In winston
a transport is essentially a storage device for your logs. Each
instance of a winston logger can have multiple transports configured at
different levels. For example, one may want error logs to be stored in a
persistent remote location (like a database), but all logs output to the
console or a local file.
There are several core transports included in winston
that leverage the built-in networking and file I/O offered by Node.js core. In
addition, there are transports which are actively supported by winston
contributors. And last (but not least)
there are additional transports written by
members of the community.
Additionally there are transports previously maintained by winston contributors that are looking for maintainers.
-
- Airbrake
- Amazon CloudWatch
- Amazon DynamoDB
- Amazon Kinesis Firehose
- Amazon SNS
- Azure Table
- Cassandra
- Cisco Spark
- Cloudant
- Datadog
- Elasticsearch
- FastFileRotate
- Google BigQuery
- Google Stackdriver Logging
- Graylog2
- Humio
- LogDNA
- Logsene (including Log-Alerts and Anomaly Detection)
- Logz.io
- Newrelic (errors only)
- Papertrail
- PostgresQL
- Pusher
- Sentry
- Seq
- SimpleDB
- Slack
- SQLite3
- SSE with KOA 2
- Sumo Logic
- Winlog2 Transport
There are several core transports included in winston
, which leverage the built-in networking and file I/O offered by Node.js core.
logger.add(new winston.transports.Console(options));
The Console transport takes a few simple options:
- level: Level of messages that this transport should log (default: level set on parent logger).
- silent: Boolean flag indicating whether to suppress output (default false).
- eol: string indicating the end-of-line characters to use (default
os.EOL
) - stderrLevels Array of strings containing the levels to log to stderr instead of stdout, for example
['error', 'debug', 'info']
. (default[]
) - consoleWarnLevels Array of strings containing the levels to log using console.warn or to stderr (in Node.js) instead of stdout, for example
['warn', 'debug']
. (default[]
)
logger.add(new winston.transports.File(options));
The File transport supports a variety of file writing options. If you are looking for daily log rotation see DailyRotateFile
- level: Level of messages that this transport should log (default: level set on parent logger).
- silent: Boolean flag indicating whether to suppress output (default false).
- eol: Line-ending character to use. (default:
os.EOL
). - filename: The filename of the logfile to write output to.
- maxsize: Max size in bytes of the logfile, if the size is exceeded then a new file is created, a counter will become a suffix of the log file.
- maxFiles: Limit the number of files created when the size of the logfile is exceeded.
- tailable: If true, log files will be rolled based on maxsize and maxfiles, but in ascending order. The filename will always have the most recent log lines. The larger the appended number, the older the log file. This option requires maxFiles to be set, or it will be ignored.
- maxRetries: The number of stream creation retry attempts before entering a failed state. In a failed state the transport stays active but performs a NOOP on it's log function. (default 2)
- zippedArchive: If true, all log files but the current one will be zipped.
- options: options passed to
fs.createWriteStream
(default{flags: 'a'}
). - stream: DEPRECATED The WriteableStream to write output to.
logger.add(new winston.transports.Http(options));
The Http
transport is a generic way to log, query, and stream logs from an arbitrary Http endpoint, preferably winstond. It takes options that are passed to the node.js http
or https
request:
- host: (Default: localhost) Remote host of the HTTP logging endpoint
- port: (Default: 80 or 443) Remote port of the HTTP logging endpoint
- path: (Default: /) Remote URI of the HTTP logging endpoint
- auth: (Default: None) An object representing the
username
andpassword
for HTTP Basic Auth - ssl: (Default: false) Value indicating if we should use HTTPS
- batch: (Default: false) Value indicating if batch mode should be used. A batch of logs to send through the HTTP request when one of the batch options is reached: number of elements, or timeout
- batchInterval: (Default: 5000 ms) Value indicating the number of milliseconds to wait before sending the HTTP request
- batchCount: (Default: 10) Value indicating the number of logs to cumulate before sending the HTTP request
logger.add(new winston.transports.Stream({
stream: fs.createWriteStream('/dev/null')
/* other options */
}));
The Stream transport takes a few simple options:
- stream: any Node.js stream. If an
objectMode
stream is provided then the entireinfo
object will be written. Otherwiseinfo[MESSAGE]
will be written. - level: Level of messages that this transport should log (default: level set on parent logger).
