1CGI::Application::PlugiUns:e:rLoCgoDnitsrpiabtucthe(d3C)PGeIr:l:ADpopcluimceanttiaotni:o:nPlugin::LogDispatch(3)
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6 CGI::Application::Plugin::LogDispatch - Add Log::Dispatch support to
7 CGI::Application
8
10 package My::App;
11
12 use CGI::Application::Plugin::LogDispatch;
13
14 sub cgiapp_init {
15 my $self = shift;
16
17 # calling log_config is optional as
18 # some simple defaults will be used
19 $self->log_config(
20 LOG_DISPATCH_MODULES => [
21 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::File',
22 name => 'debug',
23 filename => '/tmp/debug.log',
24 min_level => 'debug',
25 },
26 ]
27 );
28 }
29
30 sub myrunmode {
31 my $self = shift;
32
33 $self->log->info('Information message');
34 $self->log->debug('Debug message');
35 }
36
37 - or as a class based singleton -
38
39 package My::App;
40
41 use CGI::Application::Plugin::LogDispatch (
42 LOG_DISPATCH_MODULES => [
43 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::File',
44 name => 'debug',
45 filename => '/tmp/debug.log',
46 min_level => 'debug',
47 },
48 ]
49 );
50
51 My::App->log->info('Information message');
52
53 sub myrunmode {
54 my $self = shift;
55
56 $self->log->info('This also works');
57 }
58
60 CGI::Application::Plugin::LogDispatch adds logging support to your
61 CGI::Application modules by providing a Log::Dispatch dispatcher object
62 that is accessible from anywhere in the application.
63
64 If you have CGI::Application::Plugin::DevPopup installed, a "Log
65 Entries" report is added to the popup window, containing all of the
66 entries that were logged during the execution of the runmode.
67
69 log
70 This method will return the current Log::Dispatch dispatcher object.
71 The Log::Dispatch object is created on the first call to this method,
72 and any subsequent calls will return the same object. This effectively
73 creates a singleton log dispatcher for the duration of the request. If
74 "log_config" has not been called before the first call to "log", then
75 it will choose some sane defaults to create the dispatcher object (the
76 exact default values are defined below).
77
78 # retrieve the log object
79 my $log = $self->log;
80 $log->warning("something's not right!");
81 $log->emergency("It's all gone pear shaped!");
82
83 - or -
84
85 # use the log object directly
86 $self->log->debug(Data::Dumper::Dumper(\%hash));
87
88 - or -
89
90 # if you configured it as a singleton
91 My::App->log->debug('This works too');
92
93 log_config
94 This method can be used to customize the functionality of the
95 CGI::Application::Plugin::LogDispatch module. Calling this method does
96 not mean that a new Log::Dispatch object will be immediately created.
97 The log object will not be created until the first call to $self->log.
98
99 The recommended place to call "log_config" is in the "cgiapp_init"
100 stage of CGI::Application. If this method is called after the log
101 object has already been accessed, then it will die with an error
102 message.
103
104 If this method is not called at all then a reasonable set of defaults
105 will be used (the exact default values are defined below).
106
107 The following parameters are accepted:
108
109 LOG_DISPATCH_OPTIONS
110 This allows you to customize how the Log::Dispatch object is
111 created by providing a hash of options that will be passed to the
112 Log::Dispatch constructor. Please see the documentation for
113 Log::Dispatch for the exact syntax of the parameters. Surprisingly
114 enough you will usually not need to use this option, instead look
115 at the LOG_DISPATCH_MODULES option.
116
117 LOG_DISPATCH_OPTIONS => {
118 callbacks => sub { my %h = @_; return time().': '.$h{message}; },
119 }
120
121 LOG_DISPATCH_MODULES
122 This option allows you to specify the Log::Dispatch::* modules that
123 you wish to use to log messages. You can list multiple dispatch
124 modules, each with their own set of options. Format the options in
125 an array of hashes, where each hash contains the options for the
126 Log::Dispatch:: module you are configuring and also include a
127 'module' parameter containing the name of the dispatch module. See
128 below for an example. You can also add an 'append_newline' option
129 to automatically append a newline to each log entry for this
130 dispatch module (this option is not needed if you already specified
131 the APPEND_NEWLINE option listed below which will add a newline for
132 all dispatch modules).
133
134 LOG_DISPATCH_MODULES => [
135 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::File',
136 name => 'messages',
137 filename => '/tmp/messages.log',
138 min_level => 'info',
139 append_newline => 1
140 },
141 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSend',
142 name => 'email',
143 to => [ qw(foo@bar.com bar@baz.org ) ],
144 subject => 'Oh No!!!!!!!!!!',
145 min_level => 'emerg'
146 }
147 ]
148
149 APPEND_NEWLINE
150 By default Log::Dispatch does not append a newline to the end of
151 the log messages. By setting this option to a true value, a
152 newline character will automatically be added to the end of the log
153 message.
154
155 APPEND_NEWLINE => 1
156
157 LOG_METHOD_EXECUTION (EXPERIMENTAL)
158 This option will allow you to log the execution path of your
159 program. Set LOG_METHOD_EXECUTION to a list of all the modules you
160 want to be logged. This will automatically send a debug message at
161 the start and end of each method/function that is called in the
162 modules you listed. The parameters passed, and the return value
163 will also be logged. This can be useful by tracing the program
164 flow in the logfile without having to resort to the debugger.
