1. garnish
prettifies ndjson from wzrd and similar tools
garnish
Package: garnish
Created by: mattdesl
Last modified: Sat, 18 Jun 2022 04:55:04 GMT
Version: 5.2.0
License: MIT
Downloads: 51,330
Repository: https://github.com/mattdesl/garnish

Install

npm install garnish
yarn add garnish

garnish

stable

Prettifies ndjson or bole logs from budo, wzrd and other tools.

Example with budo, which uses this under the hood.

Install

 npm install garnish [-g|--save-dev]

Usage

CLI

Pipe a ndjson emitter into garnish like so:

 node app.js | garnish [opts]

Options:

    --level, -l    the minimum debug level, default 'debug'
    --name, -n     the default app name

Where level can be debug, info, warn, error.

API

garnish([opt])

Returns a duplexer that parses input as ndjson, and writes a pretty-printed result. Options:

  • level (String)
    • the minimum log level to print (default 'debug')
    • the order is as follows: debug, info, warn, error
  • name (String)
    • the default name for your logger; a message's name field will not be printed when it matches this default name, to reduce redundant/obvious information in the logs.

format

Typically, you would use bole or ndjson to write the content to garnish. You can also write ndjson to stdout like so:

 // a log message
console.log({
  name: 'myApp',
  level: 'warn',
  message: 'not found'
})

// a typical server message
console.log({
  name: 'myApp',
  type: 'generated',
  level: 'info',
  url: '/foo.png',
  statusCode: 200,
  contentLength: 12800, // in bytes
  elapsed: 120 // in milliseconds
})

Currently garnish styles the following:

  • level
    • the log level e.g. debug, info, warn, error (default debug) - only shown if message is present
  • name
    • an optional event or application name. It's recommended to always have a name.
  • message
    • an event message.
  • url
    • a url (stripped to pathname), useful for router logging.
  • statusCode
    • an HTTP statusCode. Codes >=400 are displayed in red.
  • contentLength
    • the response size; if a number, bytes are assumed
  • elapsed
    • time elapsed since the previous related event; if a number, milliseconds are assumed
  • type
    • the type of event logged
  • colors
    • an optional color mapping for custom styles

You can use the colors field to override any of the default colors with a new ANSI style.

For example, the following will print elapsed in yellow if it passes our threshold:

 function logTime (msg) {
  var now = Date.now()
  var time = now - lastTime
  lastTime = now

  console.log({
    name: 'app',
    message: msg,
    elapsed: time + ' ms',
    colors: {
      elapsed: time > 1000 ? 'yellow' : 'green'
    }
  })
}

See Also

License

MIT, see LICENSE.md for details.

RELATED POST

10 Must-Know Windows Shortcuts That Will Save You Time

10 Must-Know Windows Shortcuts That Will Save You Time

Arrays vs Linked Lists: Which is Better for Memory Management in Data Structures?

Arrays vs Linked Lists: Which is Better for Memory Management in Data Structures?

Navigating AWS Networking: Essential Hacks for Smooth Operation

Navigating AWS Networking: Essential Hacks for Smooth Operation

Achieving Stunning Visuals with Unity's Global Illumination

Achieving Stunning Visuals with Unity's Global Illumination

Nim's Hidden Gems: Lesser-known Features for Writing Efficient Code

Nim's Hidden Gems: Lesser-known Features for Writing Efficient Code