- silent: Boolean flag indicating whether to suppress output (default false).
- eol: Line-ending character to use. (default:
os.EOL
).
Starting with [email protected]
an effort was made to remove any transport which added additional dependencies to winston
. At the time there were several transports already in winston
which will have slowly waned in usage. The
following transports are actively maintained by members of the winston Github
organization.
As of [email protected]
the MongoDB transport has been broken out into a new module: winston-mongodb. Using it is just as easy:
const winston = require('winston');
/**
* Requiring `winston-mongodb` will expose
* `winston.transports.MongoDB`
*/
require('winston-mongodb');
logger.add(new winston.transports.MongoDB(options));
The MongoDB transport takes the following options. 'db' is required:
- level: Level of messages that this transport should log, defaults to 'info'.
- silent: Boolean flag indicating whether to suppress output, defaults to false.
- db: MongoDB connection uri, pre-connected db object or promise object which will be resolved with pre-connected db object.
- options: MongoDB connection parameters (optional, defaults to
{poolSize: 2, autoReconnect: true}
). - collection: The name of the collection you want to store log messages in, defaults to 'log'.
- storeHost: Boolean indicating if you want to store machine hostname in logs entry, if set to true it populates MongoDB entry with 'hostname' field, which stores os.hostname() value.
- username: The username to use when logging into MongoDB.
- password: The password to use when logging into MongoDB. If you don't supply a username and password it will not use MongoDB authentication.
- label: Label stored with entry object if defined.
- name: Transport instance identifier. Useful if you need to create multiple MongoDB transports.
- capped: In case this property is true, winston-mongodb will try to create new log collection as capped, defaults to false.
- cappedSize: Size of logs capped collection in bytes, defaults to 10000000.
- cappedMax: Size of logs capped collection in number of documents.
- tryReconnect: Will try to reconnect to the database in case of fail during initialization. Works only if db is a string. Defaults to false.
- expireAfterSeconds: Seconds before the entry is removed. Works only if capped is not set.
Metadata: Logged as a native JSON object in 'meta' property.
Logging unhandled exceptions: For logging unhandled exceptions specify
winston-mongodb as handleExceptions
logger according to winston documentation.
See winston-syslog.
The community has truly embraced winston
; there are over 23 winston transports and over half of them are maintained by authors external to the winston core team. If you want to check them all out, just search npm
:
$ npm search winston
If you have an issue using one of these modules you should contact the module author directly
winston-airbrake2 is a transport for winston that sends your logs to Airbrake.io.
const winston = require('winston');
const { Airbrake } = require('winston-airbrake2');
logger.add(new Airbrake(options));
The Airbrake transport utilises the node-airbrake module to send logs to the Airbrake.io API. You can set the following options:
- apiKey: The project API Key. (required, default: null)
- name: Transport name. (optional, default: 'airbrake')
- level: The level of message that will be sent to Airbrake (optional, default: 'error')
- host: The information that is displayed within the URL of the Airbrake interface. (optional, default: 'http://' + os.hostname())
- env: The environment will dictate what happens with your message. If your environment is currently one of the 'developmentEnvironments', the error will not be sent to Airbrake. (optional, default: process.env.NODE_ENV)
- timeout: The maximum time allowed to send to Airbrake in milliseconds. (optional, default: 30000)
- developmentEnvironments: The environments that will not send errors to Airbrake. (optional, default: ['development', 'test'])
- projectRoot: Extra string sent to Airbrake. (optional, default: null)
- appVersion: Extra string or number sent to Airbrake. (optional, default: null)
- consoleLogError: Toggle the logging of errors to console when the current environment is in the developmentEnvironments array. (optional, default: false)
The winston-aws-cloudwatch transport relays your log messages to Amazon CloudWatch.
const winston = require('winston');
const AwsCloudWatch = require('winston-aws-cloudwatch');
logger.add(new AwsCloudWatch(options));
Options:
- logGroupName: The name of the CloudWatch log group to which to log. [required]
- logStreamName: The name of the CloudWatch log stream to which to log. [required]
- awsConfig: An object containing your
accessKeyId
,secretAccessKey
,region
, etc.
