NAME

Dancer::Logger::LogReport - reroute Dancer logs into Log::Report

SYNOPSIS

# When your main program is not a Dancer object
use My::Dancer::App;
use Log::Report;
... start dispatcher ...
error "something is wrong";   # Log::Report::error()

# When your main program is a Dancer object
use Dancer;
use Dancer::Logger::LogReport;
use Log::Report import => 'dispatcher';
... start dispatcher ...
error "something is wrong";   # Dancer::error()

# In any case, your main program needs to start log dispatcers
# Both Dancer and other Log::Report based modules will send
# their messages here:
dispatcher FILE => 'default', ...;

# In your config
logger: log_report
logger_format: %i%m   # keep it simple
log: debug            # filtered by dispatchers

DESCRIPTION

The Log::Report exception/translation framework defines a large number of logging back-ends. The same log messages can be sent to multiple destinations at the same time via flexible dispatchers. When you use this logger in your Dancer application, it will nicely integrate with non-Dancer modules which need logging.

Many log back-ends, like syslog, have more levels of system messages. Modules who explicitly load this module can use the missing assert, notice, panic, and alert log levels. The trace name is provided as well: when you are debugging, you add a 'trace' to your program... its just a better name than 'debug'.

You probably want to set a very simple logger_format, because the dispatchers do already add some of the fields that the default simple format adds. For instance, to get the filename/line-number in messages depends on the dispatcher 'mode' (f.i. 'DEBUG').

You also want to set the log level to debug, because level filtering is controlled per dispatcher (as well)

SEE ALSO

This module is part of Log-Report distribution version 1.39, built on September 09, 2024. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/CPAN/

LICENSE

Copyrights 2007-2024 by [Mark Overmeer <markov@cpan.org>]. For other contributors see ChangeLog.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/