  secrets: [USERNAME, TOKEN],
});

logger1.log("$ exporting USERNAME=%s", USERNAME);
logger1.log("$ exporting TOKEN=%s", TOKEN);

// `logger2` inherits all secrets from its parent `logger1`
const logger2 = logger1.scope("parent");

logger2.log("$ exporting USERNAME=%s", USERNAME);
logger2.log("$ exporting TOKEN=%s", TOKEN);
Secrets Filtering

Timers

Timer are managed by the time() and timeEnd() functions. A unique label can be used to identify a timer on initialization, though if none is provided the timer will be assigned one automatically. In addition, calling the timeEnd() function without a specified label will have as effect the termination of the most recently initialized timer, that was created without providing a label.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.time("test");
signale.time();
signale.time();

setTimeout(() => {
  signale.timeEnd();
  signale.timeEnd();
  signale.timeEnd("test");
}, 500);
Timers

Configuration

Global

To enable global configuration define the options under the signale namespace in your package.json.

The following illustrates all the available options with their respective default values.

{
  "signale": {
    "displayScope": true,
    "displayBadge": true,
    "displayDate": false,
    "displayFilename": false,
    "displayLabel": true,
    "displayTimestamp": false,
    "underlineLabel": true,
    "underlineMessage": false,
    "underlinePrefix": false,
    "underlineSuffix": false,
    "uppercaseLabel": false
  }
}
View all of the available options in detail.
displayScope
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: true

Display the scope name of the logger.

displayBadge
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: true

Display the badge of the logger.

displayDate
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: false

Display the current local date in YYYY-MM-DD format.

displayFilename
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: false

Display the name of the file that the logger is reporting from.

displayLabel
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: true

Display the label of the logger.

displayTimestamp
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: false

Display the current local time in HH:MM:SS format.

underlineLabel
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: true

Underline the logger label.

underlineMessage
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: false

Underline the logger message.

underlinePrefix
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: false

Underline the logger prefix.

underlineSuffix
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: false

Underline the logger suffix.

uppercaseLabel
  • Type: Boolean
  • Default: false

Display the label of the logger in uppercase.

Local

To enable local configuration call the config() function on your signales instance. Local configurations will always override any pre-existing configuration inherited from package.json.

In the following example, loggers in the foo.js file will run under their own configuration, overriding the package.json one.

// foo.js
const { signale } = require("signales");

// Overrides any existing `package.json` config
signale.config({
  displayFilename: true,
  displayTimestamp: true,
  displayDate: false,
});

signale.success("Hello from the Global scope");
Local Config

Also, scoped loggers can have their own independent configuration, overriding the one inherited by the parent instance or package.json.

// foo.js
const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.config({
  displayFilename: true,
  displayTimestamp: true,
  displayDate: false,
});

signale.success("Hello from the Global scope");

function foo() {
  // `fooLogger` inherits the config of `signale`
  const fooLogger = signale.scope("foo scope");

  // Overrides both `signale` and `package.json` configs
  fooLogger.config({
    displayFilename: true,
    displayTimestamp: false,
    displayDate: true,
  });

  fooLogger.success("Hello from the Local scope");
}

foo();
Scope Config

API

signale.<logger>(message[, message]|messageObj|errorObj)

logger
  • Type: Function

Can be any default or custom logger.

message
  • Type: String

Can be one or more comma delimited strings.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.success("Successful operation");
//=> ✔  success  Successful operation

signale.success("Successful", "operation");
//=> ✔  success  Successful operation

signale.success("Successful %s", "operation");
//=> ✔  success  Successful operation
errorObj
  • Type: Error Object

Can be any error object.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.error(new Error("Unsuccessful operation"));
//=> ✖  error  Error: Unsuccessful operation
//        at Module._compile (module.js:660:30)
//        at Object.Module._extensions..js (module.js:671:10)
//        ...
messageObj
  • Type: Object

Can be an object holding the prefix, message and suffix attributes, with prefix and suffix always prepended and appended respectively to the logged message.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.complete({
  prefix: "[task]",
  message: "Fix issue #59",
  suffix: "(@klaussinani)",
});
//=> [task] ☒  complete  Fix issue #59 (@klaussinani)

signale.complete({
  prefix: "[task]",
  message: ["Fix issue #%d", 59],
  suffix: "(@klaussinani)",
});
//=> [task] ☒  complete  Fix issue #59 (@klaussinani)

signale.scope(name[, name])

Defines the scope name of the logger.

name
  • Type: String

Can be one or more comma delimited strings.

const { signale } = require("signales");

const foo = signale.scope("foo");
const fooBar = signale.scope("foo", "bar");

foo.success("foo");
//=> [foo] › ✔  success  foo

fooBar.success("foo bar");
//=> [foo] [bar] › ✔  success  foo bar

signale.child(childScopeName)