Alternatively, you may be interested in winston-cloudwatch.
The winston-dynamodb transport uses Amazon's DynamoDB as a sink for log messages. You can take advantage of the various authentication methods supports by Amazon's aws-sdk module. See Configuring the SDK in Node.js.
const winston = require('winston');
const { DynamoDB } = require('winston-dynamodb');
logger.add(new DynamoDB(options));
Options:
- accessKeyId: your AWS access key id
- secretAccessKey: your AWS secret access key
- region: the region where the domain is hosted
- useEnvironment: use process.env values for AWS access, secret, & region.
- tableName: DynamoDB table name
To Configure using environment authentication:
logger.add(new winston.transports.DynamoDB({
useEnvironment: true,
tableName: 'log'
}));
Also supports callbacks for completion when the DynamoDB putItem has been completed.
The winston-firehose transport relays your log messages to Amazon Kinesis Firehose.
const winston = require('winston');
const WFirehose = require('winston-firehose');
logger.add(new WFirehose(options));
Options:
- streamName: The name of the Amazon Kinesis Firehose stream to which to log. [required]
- firehoseOptions: The AWS Kinesis firehose options to pass direction to the firehose client, as documented by AWS. [required]
The winston-sns transport uses amazon SNS to send emails, texts, or a bunch of other notifications. Since this transport uses the Amazon AWS SDK for JavaScript, you can take advantage of the various methods of authentication found in Amazon's Configuring the SDK in Node.js document.
const winston = require('winston');
const SnsTransport = require('winston-sns');
logger.add(new SnsTransport(options));
Options:
- subscriber: Subscriber number - found in your SNS AWS Console, after clicking on a topic. Same as AWS Account ID. [required]
- topic_arn: Also found in SNS AWS Console - listed under a topic as Topic ARN. [required]
- aws_key: Your Amazon Web Services Key.
- aws_secret: Your Amazon Web Services Secret.
- region: AWS Region to use. Can be one of:
us-east-1
,us-west-1
,eu-west-1
,ap-southeast-1
,ap-northeast-1
,us-gov-west-1
,sa-east-1
. (default:us-east-1
) - subject: Subject for notifications. Uses placeholders for level (%l), error message (%e), and metadata (%m). (default: "Winston Error Report")
- message: Message of notifications. Uses placeholders for level (%l), error message (%e), and metadata (%m). (default: "Level '%l' Error:\n%e\n\nMetadata:\n%m")
- level: lowest level this transport will log. (default:
info
) - json: use json instead of a prettier (human friendly) string for meta information in the notification. (default:
false
) - handleExceptions: set to true to have this transport handle exceptions. (default:
false
)
winston-azuretable is a Azure Table transport:
const { AzureLogger } = require('winston-azuretable');
logger.add(new AzureLogger(options));
The Azure Table transport connects to an Azure Storage Account using the following options:
- useDevStorage: Boolean flag denoting whether to use the Azure Storage Emulator (default:
false
) - account: Azure Storage Account Name. In lieu of this setting, you can set the environment variable:
AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT
- key: Azure Storage Account Key. In lieu of this setting, you can set the environment variable:
AZURE_STORAGE_ACCESS_KEY
- level: lowest logging level transport to be logged (default:
info
) - tableName: name of the table to log messages (default:
log
) - partitionKey: table partition key to use (default:
process.env.NODE_ENV
) - silent: Boolean flag indicating whether to suppress output (default:
false
)
winston-cassandra is a Cassandra transport:
const Cassandra = require('winston-cassandra').Cassandra;
logger.add(new Cassandra(options));
The Cassandra transport connects to a cluster using the native protocol with the following options:
- level: Level of messages that this transport should log (default:
'info'
). - table: The name of the Cassandra column family you want to store log messages in (default:
'logs'
). - partitionBy: How you want the logs to be partitioned. Possible values
'hour'
and'day'
(Default). - consistency: The consistency of the insert query (default:
quorum
).
