NAME

Paranoid::Log::File - File Logging Functions

VERSION

$Id: lib/Paranoid/Log/File.pm, 2.00 2016/05/13 19:42:03 acorliss Exp $

SYNOPSIS

use Paranoid::Log;

startLogger('events', 'File', PL_DEBUG, PL_GE, 
  { 
    file   => '/var/log/events.log',
    mode   => O_TRUNC | O_CREAT | O_RDWR,
    perm   => 0600,
    syslog => 1,
  });

DESCRIPTION

This provides a mechanism to log to log files. It will log arbitrarily long text, but also provides a syslog mode which limits log lines to 2048 and precedes text with the standard syslog preamble (date/time, host, process name/PID).

The only mandatory option is the file key/value pair. This module leverages Paranoid::IO's popen.

mode defaults to O_CREAT | O_APPEND | O_WRONLY.'

perm defaults to 0666 (umask still applies).

syslog defaults to false. Enabling it causes every line to be formatted akin to syslog, along with the 2048 byte limit on messages.

OPTIONS

The options recognized for use in the options hash are as follows:

Option      Value       Description
-----------------------------------------------------
file        string      file name of log file
mode        integer     file mode to open with
perm        integer     file permissions of newly 
                        created log files
syslog      boolean     enable syslog-style format

SUBROUTINES/METHODS

NOTE: Given that this module is not intended to be used directly nothing is exported.

init

logMsg

addLogger

delLogger

DEPENDENCIES

o

Fcntl

o

Paranoid::Debug

o

Paranoid::Filesystem

o

Paranoid::Input

o

Paranoid::IO

SEE ALSO

o

Paranoid::Log

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

This isn't a high performance module when dealing with a high logging rate with high concurrency. This is due to the advisory locking requirement and the seeks to the end of the file with every message. This facility is intended as a kind of lowest-common demoninator for programs that need some kind of logging capability.

AUTHOR

Arthur Corliss (corliss@digitalmages.com)

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

This software is licensed under the same terms as Perl, itself. Please see http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.

(c) 2005 - 2015, Arthur Corliss (corliss@digitalmages.com)