Programmer's Reference Guide
| Zend_Log |
Overview
Zend_Log is a component for general purpose logging. It supports multiple log backends, formatting messages sent to the log, and filtering messages from being logged. These functions are divided into the following objects:
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A Log (instance of Zend_Log) is the object that your application uses the most. You can have as many Log objects as you like; they do not interact. A Log object must contain at least one Writer, and can optionally contain one or more Filters.
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A Writer (inherits from Zend_Log_Writer_Abstract) is responsible for saving data to storage.
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A Filter (implements Zend_Log_Filter_Interface) blocks log data from being saved. A filter may be applied to an individual Writer, or to a Log where it is applied before all Writers. In either case, filters may be chained.
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A Formatter (implements Zend_Log_Formatter_Interface) can format the log data before it is written by a Writer. Each Writer has exactly one Formatter.
Creating a Log
To get started logging, instantiate a Writer and then pass it to a Log instance:
$logger = new Zend_Log();
$writer = new Zend_Log_Writer_Stream('php://output');
$logger->addWriter($writer);
addWriter() method.
Alternatively, you can pass a Writer directly to constructor of Log as a shortcut:
$writer = new Zend_Log_Writer_Stream('php://output');
$logger = new Zend_Log($writer);
Logging Messages
To log a message, call the log() method of a Log instance
and pass it the message with a corresponding priority:
$logger->log('Informational message', Zend_Log::INFO);
log() method is a string message and the second
parameter is an integer priority. The priority must be one of the priorities recognized
by the Log instance. This is explained in the next section.
A shortcut is also available. Instead of calling the log() method, you can
call a method by the same name as the priority:
$logger->log('Informational message', Zend_Log::INFO);
$logger->info('Informational message');
$logger->log('Emergency message', Zend_Log::EMERG);
$logger->emerg('Emergency message');
Destroying a Log
If the Log object is no longer needed, set the variable containing it to
null to destroy it. This will automatically call the
shutdown() instance method of each attached Writer before
the Log object is destroyed:
$logger = null;
Using Built-in Priorities
The Zend_Log class defines the following priorities:
EMERG = 0; // Emergency: system is unusable ALERT = 1; // Alert: action must be taken immediately CRIT = 2; // Critical: critical conditions ERR = 3; // Error: error conditions WARN = 4; // Warning: warning conditions NOTICE = 5; // Notice: normal but significant condition INFO = 6; // Informational: informational messages DEBUG = 7; // Debug: debug messages
The priorities are not arbitrary. They come from the BSD syslog protocol,
which is described in » RFC-3164.
The names and corresponding priority numbers are also
compatible with another PHP logging system,
» PEAR Log,
which perhaps promotes interoperability between it and Zend_Log.
Priority numbers descend in order of importance. EMERG (0)
is the most important priority. DEBUG (7) is the least
important priority of the built-in priorities. You may define priorities
of lower importance than DEBUG. When
selecting the priority for your log message, be aware of this priority
hierarchy and choose appropriately.
Adding User-defined Priorities
User-defined priorities can be added at runtime using the Log's
addPriority() method:
$logger->addPriority('FOO', 8);
FOO, whose
value is 8. The new priority is then available for logging:
$logger->log('Foo message', 8);
$logger->foo('Foo Message');
Understanding Log Events
When you call the log() method or one of its shortcuts, a
log event is created. This is simply an associative array with data
describing the event that is passed to the writers. The following keys
are always created in this array: timestamp,
message, priority, and
priorityName.
The creation of the event array is completely transparent.
However, knowledge of the event array is required for adding an
item that does not exist in the default set above.
To add a new item to every future event, call the setEventItem()
method giving a key and a value:
$logger->setEventItem('pid', getmypid());
pid and populates
it with the PID of the current process. Once a new item has been
set, it is available automatically to all writers along with all of the
other data event data during logging. An item can be overwritten at any
time by calling the setEventItem() method again.
Setting a new event item with setEventItem() causes the
new item to be sent to all writers of the logger. However, this does
not guarantee that the writers actually record the item. This is
because the writers won't know what to do with it unless a formatter
object is informed of the new item. Please see the section on Formatters
to learn more.
| Zend_Log |
