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Log::Dispatch::Dir(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Log::Dispatch::Dir(3) |
Log::Dispatch::Dir - Log messages to separate files in a directory, with rotate
options
This document describes version 0.160 of Log::Dispatch::Dir (from Perl
distribution Log-Dispatch-Dir), released on 2019-01-09.
use Log::Dispatch::Dir;
my $dir = Log::Dispatch::Dir->new(
name => 'dir1',
min_level => 'info',
dirname => 'somedir.log',
filename_pattern => '%Y-%m-%d-%H%M%S.%{ext}',
);
$dir->log( level => 'info', message => 'your comment\n" );
# limit total size
my $dir = Log::Dispatch::Dir->new(
# ...
max_size => 10*1024*1024, # 10MB
);
# limit number of files
my $dir = Log::Dispatch::Dir->new(
# ...
max_files => 1000,
);
# limit oldest file
my $dir = Log::Dispatch::Dir->new(
# ...
max_age => 10*24*3600, # 10 days
);
This module provides a simple object for logging to directories under the
Log::Dispatch::* system, and automatically rotating them according to
different constraints. Each message will be logged to a separate file the
directory.
Logging to separate files can be useful for example when dumping
whole network responses (like HTTP::Response content).
This method takes a hash of parameters. The following options are valid:
- name ($)
The name of the object (not the dirname!). Required.
- min_level ($)
The minimum logging level this object will accept. See the
Log::Dispatch documentation on Log Levels for more information.
Required.
- max_level ($)
The maximum logging level this obejct will accept. See the
Log::Dispatch documentation on Log Levels for more information. This is
not required. By default the maximum is the highest possible level
(which means functionally that the object has no maximum).
- dirname ($)
The directory to write to.
- permissions ($)
If the directory does not already exist, the permissions that
it should be created with. Optional. The argument passed must be a valid
octal value, such as 0700 or the constants available from Fcntl, like
S_IRUSR|S_IWUSR|S_IXUSR.
See "chmod" in perlfunc for more on potential traps
when passing octal values around. Most importantly, remember that if you
pass a string that looks like an octal value, like this:
my $mode = '0644';
Then the resulting directory will end up with permissions like
this:
--w----r-T
which is probably not what you want.
- callbacks( \& or [ \&, \&, ... ] )
This parameter may be a single subroutine reference or an
array reference of subroutine references. These callbacks will be called
in the order they are given and passed a hash containing the following
keys:
( message => $log_message, level => $log_level )
The callbacks are expected to modify the message and then
return a single scalar containing that modified message. These callbacks
will be called when either the "log"
or "log_to" methods are called and
will only be applied to a given message once.
- filename_pattern ($)
Names to give to each file, expressed in pattern a la
strftime()'s. Optional. Default is
'%Y-%m-%d-%H%M%S.pid-%{pid}.%{ext}'. Time is expressed in local
time.
If file of the same name already exists, a suffix
".1", ".2", and so on will be appended.
Available pattern:
- %Y - 4-digit year number, e.g. 2009
- %y - 2-digit year number, e.g. 09 for year 2009
- %m - 2-digit month, e.g. 04 for April
- %d - 2-digit day of month, e.g. 28
- %H - 2-digit hour, e.g. 01
- %M - 2-digit minute, e.g. 57
- %S - 2-digit second, e.g. 59
- %z - the time zone as hour offset from GMT
- %Z - the time zone or name or abbreviation
- %{pid} - Process ID
- %{ext} - Guessed file extension
- Try to detect appropriate file extension using File::LibMagic. For
example, if log message looks like an HTML document, then 'html'. If
File::LibMagic is not available or type cannot be detected, defaults to
'log'.
- %% - literal '%' character
- filename_sub (\&)
A more generic mechanism for filename_pattern. If
filename_sub is given, filename_pattern will be ignored.
The code will be called with the same arguments as log_message()
and is expected to return a filename. Will die if code returns
undef.
- max_size ($)
Maximum total size of files, in bytes. After the size is
surpassed, oldest files (based on ctime) will be deleted. Optional.
Default is undefined, which means unlimited.
- max_files ($)
Maximum number of files. After this number is surpassed,
oldest files (based on ctime) will be deleted. Optional. Default is
undefined, which means unlimited.
- max_age ($)
Maximum age of files (based on ctime), in seconds. After the
age is surpassed, files older than this age will be deleted. Optional.
Default is undefined, which means unlimited.
- rotate_probability ($)
A number between 0 and 1 which specifies the probability that
rotate() will be called after each log_message(). This is
a balance between performance and rotate size accuracy. 1 means always
rotate, 0 means never rotate. Optional. Default is 0.25.
Sends a message to the appropriate output. Generally this shouldn't be called
directly but should be called through the
"log()" method (in Log::Dispatch::Output).
Please visit the project's homepage at
<https://metacpan.org/release/Log-Dispatch-Dir>.
Source repository is at
<https://github.com/perlancar/perl-Log-Dispatch-Dir>.
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website
<https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Log-Dispatch-Dir>
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a
patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired
feature.
perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2019, 2017, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2011 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.
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