NAME

Log::Dispatch::Perl - Use core Perl functions for logging

SYNOPSIS

use Log::Dispatch::Perl ();

my $dispatcher = Log::Dispatch->new;
$dispatcher->add( Log::Dispatch::Perl->new(
 name      => 'foo',
 min_level => 'info',
 action    => { debug     => '',
                info      => '',
                notice    => 'warn',
                warning   => 'warn',
                error     => 'die',
                critical  => 'die',
                alert     => 'croak',
                emergency => 'croak',
              },
) );

$dispatcher->warning( "This is a warning" );

VERSION

This documentation describes version 0.04.

DESCRIPTION

The "Log::Dispatch::Perl" module offers a logging alternative using standard Perl core functions. It allows you to fall back to the common Perl alternatives for logging, such as "warn" and "cluck". It also adds the possibility for a logging action to halt the current environment, such as with "die" and "croak".

POSSIBLE ACTIONS

The following actions are currently supported (in alphabetical order):

(absent or empty string or undef)

Indicates no action should be executed. Default for log levels "debug" and "info".

carp

Indicates a "carp" action should be executed. See "carp" in Carp. Halts execution.

cluck

Indicates a "cluck" action should be executed. See "cluck" in Carp. Does not halt execution.

confess

Indicates a "confess" action should be executed. See "confess" in Carp. Halts execution.

croak

Indicates a "croak" action should be executed. See "croak" in Carp. Halts execution.

die

Indicates a "die" action should be executed. See "die" in perlfunc. Halts execution.

warn

Indicates a "warn" action should be executed. See "warn" in perlfunc. Does not halt execution.

REQUIRED MODULES

Log::Dispatch (1.16)

AUTHOR

Elizabeth Mattijsen, <liz@dijkmat.nl>.

Please report bugs to <perlbugs@dijkmat.nl>.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2004, 2012 Elizabeth Mattijsen <liz@dijkmat.nl>. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.