maku_at
maku_at

Reputation: 1689

How to use nestjs Logging service

I tried to use the internal Logger of nestjs (described on https://docs.nestjs.com/techniques/logger -> but with no description of how to use it)

But I had problems (tried to inject LoggerService and so on)

Can anybody explain how to do this?

Upvotes: 76

Views: 134069

Answers (8)

here is a simple usage of nestJs internal Logger:

import { Logger } from '@nestjs/common';

export abstract class TestLogger {
  protected abstract readonly logger: Logger;

  async testLogger(){
    this.logger.warn(
      'Document was not found with filterQuery: '
    );
  }
}

for more complex usage and setup guide you can visit this article:

Implementing Nest JS Default Logger in your Application

Upvotes: 0

Ross Motley
Ross Motley

Reputation: 229

My approach to this is to use an AppLogger service via the NestJS DI, which wraps the NestJS logger. This means:

  • We can easily change/mock the implementation of AppLogger in unit tests (which is a pain with the private readonly logger = new Logger(AppController.name); approach)
  • Our code depends on our own classes/interfaces instead of the NestJS ones, in the sprit of Hexagonal Architecture.

It looks like:

@Injectable()
export class MyService {
  constructor(private readonly logger: AppLogger) {}

  doSomething() {
    this.logger.log('Did something.', MyService.name);
  }
}

@Global()
@Module({
  imports: [],
  controllers: [],
  providers: [
    AppLogger,
    Logger,
  ],
  exports: [AppLogger],
})
export class ConfigModule {}
import { Injectable, Logger } from '@nestjs/common';

@Injectable()
export class AppLogger {
  constructor(private readonly logger: Logger) {}

  error(message: any, context: string) {
    this.logger.error(message, context);
  }

  warn(message: any, context: string) {
    this.logger.warn(message, context);
  }

  log(message: any, context: string) {
    this.logger.log(message, context);
  }

  debug(message: any, context: string) {
    this.logger.debug(message, context);
  }

  verbose(message: any, context: string) {
    this.logger.verbose(message, context);
  }
}

Upvotes: 2

Anush
Anush

Reputation: 191

Simply you can use logger for your requirement(for error, for warn).This is the sample code for it.

import {Logger, Injectable} from '@nestjs/common';

@Injectable()
export class EmployersService {
 private readonly logger = new Logger(EmployersService.name);

 findAll() {
  this.logger.log('info message'); //for info
  this.logger.warn('warn message'); //for warn
  this.logger.error('error message'); //for error
 }
}

then output: enter image description here

Upvotes: 3

Adrian H
Adrian H

Reputation: 315

Best practice is to inject the existing logger.

app.module.ts

import { Logger, Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { AppController } from './app.controller';
import { AppService } from './app.service';

@Module({
  imports: [],
  controllers: [AppController],
  providers: [AppService, Logger],
})
export class AppModule {}

And in the app.service.ts

import { Injectable, Logger } from '@nestjs/common';

@Injectable()
export class AppService {
  constructor(private readonly logger: Logger) {}

  sayHello() {
    this.logger.log('Hello world!') 
  }
}

Upvotes: 10

Kim Kern
Kim Kern

Reputation: 60567

Best practice

Better than accessing the Logger statically is to create an instance for your class:

@Controller()
export class AppController {
  private readonly logger = new Logger(AppController.name);

  @Get()
  async get() {
    this.logger.log('Getting stuff');
  }
}

Why is this better?

  1. You can provide a context in the constructor like new Logger(AppController.name) so that the class name (or anything else) will be part of all log messages in this class.

  2. If you at some point want to extend or replace the default LoggerService, you do not need to change any of your application code besides setting the new logger. Your new logger will automatically be used. If you access it statically it will continue to take the default implementation.

const app = await NestFactory.create(AppModule, {logger: new MyLogger()});
  1. You can mock the Logger in your tests:
module.useLogger(new NoOpLogger());

Upvotes: 187

vijayakumarpsg587
vijayakumarpsg587

Reputation: 1177

This answer might be useful for others who are trying with CustomLogger Implementation. I am trying to show a sample custom logger implementation and how it can be injected to the Nestjs framework.

I understand that Nestjs inherently uses pino logger. This is just a custom implementation of logger service (which you can replace with bunyan, winston, etc..) This is the folder structure I use:

> src /  
>   modules /
>      database /
>        ...
>        database.module.ts
>      api /
>        services /
>        controllers /
>        interceptors /
>        middlewares /
>        models /
>        schemas /
>      shared /
>        services /
>           app.util.service.ts
>           pino.logger.service.ts
>        utils / 
>        interceptors /
>        filters /
>        main.ts    
>        app.controller.ts    
>        app.service.ts
>        server.util.service.ts 

This is the main gist of it. So the logger service is implemented as follows

import {Injectable, LoggerService, Scope} from "@nestjs/common";
import * as pino from 'pino';
import {AppUtilService} from "./app.util.service";
import * as os from "os";
import {APP_LOG_REDACT, APP_MESSAGE_KEY} from "../utils/app.constants";

    @Injectable({
        scope: Scope.DEFAULT
    })
    export class PinoLoggerService implements LoggerService{
        constructor(private appUtilService: AppUtilService) {

