Log::Dispatch::File - Object for logging to files
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Log::Dispatch::File - Object for logging to files
use Log::Dispatch::File;
my $file = Log::Dispatch::File->new( name => 'file1',
min_level => 'info',
filename => 'Somefile.log',
mode => 'append' );
$file->log( level => 'emerg', message => "I've fallen and I can't get up\n" );
This module provides a simple object for logging to files under the
Log::Dispatch::* system.
new(%p)
This method takes a hash of parameters. The following options are
valid:
- name ($)
The name of the object (not the filename!). Required.
- min_level ($)
The minimum logging level this object will accept. See the
Log::Dispatch documentation on Log Levels for more information. Required.
- max_level ($)
The maximum logging level this obejct will accept. See the
Log::Dispatch documentation on Log Levels for more information. This is not
required. By default the maximum is the highest possible level (which
means functionally that the object has no maximum).
- filename ($)
The filename to be opened for writing.
- mode ($)
The mode the file should be opened with. Valid options are 'write',
'>', 'append', '>>', or the relevant constants from Fcntl. The
default is 'write'.
- binmode ($)
A layer name to be passed to binmode, like ``:utf8'' or ``:raw''.
- close_after_write ($)
Whether or not the file should be closed after each write. This
defaults to false.
If this is true, then the mode will aways be append, so that the file
is not re-written for each new message.
- autoflush ($)
Whether or not the file should be autoflushed. This defaults to true.
- permissions ($)
If the file does not already exist, the permissions that it should
be created with. Optional. The argument passed must be a valid
octal value, such as 0600 or the constants available from Fcntl, like
S_IRUSR|S_IWUSR.
See chmod in the perlfunc manpage for more on potential traps when passing octal
values around. Most importantly, remember that if you pass a string
that looks like an octal value, like this:
my $mode = '0644';
Then the resulting file will end up with permissions like this:
--w----r-T
which is probably not what you want.
callbacks( \& or [ \&, \&, ... ] )
This parameter may be a single subroutine reference or an array
reference of subroutine references. These callbacks will be called in
the order they are given and passed a hash containing the following keys:
( message => $log_message, level => $log_level )
The callbacks are expected to modify the message and then return a
single scalar containing that modified message. These callbacks will
be called when either the log
or log_to
methods are called and
will only be applied to a given message once.
log_message( message => $ )
Sends a message to the appropriate output. Generally this shouldn't
be called directly but should be called through the log()
method
(in Log::Dispatch::Output).
Dave Rolsky, <autarch@urth.org>
Log::Dispatch::File - Object for logging to files
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