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# Help
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* [Exit logging](#exit-logging)
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* [Log rotation](#rotate)
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* [Reopening log files](#reopening)
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* [Saving to multiple files](#multiple)
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* [Log filtering](#filter-logs)
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* [Transports and systemd](#transport-systemd)
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* [Duplicate keys](#dupe-keys)
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* [Log levels as labels instead of numbers](#level-string)
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* [Pino with `debug`](#debug)
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* [Unicode and Windows terminal](#windows)
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<a id="exit-logging"></a>
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## Exit logging
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When a Node process crashes from uncaught exception, exits due to a signal,
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or exits of it's own accord we may want to write some final logs – particularly
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in cases of error.
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Writing to a Node.js stream on exit is not necessarily guaranteed, and naively writing
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to an Extreme Mode logger on exit will definitely lead to lost logs.
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To write logs in an exit handler, create the handler with [`pino.final`](/docs/api.md#pino-final):
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```js
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process.on('uncaughtException', pino.final(logger, (err, finalLogger) => {
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finalLogger.error(err, 'uncaughtException')
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process.exit(1)
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}))
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process.on('unhandledRejection', pino.final(logger, (err, finalLogger) => {
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finalLogger.error(err, 'unhandledRejection')
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process.exit(1)
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}))
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```
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The `finalLogger` is a special logger instance that will synchronously and reliably
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flush every log line. This is important in exit handlers, since no more asynchronous
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activity may be scheduled.
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<a id="rotate"></a>
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## Log rotation
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Use a separate tool for log rotation:
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We recommend [logrotate](https://github.com/logrotate/logrotate).
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Consider we output our logs to `/var/log/myapp.log` like so:
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```
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$ node server.js > /var/log/myapp.log
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```
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We would rotate our log files with logrotate, by adding the following to `/etc/logrotate.d/myapp`:
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```
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/var/log/myapp.log {
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su root
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daily
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rotate 7
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delaycompress
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compress
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notifempty
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missingok
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copytruncate
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}
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```
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The `copytruncate` configuration has a very slight possibility of lost log lines due
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to a gap between copying and truncating - the truncate may occur after additional lines
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have been written. To perform log rotation without `copytruncate`, see the [Reopening log files](#reopening)
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help.
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<a id="reopening"></a>
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## Reopening log files
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In cases where a log rotation tool doesn't offer a copy-truncate capabilities,
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or where using them is deemed inappropriate `pino.destination` and `pino.extreme`
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destinations are able to reopen file paths after a file has been moved away.
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One way to use this is to set up a `SIGUSR2` or `SIGHUP` signal handler that
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reopens the log file destination, making sure to write the process PID out
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somewhere so the log rotation tool knows where to send the signal.
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```js
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// write the process pid to a well known location for later
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const fs = require('fs')
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fs.writeFileSync('/var/run/myapp.pid', process.pid)
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const dest = pino.destination('/log/file') // pino.extreme will also work
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const logger = require('pino')(dest)
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process.on('SIGHUP', () => dest.reopen())
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```
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The log rotation tool can then be configured to send this signal to the process
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after a log rotation event has occurred.
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Given a similar scenario as in the [Log rotation](#rotate) section a basic
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`logrotate` config that aligns with this strategy would look similar to the following:
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```
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/var/log/myapp.log {
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su root
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daily
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rotate 7
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delaycompress
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compress
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notifempty
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missingok
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postrotate
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kill -HUP `cat /var/run/myapp.pid`
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endscript
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}
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```
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<a id="multiple"></a>
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## Saving to multiple files
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Let's assume we want to store all error messages to a separate log file.
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Install [pino-tee](http://npm.im/pino-tee) with:
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```bash
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npm i pino-tee -g
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```
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The following writes the log output of `app.js` to `./all-logs`, while
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writing only warnings and errors to `./warn-log:
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```bash
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node app.js | pino-tee warn ./warn-logs > ./all-logs
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```
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<a id="filter-logs"></a>
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## Log Filtering
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The Pino philosophy advocates common, pre-existing, system utilities.
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Some recommendations in line with this philosophy are:
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1. Use [`grep`](https://linux.die.net/man/1/grep):
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```sh
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$ # View all "INFO" level logs
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$ node app.js | grep '"level":30'
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```
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1. Use [`jq`](https://stedolan.github.io/jq/):
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```sh
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$ # View all "ERROR" level logs
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$ node app.js | jq 'select(.level == 50)'
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```
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<a id="transport-systemd"></a>
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## Transports and systemd
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`systemd` makes it complicated to use pipes in services. One method for overcoming
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this challenge is to use a subshell:
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```
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ExecStart=/bin/sh -c '/path/to/node app.js | pino-transport'
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```
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<a id="dupe-keys"></a>
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## How Pino handles duplicate keys
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Duplicate keys are possibly when a child logger logs an object with a key that
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collides with a key in the child loggers bindings.
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See the [child logger duplicate keys caveat](/docs/child-loggers.md#duplicate-keys-caveat)
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for information on this is handled.
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<a id="level-string"></a>
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## Log levels as labels instead of numbers
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Pino log lines are meant to be parseable. Thus, Pino's default mode of operation
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is to print the level value instead of the string name. However, while it is
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possible to set the `useLevelLabels` option, we recommend using one of these
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options instead if you are able:
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1. If the only change desired is the name then a transport can be used. One such
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transport is [`pino-text-level-transport`](https://npm.im/pino-text-level-transport).
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1. Use a prettifier like [`pino-pretty`](https://npm.im/pino-pretty) to make
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the logs human friendly.
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<a id="debug"></a>
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## Pino with `debug`
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The popular [`debug`](http://npm.im/debug) is used in many modules across the ecosystem.
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The [`pino-debug`](http://github.com/pinojs/pino-debug) module
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can capture calls to `debug` loggers and run them
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through `pino` instead. This results in a 10x (20x in extreme mode)
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performance improvement - even though `pino-debug` is logging additional
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data and wrapping it in JSON.
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To quickly enable this install [`pino-debug`](http://github.com/pinojs/pino-debug)
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and preload it with the `-r` flag, enabling any `debug` logs with the
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`DEBUG` environment variable:
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```sh
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$ npm i pino-debug
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$ DEBUG=* node -r pino-debug app.js
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```
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[`pino-debug`](http://github.com/pinojs/pino-debug) also offers fine grain control to map specific `debug`
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namespaces to `pino` log levels. See [`pino-debug`](http://github.com/pinojs/pino-debug)
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for more.
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<a id="windows"></a>
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## Unicode and Windows terminal
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Pino uses [sonic-boom](https://github.com/mcollina/sonic-boom) to speed
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up logging. Internally, it uses [`fs.write`](https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v10.x/docs/api/fs.html#fs_fs_write_fd_string_position_encoding_callback) to write log lines directly to a file
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descriptor. On Windows, unicode output is not handled properly in the
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terminal (both `cmd.exe` and powershell), and as such the output could
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be visualized incorrectly if the log lines include utf8 characters. It
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is possible to configure the terminal to visualize those characters
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correctly with the use of [`chcp`](https://ss64.com/nt/chcp.html) by
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executing in the terminal `chcp 65001`. This is a known limitation of
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Node.js.
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