        }

        logService = (fileNameString): pino.Logger => {
            return pino({
                useLevelLabels: true,
                prettyPrint: this.appUtilService.isDevEnv(),
                // tslint:disable-next-line: object-literal-sort-keys
                messageKey: APP_MESSAGE_KEY,
                level: this.appUtilService.getLogLevel(),
                redact: {
                    paths: APP_LOG_REDACT,
                    censor: '**SECRET-INFO**'
                },
                base: {
                    hostName: os.hostname(),
                    platform: os.platform(),
                    processId: process.pid,
                    timestamp: this.appUtilService.getCurrentLocaleTimeZone(),
                    // tslint:disable-next-line: object-literal-sort-keys
                    fileName: this.appUtilService.getFileName(fileNameString),
                },
            });
        }

        debug(message: any, context?: string): any {
        }

        error(message: any, trace?: string, context?: string): any {
        }

        log(message: any, context?: string): any {
        }

        warn(message: any, context?: string): any {
        }

    }

The custom implementation is implemented with the my specific options in pinojs github I am using fastifyjs instead of express (again to match my prject needs). So I've added the logger in fastify js server options. If you are using express, its better to specify the new custom implementation in the Nest application Adapter as stated above.

My util service that takes care of implementing the fastify server

import * as fastify from "fastify";
import {Http2Server, Http2ServerRequest, Http2ServerResponse} from "http2";
import {DocumentBuilder, SwaggerModule} from "@nestjs/swagger";
import * as fs from "fs";
import * as path from "path";
import * as uuid from "uuid";
import * as qs from "query-string";
import {PinoLoggerService} from "./modules/shared/services/pino.logger.service";
import {AppUtilService} from "./modules/shared/services/app.util.service";
import {AppConstantsService} from "./modules/shared/services/app.constants.service";
import {AppModel} from "./modules/shared/model/app.model";
import {Reflector} from "@nestjs/core";
export class ServerUtilService {
    private logService;
    private appConstantsService;
    private appUtilServiceInstance: AppUtilService;
    private fastifyInstance: fastify.FastifyInstance<Http2Server, Http2ServerRequest, Http2ServerResponse>;
    constructor() {
        this.appUtilServiceInstance = new AppUtilService();
        this.logService = new PinoLoggerService(this.appUtilServiceInstance);
        this.appConstantsService = new AppConstantsService(this.appUtilServiceInstance);
    }

    retrieveAppConstants(): AppModel {
        return this.appConstantsService.getServerConstants();
    }

    retrieveAppUtilService(): AppUtilService {
        return this.appConstantsService;
    }
    createFastifyServerInstance = (): fastify.FastifyInstance<Http2Server, Http2ServerRequest, Http2ServerResponse> => {
        const serverConstants = this.appConstantsService.getServerConstants();
        const httpsOptions = {
            cert: fs.readFileSync(path.join(process.cwd() + '/https-keys/cert.pem')),
            key: fs.readFileSync(path.join(process.cwd() + '/https-keys/key.pem')),

            allowHTTP1: true,
            rejectUnauthorized: true,
        };
        this.fastifyInstance = fastify({

            http2: true,
            https: httpsOptions,
            bodyLimit: 26214400,
            pluginTimeout: 20000,
            genReqId: () => {
                return uuid.v4().toString();
            },
            requestIdHeader: serverConstants.requestIdHeader,
            modifyCoreObjects: true,
            trustProxy: serverConstants.trustProxy,
            ignoreTrailingSlash: true,
            logger: this.logService,
            querystringParser: (str) => {
                return qs.parse(str);
            },
        });
        this.addContentTypeParser();
        return this.fastifyInstance;
    };

    private addContentTypeParser() {
        this.fastifyInstance.addContentTypeParser('*', (req, done) => {
            let data = '';
            req.on('data', chunk => {
                console.log('inside data listener event');
                return data += chunk; });
            req.on('end', () => {
                done(null,data);
            })
        });
    }


}
export const ServerUtilServiceInstance = new ServerUtilService();

And in my main.ts

async function bootstrap() {
  const fastifyServerInstance = 
  ServerUtilServiceInstance.createFastifyServerInstance();
  const serverConstants = ServerUtilServiceInstance.retrieveAppConstants();
  const app: NestFastifyApplication = await NestFactory.create<NestFastifyApplication>(
      AppModule,
      new FastifyAdapter(fastifyServerInstance)
  );
    ....
    ... // global filters, interceptors, pipes
    ....
    await app.listen(serverConstants.port, '0.0.0.0');

}

Upvotes: 5

Dani Mach
Dani Mach

Reputation: 511

You need to import first into your class:

import { Logger } from '@nestjs/common';

and then you can begin with logging:

Logger.log('info')
Logger.warn('warning')
Logger.error('something went wrong! ', error)

Upvotes: 40

maku_at
maku_at

Reputation: 1689

The answer is simple. There are static methods on the Logger class.

e.g.

static log(message: string, context = '', isTimeDiffEnabled = true) 

Usage:

Logger.log('Only a test');

Upvotes: 3

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