A logging library for PHP designed for simplicity and ease of use

3.0.0 2014-11-23 12:02 UTC

This package is auto-updated.

Last update: 2024-03-29 03:14:49 UTC


README

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Logga is a logging library for PHP designed for simplicity and ease of use. Starting from v1.0.0, Logga features support for multiple logging streams and message formatters, providing developers with great flexibility.

Current version features a file stream and a default formatter. Future releases of Logga will have a Database stream out of the box, as well as a plugin system to allow developers to write custom streams and formatters so that pretty much every logging need is covered.

##Installation ###Composer Since version 2.0.0 Logga can be installed using Composer. Add the following dependency to your composer.json:

{
  "require": {
    "carlosafonso/logga": "3.*",
  }
}

Then run:

$ composer update

Don't forget to include Composer's autoload file if you haven't done so already:

require 'vendor/autoload.php':

###Manual installation Logga can also be installed by downloading the latest version and unzipping everything into your project folder, or by cloning the repository:

$ git clone https://github.com/carlosafonso/logga.git

Remember to include the main library file into your project:

require 'logga.php';

##Quick start Set up a quick logger with the following code:

$l = new \Logga\Logga();
$l->info('Hello world!');

If you run this code, the following line will be printed on screen:

[2014-02-15 17:42:14][INFO   ]: Hello world!

Furthermore, a file named something like default_log.log will appear in the folder you're running your script from. A quick look into it reveals the same content shown above.

And that's pretty much it! You have set up your logging system with just a couple of lines. From now on you can trace everything you need using any of the eight logging functions provided by Logga (debug(), info(), notice(), warning(), error(), critical(), alert() and emergency()).

##Usage The above is simple enough for the average developer but you might want to customize Logga a bit in order to fulfill your needs. This section will show you how.

###Understanding streams In Logga, as in other logging libraries, a stream is an abstraction of a place where log messages are stored. You can use as many streams as you need, so that logging a message just once produces the same output in different places (i.e., a plain text file and a database table).

Additionally, you can configure each stream: for example, you might want all messages to be logged to the plain text file but only WARNING messages or above into the database.

As of version 2.2.0, Logga comes with 4 streams: FileStream, HttpStream, MailStream and StandardOutputStream (with several others currently in the works, such as DatabaseStream).

###Default streams If you don't specifically provide any stream to Logga's constructor, the library will use both a FileStream and a StandardOutputStream by default (the first one logging to a file named default_log.log).

###Creating a custom stream You can create a stream by instantiating any class which extends from LogStream, optionally passing an array with the desired options:

$s = new FileStream(array('file' => 'my_custom_log_file', 'date' => TRUE));
$l = new Logga($s);
$l->info('Hi, custom file!');

The above will produce a file called my_custom_log_file_<datetime>.log, where datetime is the current date and time.

You can use more than one stream. Just call Logga's constructor with an array of streams:

$s1 = new FileStream(array('file' => 'my_first_custom_log_file', 'date' => TRUE));
$s2 = new FileStream(array('file' => 'my_second_custom_log_file', 'date' => TRUE));
$l = new Logga(array($s1, $s2));
$l->info('Hi, custom file!');

##Streams ###Specifying a log level

###Enabling and disabling streams

###Available stream classes

##Formatters