165
166 LOG_METHOD_EXECUTION => [qw(__PACKAGE__ CGI::Application CGI)],
167
168 WARNING: This hasn't been heavily tested, although it seems to
169 work fine for me. Also, a closure is created around the log
170 object, so some care may need to be taken when using this in a
171 persistent environment like mod_perl. This feature depends on the
172 Sub::WrapPackages module.
173
174 DEFAULT OPTIONS
175 The following example shows what options are set by default (ie this is
176 what you would get if you do not call log_config). A single
177 Log::Dispatch::Screen module that writes error messages to STDERR with
178 a minimum log level of debug.
179
180 $self->log_config(
181 LOG_DISPATCH_MODULES => [
182 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::Screen',
183 name => 'screen',
184 stderr => 1,
185 min_level => 'debug',
186 append_newline => 1
187 }
188 ],
189 );
190
191 Here is a more customized example that uses two file appenders, and an
192 email gateway. Here all debug messages are sent to /tmp/debug.log, and
193 all messages above are sent to /tmp/messages.log. Also, any emergency
194 messages are emailed to foo@bar.com and bar@baz.org.
195
196 $self->log_config(
197 LOG_DISPATCH_MODULES => [
198 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::File',
199 name => 'debug',
200 filename => '/tmp/debug.log',
201 min_level => 'debug',
202 max_level => 'debug'
203 },
204 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::File',
205 name => 'messages',
206 filename => '/tmp/messages.log',
207 min_level => 'info'
208 },
209 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSend',
210 name => 'email',
211 to => [ qw(foo@bar.com bar@baz.org ) ],
212 subject => 'Oh No!!!!!!!!!!',
213 min_level => 'emerg'
214 }
215 ],
216 APPEND_NEWLINE => 1,
217 );
218
220 In a CGI::Application module:
221
222 # configure the log modules once during the init stage
223 sub cgiapp_init {
224 my $self = shift;
225
226 # Configure the session
227 $self->log_config(
228 LOG_DISPATCH_MODULES => [
229 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::File',
230 name => 'messages',
231 filename => '/tmp/messages.log',
232 min_level => 'error'
233 },
234 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSend',
235 name => 'email',
236 to => [ qw(foo@bar.com bar@baz.org ) ],
237 subject => 'Oh No!!!!!!!!!!',
238 min_level => 'emerg'
239 }
240 ],
241 APPEND_NEWLINE => 1,
242 );
243
244 }
245
246 sub cgiapp_prerun {
247 my $self = shift;
248
249 $self->log->debug("Current runmode: ".$self->get_current_runmode);
250 }
251
252 sub my_runmode {
253 my $self = shift;
254 my $log = $self->log;
255
256 if ($ENV{'REMOTE_USER'}) {
257 $log->info("user ".$ENV{'REMOTE_USER'});
258 }
259
260 # etc...
261 }
262
264 This module can be used as a singleton object. This means that when
265 the object is created, it will remain accessable for the duration of
266 the process. This can be useful in persistent environments like
267 mod_perl and PersistentPerl, since the object only has to be created
268 one time, and will remain in memory across multiple requests. It can
269 also be useful if you want to setup a DIE handler, or WARN handler,
270 since you will not have access to the $self object.
271
272 To use this module as a singleton you need to provide all configuration
273 parameters as options to the use statement. The use statement will
274 accept all the same parameters that the log_config method accepts, so
275 see the documentation above for more details.
276
277 When creating the singleton, the log object will be saved in the
278 namespace of the module that created it. The singleton will also be
279 inherited by any subclasses of this module.
280
281 NOTE: Singleton support requires the Class::ISA module which is not
282 installed automatically by this module.
283
285 package My::App;
286
287 use base qw(CGI::Application);
288 use CGI::Application::Plugin::LogDispatch(
289 LOG_DISPATCH_MODULES => [
290 { module => 'Log::Dispatch::File',
291 name => 'messages',
292 filename => '/tmp/messages.log',
293 min_level => 'error'
294 },
295 ],
296 APPEND_NEWLINE => 1,
297 );
298
299 }
300
301 sub cgiapp_prerun {
302 my $self = shift;
303
304 $self->log->debug("Current runmode: ".$self->get_current_runmode);
305 }
306
307 sub my_runmode {
308 my $self = shift;
309 my $log = $self->log;
310
311 if ($ENV{'REMOTE_USER'}) {
312 $log->info("user ".$ENV{'REMOTE_USER'});
313 }
314
315 # etc...
316 }
317
318 package My::App::Subclass;
319
320 use base qw(My::App);
321
322 # Setup a die handler that uses the logger
323 $SIG{__DIE__} = sub { My::App::Subclass->log->emerg(@_); CORE::die(@_); };
324
325 sub my_other_runmode {
326 my $self = shift;
327
328 $self->log->info("This will log to the logger configured in My::App");
329 }
330
332 Please report any bugs or feature requests to
333 "bug-cgi-application-plugin-logdispatch@rt.cpan.org", or through the
334 web interface at <http://rt.cpan.org>. I will be notified, and then
335 you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make
336 changes.
337
339 CGI::Application, Log::Dispatch, Log::Dispatch::Screen,
340 Sub::WrapPackages, perl(1)
341
343 Cees Hek <ceeshek@gmail.com>
344
346 Copyright (C) 2004 Cees Hek <ceeshek@gmail.com>
347
348 This library is free software. You can modify and or distribute it
349 under the same terms as Perl itself.
350
351
352
353perl v5.30.0 2019-C0G7I-:2:6Application::Plugin::LogDispatch(3)