In addition to the options accepted by the Node.js Cassandra driver Client.
- hosts: Cluster nodes that will handle the write requests:
Array of strings containing the hosts, for example
['host1', 'host2']
(required). - keyspace: The name of the keyspace that will contain the logs table (required). The keyspace should be already created in the cluster.
winston-spark is a transport for Cisco Spark
const winston = require('winston');
require('winston-spark');
const options = {
accessToken: '***Your Spark Access Token***',
roomId: '***Spark Room Id***'
};
logger.add(new winston.transports.SparkLogger(options));
Valid Options are as the following:
- accessToken Your Spark Access Token. [required]
- roomId Spark Room Id. [required]
- level Log Level (default: info)
- hideMeta Hide MetaData (default: false)
winston-clodant is a transport for Cloudant NoSQL Db.
const winston = require('winston');
const WinstonCloudant = require('winston-cloudant');
logger.add(new WinstonCloudant(options));
The Cloudant transport takes the following options:
url : Access url including user and password [required]
username : Username for the Cloudant DB instance
password : Password for the Cloudant DB instance
host : Host for the Cloudant DB instance
db : Name of the databasename to put logs in
logstash : Write logs in logstash format
datadog-winston is a transport to ship your logs to datadog.
var winston = require('winston')
var DatadogWinston = require('datadog-winston')
var logger = winston.createLogger({
// Whatever options you need
// Refer https://github.com/winstonjs/winston#creating-your-own-logger
})
logger.add(
new DatadogWinston({
apiKey: 'super_secret_datadog_api_key',
hostname: 'my_machine',
service: 'super_service',
ddsource: 'nodejs',
ddtags: 'foo:bar,boo:baz'
})
)
Options:
- apiKey: Your datadog api key [required]
- hostname: The machine/server hostname
- service: The name of the application or service generating the logs
- ddsource: The technology from which the logs originated
- ddtags: Metadata associated with the logs
winston-bigquery is a transport for Google BigQuery.
import {WinstonBigQuery} from 'winston-bigquery';
import winston, {format} from 'winston';
const logger = winston.createLogger({
transports: [
new WinstonBigQuery({
tableId: 'winston_logs',
datasetId: 'logs'
})
]
});
The Google BigQuery takes the following options:
- datasetId : Your dataset name [required]
- tableId : Table name in the datase [required]
- applicationCredentials : a path to local service worker (useful in dev env) [Optional]
Pay Attention, since BQ, unlike some other products, is not a "schema-less" you will need to build the schema in advance. read more on the topic on github or npmjs.com
@google-cloud/logging-winston provides a transport to relay your log messages to Stackdriver Logging.
const winston = require('winston');
const Stackdriver = require('@google-cloud/logging-winston');
logger.add(new Stackdriver({
projectId: 'your-project-id',
keyFilename: '/path/to/keyfile.json'
}));
winston-graylog2 is a Graylog2 transport:
const winston = require('winston');
const Graylog2 = require('winston-graylog2');
logger.add(new Graylog2(options));
The Graylog2 transport connects to a Graylog2 server over UDP using the following options:
- name: Transport name
- level: Level of messages this transport should log. (default: info)
- silent: Boolean flag indicating whether to suppress output. (default: false)
- handleExceptions: Boolean flag, whenever to handle uncaught exceptions. (default: false)
- graylog:
- servers; list of graylog2 servers
- host: your server address (default: localhost)
- port: your server port (default: 12201)
- hostname: the name of this host (default: os.hostname())
- facility: the facility for these log messages (default: "Node.js")
- bufferSize: max UDP packet size, should never exceed the MTU of your system (default: 1400)
- servers; list of graylog2 servers
Log to Elasticsearch in a logstash-like format and leverage Kibana to browse your logs.
