NAME

Log::Agent::Channel::File - file logging channel for Log::Agent

SYNOPSIS

require Log::Agent::Channel::File;

my $driver = Log::Agent::Channel::File->make(
    -prefix     => "prefix",
    -stampfmt   => "own",
    -showpid    => 1,
    -magic_open => 0,
    -filename   => "/tmp/output.err",
    -share      => 1,
);

DESCRIPTION

The file channel performs logging to a file, along with the necessary prefixing and stamping of the messages.

Internally, the Log::Agent::Driver::File driver creates such objects for each logging channel defined at driver creation time.

The creation routine make() takes the following arguments:

-filename => file

The file name where output should go. The file is opened in append mode and autoflushing is turned on. See also the -magic_open flag.

-magic_open => flag

When true, channel filenames beginning with '>' or '|' are opened using Perl's open(). Otherwise, sysopen() is used, in append mode.

Default is false.

-no_newline => flag

When set to true, never append any "\n" (on Unix) or "\r\n" (on Windows) to log messages.

Internally, Log::Agent relies on the channel to delimit logged lines appropriately, so this flag is not used. However, it might be useful for Log::Agent::Logger users.

Default is false, meaning newline markers are systematically appended.

-no_prefixing => flag

When set to true, disable the prefixing logic entirely, i.e. the following options are ignored completely: -prefix, -showpid, -no_ucfirst, -stampfmt.

Default is false.

-no_ucfirst => flag

When set to true, don't upper-case the first letter of the log message entry when there's no prefix inserted before the logged line. When there is a prefix, a ":" character follows, and therefore the leading letter of the message should not be upper-cased anyway.

Default is false, meaning uppercasing is performed.

-prefix => prefix

The application prefix string to prepend to messages.

-rotate => object

This sets a default logfile rotation policy. You need to install the additional Log::Agent::Rotate module to use this switch.

object is the Log::Agent::Rotate instance describing the rotating policy for the channel. Only files which are not opened via a so-called magic open can be rotated.

-share => flag

When true, this flag records the channel in a global pool indexed by filenames. An existing file handle for the same filename may be then be shared amongst several file channels.

However, you will get this message in the file

Rotation for 'filename' may be wrong (shared with distinct policies)

when a rotation policy different from the one used during the initial opening is given. Which policy will be used is unspecified, on purpose.

-showpid => flag

If set to true, the PID of the process will be appended within square brackets after the prefix, to all messages.

Default is false.

-stampfmt => (name | CODE)

Specifies the time stamp format to use. By default, my "own" format is used. See Log::Agent::Stamping for a description of the available format names.

You may also specify a CODE ref: that routine will be called every time we need to compute a time stamp. It should not expect any parameter, and should return a string.

CAVEAT

Beware of chdir(). If your program uses chdir(), you should always specify logfiles by using absolute paths, otherwise you run the risk of having your relative paths become invalid: there is no anchoring done at the time you specify them. This is especially true when configured for rotation, since the logfiles are recreated as needed and you might end up with many logfiles scattered throughout all the directories you chdir()ed to.

AUTHOR

Raphael Manfredi <Raphael_Manfredi@pobox.com>

SEE ALSO

Log::Agent::Logger(3), Log::Agent::Channel(3).