midweste / simplelogger
SimpleLogger is a collection of very simple loggers implementing \Psr\Log\LoggerInterface (PSR-3)
Requires
- php: >=5.4
- psr/log: ^1.0.0
Provides
- psr/log-implementation: 1.0.0
This package is auto-updated.
Last update: 2024-10-18 06:43:27 UTC
README
SimpleLogger is a collection of very simple logger classes for PHP 5.4 implementing \Psr\Log\LoggerInterface (PSR-3), the common logger interface standardized by the PHP Framework Interop Group (www.php-fig.org).
SimpleLogger is intended for small projects or testing purposes if you don't need a full-featured logging solution like Monolog.
If you just need to output a few log messages in a small PHP project but want to stick to the PSR-3 standard this package is for you. When your project grows you can simply replace it by a more advanced logging solution like Monolog.
Loggers
-
\Midweste\SimpleLogger\EchoLogger: Just echo the log message
-
\Midweste\SimpleLogger\FileLogger: Log to a file
-
\Midweste\SimpleLogger\ArrayLogger: Keep log messages in an array for later use (e.g. display it to the user)
-
\Midweste\SimpleLogger\SessionLogger: Keep log messages in a session for later use (e.g. display it to the user on another page)
-
\Midweste\SimpleLogger\ConsoleLogger: Log to the Symfony2 console => DEPRECATED: use
Symfony\Component\Console\Logger\ConsoleLogger
instead
Installation
composer require midweste/simplelogger
Usage
$logger = new \Midweste\SimpleLogger\FileLogger('/path/to/logfile'); $logger->info('This is the first log message');
NEW: it's now possible to set a minimum log level in the constructor of FileLogger, EchoLogger and ArrayLogger:
$logger = new \Midweste\SimpleLogger\FileLogger('/path/to/logfile', \Psr\Log\LogLevel::ERROR); $logger->info('This is the first log message'); // this message will be discarded $logger->error('This is an error message'); // this message will be logged
In one of my projects there was a "fetcher" class that fetched some information from a web service. It needed to log whether this fetch was successfull or not and how many data it fetched. It could be invoked either from the command line, by a background task, or by a user in the admin web page of the application. This was the use case for three logger classes:
-
the fetcher class itself just logs to any PSR-3 compliant logger
-
if called from a background task (cronjob), it is given a FileLogger
-
if called from the command line, it is given a ConsoleLogger
-
if called from the web interface, it is given an ArrayLogger. The output of this logger is then displayed to the user on the web page.