See: https://github.com/vanthome/winston-elasticsearch.
fast-file-rotate is a performant file transport providing daily log rotation.
const FileRotateTransport = require('fast-file-rotate');
const winston = require('winston');
const logger = winston.createLogger({
transports: [
new FileRotateTransport({
fileName: __dirname + '/console%DATE%.log'
})
]
})
humio-winston is a transport for sending logs to Humio:
const winston = require('winston');
const HumioTransport = require('humio-winston');
const logger = winston.createLogger({
transports: [
new HumioTransport({
ingestToken: '<YOUR HUMIO INGEST TOKEN>',
}),
],
});
LogDNA Winston is a transport for being able to forward the logs to LogDNA:
const logdnaWinston = require('logdna-winston');
const winston = require('winston');
const logger = winston.createLogger({});
const options = {
key: apikey, // the only field required
hostname: myHostname,
ip: ipAddress,
mac: macAddress,
app: appName,
env: envName,
index_meta: true // Defaults to false, when true ensures meta object will be searchable
};
// Only add this line in order to track exceptions
options.handleExceptions = true;
logger.add(new logdnaWinston(options));
let meta = {
data:'Some information'
};
logger.log('info', 'Log from LogDNA Winston', meta);
You can download the logzio transport here : https://github.com/logzio/winston-logzio
Basic Usage
const winston = require('winston');
const Logzio = require('winston-logzio');
logger.add(new Logzio({
token: '__YOUR_API_TOKEN__'
}));
For more information about how to configure the logzio transport, view the README.md in the winston-logzio repo.
winston-logsene transport for Elasticsearch bulk indexing via HTTPS to Logsene:
const winston = require('winston');
const Logsene = require('winston-logsene');
logger.add(new Logsene({
token: process.env.LOGSENE_TOKEN
/* other options */
}));
Options:
- token: Logsene Application Token
- source: Source of the logs (defaults to main module)
Logsene features:
- Fulltext search
- Anomaly detection and alerts
- Kibana4 integration
- Integration with SPM Performance Monitoring for Node.js
The winston-mail is an email transport:
const { Mail } = require('winston-mail');
logger.add(new Mail(options));
The Mail transport uses node-mail behind the scenes. Options are the following, to
and host
are required:
- to: The address(es) you want to send to. [required]
- from: The address you want to send from. (default:
winston@[server-host-name]
) - host: SMTP server hostname
- port: SMTP port (default: 587 or 25)
- secure: Use secure
- username User for server auth
- password Password for server auth
- level: Level of messages that this transport should log.
- silent: Boolean flag indicating whether to suppress output.
Metadata: Stringified as JSON in email.
newrelic-winston is a Newrelic transport:
const winston = require('winston');
const Newrelic = require('newrelic-winston');
logger.add(new Newrelic(options));
The Newrelic transport will send your errors to newrelic and accepts the follwing optins:
- env: the current evironment. Defatuls to
process.env.NODE_ENV
If env
is either 'dev' or 'test' the lib will not load the included newrelic module saving devs from anoying errors ;)
winston-papertrail is a Papertrail transport:
const { Papertrail } = require('winston-papertrail');
logger.add(new Papertrail(options));
The Papertrail transport connects to a PapertrailApp log destination over TCP (TLS) using the following options:
- level: Level of messages this transport should log. (default: info)
- host: FQDN or IP address of the Papertrail endpoint.
- port: Port for the Papertrail log destination.
- hostname: The hostname associated with messages. (default: require('os').hostname())
- program: The facility to send log messages.. (default: default)
- logFormat: a log formatting function with the signature
function(level, message)
, which allows custom formatting of the level or message prior to delivery
Metadata: Logged as a native JSON object to the 'meta' attribute of the item.