Creates new child logger which inherits parent's scope.

childScopeName
  • Type: String

Scope name of child logger.

const { signale } = require("signales");

const systemLogger = signale.scope("system");
systemLogger.success("Hello from system logger");

//=> [system] › ✔  success   Hello from system logger

const childLogger = systemLogger.child("net");
childLogger.success("Hello from child logger");

//=> [system::net] › ✔  success   Hello from child logger

signale.unscope()

Clears the scope name of the logger.

const { signale } = require("signales");

const foo = signale.scope("foo");

foo.success("foo");
//=> [foo] › ✔  success  foo

foo.unscope();

foo.success("foo");
//=> ✔  success  foo

signale.clone(options)

Creates clone of current signales instance with new options applied to it.

const { signales, Signale } = require("signales");

signales
  .clone({ scope: "foo", scopeFormatter: Signale.barsScopeFormatter })
  .child("bar")
  .info("hello");

//=> [foo] [bar] › ℹ  info      hello

signale.config(settingsObj)

Sets the configuration of an instance overriding any existing global or local configuration.

settingsObj
  • Type: Object

Can hold any of the documented options.

// foo.js
const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.config({
  displayFilename: true,
  displayTimestamp: true,
  displayDate: true,
});

signale.success("Successful operations");
//=> [2018-5-15] [11:12:38] [foo.js] › ✔  success  Successful operations

signale.time([, label])

  • Return Type: String

Sets a timers and accepts an optional label. If none provided the timer will receive a unique label automatically.

Returns a string corresponding to the timer label.

label
  • Type: String

Label corresponding to the timer. Each timer must have its own unique label.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.time();
//=> ▶  timer_0  Initialized timer...

signale.time();
//=> ▶  timer_1  Initialized timer...

signale.time("label");
//=> ▶  label    Initialized timer...

signale.timeEnd([, label])

  • Return Type: Object

Deactivates the timer to which the given label corresponds. If no label is provided the most recent timer, that was created without providing a label, will be deactivated.

Returns an object {label, span} holding the timer label and the total running time.

label
  • Type: String

Label corresponding to the timer, each timer has its own unique label.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.time();
//=> ▶  timer_0  Initialized timer...

signale.time();
//=> ▶  timer_1  Initialized timer...

signale.time("label");
//=> ▶  label    Initialized timer...

signale.timeEnd();
//=> ◼  timer_1  Timer run for: 2ms

signale.timeEnd();
//=> ◼  timer_0  Timer run for: 2ms

signale.timeEnd("label");
//=> ◼  label    Timer run for: 2ms

signale.disable()

Disables the logging functionality of all loggers belonging to a specific instance.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.success("foo");
//=> ✔  success  foo

signale.disable();

signale.success("foo");
//=>

signale.enable()

Enables the logging functionality of all loggers belonging to a specific instance.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.disable();

signale.success("foo");
//=>

signale.enable();

signale.success("foo");
//=> ✔  success  foo

signale.isEnabled()

Checks whether the logging functionality of a specific instance is enabled.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.success("foo");
//=> ✔  success  foo

signale.isEnabled();
// => true

signale.disable();

signale.success("foo");
//=>

signale.isEnabled();
// => false

signale.addSecrets(secrets)

Adds new secrets/sensitive-information to the targeted Signale instance.

secrets
  • Type: (String|Number)[]

Array holding the secrets/sensitive-information to be filtered out.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.log("$ exporting USERNAME=%s", "klaussinani");
//=> $ exporting USERNAME=klaussinani

signale.addSecrets(["klaussinani"]);

signale.log("$ exporting USERNAME=%s", "klaussinani");
//=> $ exporting USERNAME=[secure]

signale.clearSecrets()

Removes all secrets/sensitive-information from the targeted Signale instance.

const { signale } = require("signales");

signale.addSecrets(["klaussinani"]);

signale.log("$ exporting USERNAME=%s", "klaussinani");
//=> $ exporting USERNAME=[secure]

signale.clearSecrets();

signale.log("$ exporting USERNAME=%s", "klaussinani");
//=> $ exporting USERNAME=klaussinani

Development

For more info on how to contribute to the project, please read the contributing guidelines.

  • Fork the repository and clone it to your machine
  • Navigate to your local fork: cd signales
  • Install the project dependencies: npm install or yarn install
  • Build project: npm build or yarn build
  • Lint code for errors: npm test or yarn test

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Who's Using It?

View in detail all the packages and repositories that are using Signales here.

Maintainers

Original Signale's Team

License

MIT

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Highly configurable logging utility

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