The LogSubscriber logs HTTP requests and responses to a
PSR-3 logger, callable, resource returned
by fopen()
, or by calling echo()
.
Here's the simplest example of how it's used:
use GuzzleHttp\Client;
use GuzzleHttp\Subscriber\Log\LogSubscriber;
$client = new Client();
$client->getEmitter()->attach(new LogSubscriber());
$client->get('http://httpbin.org');
Running the above example will echo a message using the Apache Common Log Format (CLF).
[info] hostname Guzzle/5.0 curl/7.21.4 PHP/5.5.7 - [2014-03-01T22:48:13+00:00] "GET / HTTP/1.1" 200 7641
Note
Because no logger is provided, the subscriber simply logs messages with
echo()
. This is the method used for logging if null
is provided.
This project can be installed using Composer. Add the following to your composer.json:
{
"require": {
"guzzlehttp/log-subscriber": "~1.0"
}
}
You can provide a PSR-3 logger to the constructor as well. The following example shows how the LogSubscriber can be combined with Monolog.
use GuzzleHttp\Client;
use GuzzleHttp\Subscriber\Log\LogSubscriber;
use Monolog\Logger;
use Monolog\Handler\StreamHandler;
// create a log channel
$log = new Logger('name');
$log->pushHandler(new StreamHandler('/path/to/your.log', Logger::WARNING));
$client = new Client();
$subscriber = new LogSubscriber($log);
$client->getEmitter()->attach($subscriber);
The LogSubscriber's constructor accepts a logger as the first argument and a
message format string or a message formatter as the second argument. You could
log the full HTTP request and Response message using the debug format via
GuzzleHttp\Subscriber\Log\Formatter::DEBUG
.
use GuzzleHttp\Subscriber\Log\LogSubscriber;
use GuzzleHttp\Subscriber\Log\Formatter;
// Log the full request and response messages using echo() calls.
$subscriber = new LogSubscriber(null, Formatter::DEBUG);
Included in this repository is a message formatter. The message formatter is
used to format log messages for both requests and responses using a log
template that uses variable substitution for string enclosed in braces
({}
).
The following variables are available in message formatter templates:
- {request}
- Full HTTP request message
- {response}
- Full HTTP response message
- {ts}
- Timestamp
- {host}
- Host of the request
- {method}
- Method of the request
- {url}
- URL of the request
- {protocol}
- Request protocol
- {version}
- Protocol version
- {resource}
- Resource of the request (path + query + fragment)
- {hostname}
- Hostname of the machine that sent the request
- {code}
- Status code of the response (if available)
- {phrase}
- Reason phrase of the response (if available)
- {error}
- Any error messages (if available)
- {req_header_*}
- Replace
*
with the lowercased name of a request header to add to the message. - {res_header_*}
- Replace
*
with the lowercased name of a response header to add to the message - {req_headers}
- Request headers as a string.
- {res_headers}
- Response headers as a string.
- {req_body}
- Request body as a string.
- {res_body}
- Response body as a string.