Provided by: libpoet-perl_0.16-3_all bug

NAME

       Poet::Log -- Poet logging

SYNOPSIS

           # In a conf file...
           log:
             defaults:
               level: info
               output: poet.log
               layout: "%d{dd/MMM/yyyy:HH:mm:ss.SS} [%p] %c - %m - %F:%L - %P%n"
             class:
               CHI:
                 level: debug
                 output: chi.log
                 layout: "%d{dd/MMM/yyyy:HH:mm:ss.SS} %m - %P%n"
               MyApp::Foo:
                 output: stdout

           # In a script...
           use Poet::Script qw($log);

           # In a module...
           use Poet qw($log);

           # In a component...
           my $log = $m->log;

           # For an arbitrary category...
           my $log = Poet::Log->get_logger(category => 'MyApp::Bar');

           # then...
           $log->error("an error occurred");

           $log->debugf("arguments are: %s", \@_)
               if $log->is_debug();

DESCRIPTION

       Poet uses Log::Any and Log::Log4perl for logging, with simplified configuration for the
       common case.

       Log::Any is a logging abstraction that allows CPAN modules to log without knowing about
       which logging framework is in use. It supports standard logging methods ("$log->debug",
       "$log->is_debug") along with sprintf variants ("$log->debugf").

       Log4perl is a powerful logging package that provides just about any logging-related
       feature you'd want. One of its only drawbacks is its somewhat cumbersome configuration.
       So, we provide a way to configure Log4perl simply through Poet configuration if you just
       want common features.

       Note: Log4perl is not a strict dependency for Poet.  Log messages will simply not get
       logged until you install it or until you modify logging for your app.

CONFIGURATION

       The configurations below can go in any Poet conf file, e.g. "local.cfg" or
       "global/log.cfg".

       Here's a simple configuration that caches everything to "logs/poet.log" at "info" level.
       This is also the default if no configuration is present.

           log:
             defaults:
               level: info
               output: poet.log
               layout: %d{dd/MMM/yyyy:HH:mm:ss.SS} [%p] %c - %m - %F:%L - %P%n

       Here's a more involved configuration that maintains the same default, but adds several
       categories that are logged differently:

           log:
             defaults:
               level: info
               output: poet.log
               layout: "%d{dd/MMM/yyyy:HH:mm:ss.SS} [%p] %c - %m - %F:%L - %P%n"
             category:
               CHI:
                 level: debug
                 output: chi.log
                 layout: "%d{dd/MMM/yyyy:HH:mm:ss.SS} %m - %P%n"
               MyApp::Foo:
                 output: stdout

       For the default and for each category, you can specify three different settings:

       •   level - one of the valid log4perl levels (fatal, error, warn, info, debug, trace)

       •   output - can be a relative filename (which will be placed in the Poet log directory),
           an absolute filename, or the special names "stdout" or "stderr"

       •   layout - a valid log4perl PatternLayout string.

       If a setting isn't defined for a specific category then it falls back to the default. In
       this example, "MyApp::Foo" will inherit the default level and layout.

       Notice that we use '::' instead of '.' to specify hierarchical category names, because '.'
       would interfere with Poet::Conf dot notation.

       Finally, if you must use a full Log4perl configuration file, you can specify it this way:

           log:
             log4perl_conf: /path/to/log4perl.conf

USAGE

   Obtaining log handle
       •   In a script (log category will be 'main'):

               use Poet::Script qw($log);

       •   In a module "MyApp::Foo" (log category will be 'MyApp::Foo'):

               use Poet qw($log);

       •   In a component "/foo/bar" (log category will be 'Mason::Component::foo::bar'):

               my $log = $m->log;

       •   Manually for an arbitrary log category:

               my $log = Poet::Log->get_logger(category => 'Some::Category');

               # or

               my $log = MyApp::Log->get_logger(category => 'Some::Category');

   Using log handle
           $log->error("an error occurred");

           $log->debugf("arguments are: %s", \@_)
               if $log->is_debug();

       See "Log::Any|Log::Any" for more details.

MODIFIABLE METHODS

       These methods are not intended to be called externally, but may be useful to override or
       modify with method modifiers in subclasses. Their APIs will be kept as stable as possible.

       initialize_logging
           Called once when the Poet environment is initialized. By default, initializes log4perl
           with the results of "generate_log4perl_config" and then calls
           "Log::Any::Adapter->set('Log4perl')".  You can modify this to initialize log4perl in
           your own way, or use a different Log::Any adapter, or use a completely different
           logging system.

       generate_log4perl_config
           Returns a log4perl config string based on Poet configuration. You can modify this to
           construct and return your own config.

SEE ALSO

       Poet

AUTHOR

       Jonathan Swartz <swartz@pobox.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Jonathan Swartz.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.