Log::Any::Adapter::Development - Manual for developing new Log::Any adapters
version 1.717
The adapter module:
package Log::Any::Adapter::YAL;
use strict;
use warnings;
use Log::Any::Adapter::Util ();
use base qw(Log::Any::Adapter::Base);
# Optionally initialize object, e.g. for delegation
#
sub init {
my ($self) = @_;
$self->{attr} = ...;
}
# Create logging methods: debug, info, etc.
#
foreach my $method ( Log::Any::Adapter::Util::logging_methods() ) {
no strict 'refs';
*$method = sub { ... };
}
# or, support structured logging instead
sub structured {
my ($self, $level, $category, @args) = @_;
# ... process and log all @args
}
# Create detection methods: is_debug, is_info, etc.
#
foreach my $method ( Log::Any::Adapter::Util::detection_methods() ) {
no strict 'refs';
*$method = sub { ... };
}
and the application:
Log::Any->set_adapter('YAL');
This document describes how to implement a new Log::Any adapter.
The easiest way to start is to look at the source of existing adapters, such as Log::Any::Adapter::Log4perl and Log::Any::Adapter::Dispatch.
If you are going to publicly release your adapter, call it 'Log::Any::Adapter::something' so that users can use it with
Log::Any->set_adapter(I<something>);
If it's an internal driver, you can call it whatever you like and use it like
Log::Any->set_adapter('+My::Log::Adapter');
All adapters must directly or indirectly inherit from Log::Any::Adapter::Base.
Log::Any supports the following log levels:
If the logging mechanism used by your adapter supports different levels, it's your responsibility to map them appropriately when you implement the logging and detection methods described below. For example, if your mechanism only supports "debug", "normal" and "fatal" levels, you might map the levels like this:
The constructor (new
) is provided by Log::Any::Adapter::Base. It will:
At this point, overriding the default constructor is not supported. Hopefully it will not be needed.
The constructor is called whenever a log object is requested. e.g. If the application initializes Log::Any like so:
Log::Any->set_adapter('Log::YAL', yal_object => $yal, depth => 3);
and then a class requests a logger like so:
package Foo;
use Log::Any qw($log);
Then $log
will be populated with the return value of:
Log::Any::Adapter::Yal->new(yal_object => $yal, depth => 3, category => 'Foo');
This is memoized, so if the same category should be requested again (e.g. through a separate get_logger
call, the same object will be returned. Therefore, you should try to avoid anything non-deterministic in your "init" function.
The following methods have no default implementation, and MUST be defined by your subclass, unless your adapter supports "Structured logging":
These methods must log a message at the specified level.
To help generate these methods programmatically, you can get a list of the sub names with the Log::Any::Adapter::Util::logging_methods function.
The following methods have no default implementation, and MUST be defined by your subclass:
These methods must return a boolean indicating whether the specified level is active, i.e. whether the adapter is listening for messages of that level.
To help generate these methods programmatically, you can get a list of the sub names with the Log::Any::Adapter::Util::detection_methods function.
Your adapter can choose to receive structured data instead of a string. In this case, instead of implementing all the "Logging methods", you define a single method called structured
. The method receives the log level, the category, and all arguments that were passed to the logging function, so be prepared to not only handle strings, but also hashrefs, arrayrefs, coderefs, etc.
Aliases (e.g. "err" for "error") are handled by Log::Any::Proxy and will call the corresponding real name in your adapter class. You do not need to implement them in your adapter.
The following methods have no default implementation but MAY be provided by your subclass:
This is called after the adapter object is created and blessed into your class. Perform any necessary validation or initialization here. For example, you would use init
to create a logging object for delegation, or open a file or socket, etc.
The following Log::Any::Adapter::Base method may be useful for defining adapters via delegation:
Handle the specified $method
by calling $adapter_method
on the object contained in $self->{$slot}
.
See Log::Any::Adapter::Dispatch and Log::Any::Adapter::Log4perl for examples of usage.
The following Log::Any::Adapter::Util functions give you a list of methods that you need to implement. You can get logging methods, detection methods or both:
Jonathan Swartz <swartz@pobox.com>
David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>
Doug Bell <preaction@cpan.org>
Daniel Pittman <daniel@rimspace.net>
Stephen Thirlwall <sdt@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2017 by Jonathan Swartz, David Golden, and Doug Bell.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.