JSPM

  • Created
  • Published
  • Downloads 228116
  • Score
    100M100P100Q163421F
  • License MIT

Just a simple logging module for your Electron application

Package Exports

    This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (electron-log) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

    Readme

    electron-log

    Tests NPM version Downloads

    Simple logging module Electron/Node.js/NW.js application. No dependencies. No complicated configuration.

    By default, it writes logs to the following locations:

    • on Linux: ~/.config/{app name}/logs/main.log
    • on macOS: ~/Library/Logs/{app name}/main.log
    • on Windows: %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\{app name}\logs\main.log

    Installation

    Starts from v5, electron-log requires Electron 13+ or Node.js 14+. Feel free to use electron-log v4 for older runtime. v4 supports Node.js 0.10+ and almost any Electron build.

    Install with npm:

    npm install electron-log

    Usage

    Main process

    import log from 'electron-log/main';
    
    // Optional, initialize the logger for any renderer process
    log.initialize();
    
    log.info('Log from the main process');

    Renderer process

    If a bundler is used, you can just import the module:

    import log from 'electron-log/renderer';
    log.info('Log from the renderer process');

    This function uses sessions to inject a preload script to make the logger available in a renderer process.

    Without a bundler, you can use a global variable __electronLog. It contains only log functions like info, warn and so on.

    There are a few other ways how a logger can be initialized for a renderer process. Read more.

    Preload script

    To use the logger inside a preload script, use the electron-log/renderer import. There's also the electron-log/preload entrypoint, but it's used only as a bridge between the main and renderer processes and doesn't export a logger. In most cases, you don't need this preload entrypoint.

    Node.js and NW.js

    import log from 'electron-log/node';
    log.info('Log from the nw.js or node.js');

    electron-log v2.x, v3.x, v4.x

    If you would like to upgrade to the latest version, read the migration guide and the changelog.

    Log levels

    electron-log supports the following log levels:

    error, warn, info, verbose, debug, silly

    Transport

    Transport is a simple function which does some work with log message. By default, two transports are active: console and file.

    You can set transport options or use methods using:

    log.transports.console.format = '{h}:{i}:{s} {text}';

    log.transports.file.getFile();

    Each transport has level and transforms options.

    Console transport

    Just prints a log message to application console (main process) or to DevTools console (renderer process).

    Options
    • format, default '%c{h}:{i}:{s}.{ms}%c › {text}' (main), '{h}:{i}:{s}.{ms} › {text}' (renderer)
    • level, default 'silly'
    • useStyles, force enable/disable styles

    Read more about console transport.

    File transport

    The file transport writes log messages to a file.

    Options
    • format, default '[{y}-{m}-{d} {h}:{i}:{s}.{ms}] [{level}] {text}'
    • level, default 'silly'
    • resolvePathFn function sets the log path, for example
    log.transports.file.resolvePathFn = () => path.join(APP_DATA, 'logs/main.log');

    Read more about file transport.

    IPC transport

    It displays log messages from main process in the renderer's DevTools console. By default, it's disabled for a production build. You can enable in the production mode by setting the level property.

    Options
    • level, default 'silly' in the dev mode, false in the production.

    Remote transport

    Sends a JSON POST request with LogMessage in the body to the specified url.

    Options
    • level, default false
    • url, remote endpoint

    Read more about remote transport.

    Disable a transport

    Just set level property to false, for example:

    log.transports.file.level = false;
    log.transports.console.level = false;

    Override/add a custom transport

    Transport is just a function (msg: LogMessage) => void, so you can easily override/add your own transport. More info.

    Third-party transports

    Overriding console.log

    Sometimes it's helpful to use electron-log instead of default console. It's pretty easy:

    console.log = log.log;

    If you would like to override other functions like error, warn and so on:

    Object.assign(console, log.functions);

    Colors

    Colors can be used for both main and DevTools console.

    log.info('%cRed text. %cGreen text', 'color: red', 'color: green')

    Available colors:

    • unset (reset to default color)
    • black
    • red
    • green
    • yellow
    • blue
    • magenta
    • cyan
    • white

    For DevTools console you can use other CSS properties.

    Catch errors

    electron-log can catch and log unhandled errors/rejected promises:

    log.errorHandler.startCatching(options?);

    More info.

    Electron events logging

    Sometimes it's helpful to save critical electron events to the log file.

    log.eventLogger.startLogging(options?);

    By default, it save the following events:

    • certificate-error, child-process-gone, render-process-gone of app
    • crashed, gpu-process-crashed of webContents
    • did-fail-load, did-fail-provisional-load, plugin-crashed, preload-error of every WebContents. You can switch any event on/off.

    More info.

    Hooks

    In some situations, you may want to get more control over logging. Hook is a function which is called on each transport call.

    (message: LogMessage, transport: Transport, transportName) => LogMessage

    More info.

    Multiple logger instances

    You can create multiple logger instances with different settings:

    import log from 'electron-log/main';
    
    const anotherLogger = log.create({ logId: 'anotherInstance' });

    Be aware that you need to configure each instance (e.g. log file path) separately.

    Logging scopes

    import log from 'electron-log/main';
    const userLog = log.scope('user');
    
    userLog.info('message with user scope');
    // Prints 12:12:21.962 (user) › message with user scope

    By default, scope labels are padded in logs. To disable it, set
    log.scope.labelPadding = false.

    Buffering

    It's like a transaction, you may add some logs to the buffer and then decide whether to write these logs or not. It allows adding verbose logs only when some operations failed.

    import log from 'electron-log/main';
    
    log.buffering.begin();
    try {
      log.info('First silly message');
      // do somethings complex
      log.info('Second silly message');
      // do something else
       
      // Finished fine, we don't need these logs anymore
      log.buffering.reject();
    } catch (e) {
      log.buffering.commit();
      log.warn(e);
    }