@pauleliet/winston-pg-native is a PostgresQL transport supporting Winston 3.X.
winston-pusher is a Pusher transport.
const { PusherLogger } = require('winston-pusher');
logger.add(new PusherLogger(options));
This transport sends the logs to a Pusher app for real time processing and it uses the following options:
- pusher [Object]
- appId The application id obtained from the dashboard
- key The application key obtained from the dashboard
- secret The application secret obtained from the dashboard
- cluster The cluster
- encrypted Whether the data will be send through SSL
- channel The channel of the event (default: default)
- event The event name (default: default)
winston-transport-sentry-node is a transport for Sentry uses @sentry/node.
const Sentry = require('winston-transport-sentry-node').default;
logger.add(new Sentry({
sentry: {
dsn: 'https://******@sentry.io/12345',
},
level: 'info'
}));
This transport takes the following options:
- sentry: [Object]
- dsn: Sentry DSN or Data Source Name (default:
process.env.SENTRY_DSN
) REQUIRED - environment: The application environment (default:
process.env.SENTRY_ENVIRONMENT || process.env.NODE_ENV || 'production'
) - serverName: The application name
- debug: Turns debug mode on or off (default:
process.env.SENTRY_DEBUG || false
) - sampleRate: Sample rate as a percentage of events to be sent in the range of 0.0 to 1.0 (default:
1.0
) - maxBreadcrumbs: Total amount of breadcrumbs that should be captured (default:
100
)
- dsn: Sentry DSN or Data Source Name (default:
- level: Level of messages that this transport should log
- silent: Boolean flag indicating whether to suppress output, defaults to false
winston-seq is a transport that sends structured log events to Seq.
const { SeqTransport } = require('@datalust/winston-seq');
logger.add(new SeqTransport({
serverUrl: "https://your-seq-server:5341",
apiKey: "your-api-key",
onError: (e => { console.error(e) }),
}));
SeqTransport
is configured with the following options:
- serverUrl - the URL for your Seq server's ingestion
- apiKey - (optional) The Seq API Key to use
- onError - Callback to execute when an error occurs within the transport
The winston-simpledb transport is just as easy:
const SimpleDB = require('winston-simpledb').SimpleDB;
logger.add(new SimpleDB(options));
The SimpleDB transport takes the following options. All items marked with an asterisk are required:
- awsAccessKey:* your AWS Access Key
- secretAccessKey:* your AWS Secret Access Key
- awsAccountId:* your AWS Account Id
- domainName:* a string or function that returns the domain name to log to
- region:* the region your domain resides in
- itemName: a string ('uuid', 'epoch', 'timestamp') or function that returns the item name to log
Metadata: Logged as a native JSON object to the 'meta' attribute of the item.
winston-slack-webhook-transport is a transport that sends all log messages to the Slack chat service.
const winston = require('winston');
const SlackHook = require('winston-slack-webhook-transport');
const logger = winston.createLogger({
level: 'info',
transports: [
new SlackHook({
webhookUrl: 'https://hooks.slack.com/services/xxx/xxx/xxx'
})
]
});
logger.info('This should now appear on Slack');
This transport takes the following options:
- webhookUrl - Slack incoming webhook URL. This can be from a basic integration or a bot. REQUIRED
- channel - Slack channel to post message to.
- username - Username to post message with.
- iconEmoji - Status icon to post message with. (interchangeable with iconUrl)
- iconUrl - Status icon to post message with. (interchangeable with iconEmoji)
- formatter - Custom function to format messages with. This function accepts the info object (see Winston documentation) and must return an object with at least one of the following three keys: text (string), attachments (array of attachment objects), blocks (array of layout block objects). These will be used to structure the format of the logged Slack message. By default, messages will use the format of
[level]: [message]
with no attachments or layout blocks. - level - Level to log. Global settings will apply if this is blank.
