Simple universal and extra-light (1kB) logger for node/browser, with prefix, time and colours.
This simple utility is <1kB and is optimised to disable all logging in production, display log time, line of origin, prefix and sane colors on the server console.
Also, it is tree-shacked and has the same API as the console
native object.
We use it with Next.js and Vercel, and we don't need the server logs on production because we have Sentry for that, and disabling them reduces our cost.
import createSimpleLogger from '@unly/simple-logger';
const logger = createSimpleLogger({
prefix: 'My lib',
shouldPrint: () => process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production', // Only print in non-production env (default behavior)
});
Make sure to check our advanced examples below!
This is an example of the default color behaviour (see
scripts/show-colors.js
).
We recommend adapting:
- The
prefix
option, using the filename, the class name, the module name, etc. to help locate the origin of the message. - The
shouldPrint
option to your needs. By default, it won't print anything in production environment. - The
colorize
option, if you want to customize the colors used on the server. SeecolorizeFallback
for inspiration.
yarn add @unly/simple-logger
or
npm install @unly/simple-logger
You'll also need to install those peer dependencies:
yarn add chalk
We decided to allow you to decide what version of chalk you want to use for greater flexibility.
Here are a few options to adapt the lib to your own needs.
export type SimpleLoggerOptions = {
prefix?: string;
disableAutoWrapPrefix?: boolean;
colorize?: Colorize;
shouldPrint?: ShouldPrint;
shouldShowTime?: ShouldShowTime;
timeFormat?: TimeFormat;
};
export type Colorize = (mode: PrintMode, prefixes: string[]) => string[];
export type ShouldPrint = (mode: PrintMode) => boolean;
export type ShouldShowTime = () => boolean;
export type TimeFormat = () => string;
prefix: None
disableAutoWrapPrefix: `false`
colorize: Colorize for server console only, see implementation
shouldPrint: Prints if NODE_ENV !== 'production'
shouldShowTime: Enabled
timeFormat: Using ISO string
You can define the following environment variables:
UNLY_SIMPLE_LOGGER_ENV
: Will be used instead ofNODE_ENV
, to configure the default behavior ofshouldPrint
.- E.g: If set to
APP_STAGE
, then will compareAPP_STAGE
withproduction
. IfAPP_STAGE = 'staging'
(ordevelopment
), thenshouldPrint
will print by default. IfAPP_STAGE = 'production'
, thenshouldPrint
will not print by default. If a customshouldPrint
is provided, then it will ignoreUNLY_SIMPLE_LOGGER_ENV
as it won't rely on the defaultshouldPrint
implementation.
- E.g: If set to
SIMPLE_LOGGER_SHOULD_SHOW_TIME
: Will be used to configure whether to show the time by default.- E.g: If set to
false
, then will not show the time.
- E.g: If set to
Those advanced examples are taken from actual implementation in production-grade applications.
If you want to define your config only once and reuse it everywhere across your app, you can write a proxy, see below:
import createSimpleLogger, { SimpleLogger } from '@unly/simple-logger';
/**
* Custom logger proxy.
*
* Customize the @unly/simple-logger library by providing app-wide default behavior.
*
* @param fileLabel
*/
export const createLogger = ({ fileLabel }: { fileLabel: string }): SimpleLogger => {
return createSimpleLogger({
prefix: fileLabel,
shouldPrint: (mode) => {
return process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_APP_STAGE !== 'production';
},
});
};
import { createLogger } from '../logger';
const fileLabel = 'someFile';
const logger = createLogger({
fileLabel,
});
logger.warn(`Oops, a warning!`, { x: 1 })
Similar to the previous example, the createLogger
can be used to change the behaviors for tests.
In the below example, the NODE_ENV
equals test
during tests (when running yarn test
) and it makes it easy to change the behavior to use console
instead of the logger
in such case.
Combined with other configuration, it allows to silent all logs when using either console
or logger
during tests.
/**
* Custom logger proxy.
*
* Customize the @unly/simple-logger library by providing app-wide default behavior.
*
* @param fileLabel
*/
export const createLogger = ({ fileLabel }: { fileLabel: string }): SimpleLogger => {
// Mute logger during tests, to avoid cluttering the console
if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'test') {
return global.muteConsole();
}
return createSimpleLogger({
prefix: fileLabel,
shouldPrint: (mode) => {
return process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_APP_STAGE !== 'production';
},
});
};
We gladly accept PRs, but please open an issue first, so we can discuss it beforehand.
No changelog for now. WIP. Thinking of using https://github.com/semantic-release/semantic-release.
We follow Semantic Versioning. (major.minor.patch
)
This project is being authored by:
- [Unly] Ambroise Dhenain (Vadorequest) (active)
Unly is a socially responsible company, fighting inequality and facilitating access to higher education. Unly is committed to making education more inclusive, through responsible funding for students.
We provide technological solutions to help students find the necessary funding for their studies.
We proudly participate in many TechForGood initiatives. To support and learn more about our actions to make education accessible, visit :
- https://twitter.com/UnlyEd
- https://www.facebook.com/UnlyEd/
- https://www.linkedin.com/company/unly
- Interested to work with us?
Tech tips and tricks from our CTO on our Medium page!
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ts-node-dev
, plaints-node
, or simpletsc
.
If you’re new to TypeScript, checkout this handy cheatsheet
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To run TSDX, use:
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.
To do a one-off build, use npm run build
or yarn build
.
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.
Code quality is set up for you with prettier
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. Adjust the respective fields in package.json
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This is the folder structure we set up for you:
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index.tsx # EDIT THIS
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blah.test.tsx # EDIT THIS
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package.json
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tsconfig.json
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Two actions are added by default:
main
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Please see the main tsdx
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development-only optimizations:
// ./types/index.d.ts
declare
var __DEV__: boolean;
// inside your code...
if (__DEV__) {
console.log('foo');
}
You can also choose to install and use invariant and warning functions.
CJS, ESModules, and UMD module formats are supported.
The appropriate paths are configured in package.json
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Per Palmer Group guidelines, always use named exports. Code split inside your React app instead of your React library.
There are many ways to ship styles, including with CSS-in-JS. TSDX has no opinion on this, configure how you like.
For vanilla CSS, you can include it at the root directory and add it to the files
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