- unfurlLinks - Enables or disables link unfurling. (Default: false)
- unfurlMedia - Enables or disables media unfurling. (Default: false)
- mrkdwn - Enables or disables
mrkdwn
formatting within attachments or layout blocks (Default: false)
The winston-better-sqlite3 transport uses better-sqlite3.
const wbs = require('winston-better-sqlite3');
logger.add(new wbs({
// path to the sqlite3 database file on the disk
db: '<name of sqlite3 database file>',
// A list of params to log
params: ['level', 'message']
}));
winston-sumologic-transport is a transport for Sumo Logic
const winston = require('winston');
const { SumoLogic } = require('winston-sumologic-transport');
logger.add(new SumoLogic(options));
Options:
- url: The Sumo Logic HTTP collector URL
winston-koa-sse is a transport that leverages on Server Sent Event. With this transport you can use your browser console to view your server logs.
winston-winlog2 is a Windows Event log transport:
const winston = require('winston');
const Winlog2 = require('winston-winlog2');
logger.add(new Winlog2(options));
The winlog2 transport uses the following options:
- name: Transport name
- eventLog: Log type (default: 'APPLICATION')
- source: Name of application which will appear in event log (default: 'node')
These transports are part of the winston
Github organization but are
actively seeking new maintainers. Interested in getting involved? Open an
issue on winston
to get the conversation started!
As of [email protected]
the CouchDB transport has been broken out into a new module: winston-couchdb.
const WinstonCouchDb = require('winston-couchdb');
logger.add(new WinstonCouchdb(options));
The Couchdb
will place your logs in a remote CouchDB database. It will also create a Design Document, _design/Logs
for later querying and streaming your logs from CouchDB. The transport takes the following options:
- host: (Default: localhost) Remote host of the HTTP logging endpoint
- port: (Default: 5984) Remote port of the HTTP logging endpoint
- db: (Default: winston) Remote URI of the HTTP logging endpoint
- auth: (Default: None) An object representing the
username
andpassword
for HTTP Basic Auth - ssl: (Default: false) Value indicating if we should us HTTPS
As of [email protected]
the Loggly transport has been broken out into a new module: winston-loggly.
const WinstonLoggly = require('winston-loggly');
logger.add(new winston.transports.Loggly(options));
The Loggly transport is based on Nodejitsu's node-loggly implementation of the Loggly API. If you haven't heard of Loggly before, you should probably read their value proposition. The Loggly transport takes the following options. Either 'inputToken' or 'inputName' is required:
- level: Level of messages that this transport should log.
- subdomain: The subdomain of your Loggly account. [required]
- auth: The authentication information for your Loggly account. [required with inputName]
- inputName: The name of the input this instance should log to.
- inputToken: The input token of the input this instance should log to.
- json: If true, messages will be sent to Loggly as JSON.
const WinstonRedis = require('winston-redis');
logger.add(new WinstonRedis(options));
This transport accepts the options accepted by the node-redis client:
- host: (Default localhost) Remote host of the Redis server
- port: (Default 6379) Port the Redis server is running on.
- auth: (Default None) Password set on the Redis server
In addition to these, the Redis transport also accepts the following options.
- length: (Default 200) Number of log messages to store.
- container: (Default winston) Name of the Redis container you wish your logs to be in.
- channel: (Default None) Name of the Redis channel to stream logs from.
As of [email protected]
the Riak transport has been broken out into a new module: winston-riak. Using it is just as easy:
const { Riak } = require('winston-riak');
logger.add(new Riak(options));
In addition to the options accepted by the riak-js client, the Riak transport also accepts the following options. It is worth noting that the riak-js debug option is set to false by default:
- level: Level of messages that this transport should log.
- bucket: The name of the Riak bucket you wish your logs to be in or a function to generate bucket names dynamically.
// Use a single bucket for all your logs
const singleBucketTransport = new Riak({ bucket: 'some-logs-go-here' });
// Generate a dynamic bucket based on the date and level
const dynamicBucketTransport = new Riak({
bucket: function (level, msg, meta, now) {
var d = new Date(now);
return level + [d.getDate(), d.getMonth(), d.getFullYear()].join('-');
}
});
There are more than 1000 packages on npm
when you search for winston
.
That's why we say it's a logger for just about everything