Provided by: liblog-log4perl-perl_1.57-1_all 

NAME
Log::Log4perl::Appender::ScreenColoredLevels - Colorize messages according to level
SYNOPSIS
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->init(\ <<'EOT');
log4perl.category = DEBUG, Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen = \
Log::Log4perl::Appender::ScreenColoredLevels
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = \
Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout.ConversionPattern = \
%d %F{1} %L> %m %n
EOT
# Appears black
DEBUG "Debug Message";
# Appears green
INFO "Info Message";
# Appears blue
WARN "Warn Message";
# Appears magenta
ERROR "Error Message";
# Appears red
FATAL "Fatal Message";
DESCRIPTION
This appender acts like Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen, except that it colorizes its output, based on
the priority of the message sent.
You can configure the colors and attributes used for the different levels, by specifying them in your
configuration:
log4perl.appender.Screen.color.TRACE=cyan
log4perl.appender.Screen.color.DEBUG=bold blue
You can also specify nothing, to indicate that level should not have coloring applied, which means the
text will be whatever the default color for your terminal is. This is the default for debug messages.
log4perl.appender.Screen.color.DEBUG=
You can use any attribute supported by Term::ANSIColor as a configuration option.
log4perl.appender.Screen.color.FATAL=\
bold underline blink red on_white
The commonly used colors and attributes are:
attributes
BOLD, DARK, UNDERLINE, UNDERSCORE, BLINK
colors
BLACK, RED, GREEN, YELLOW, BLUE, MAGENTA, CYAN, WHITE
background colors
ON_BLACK, ON_RED, ON_GREEN, ON_YELLOW, ON_BLUE, ON_MAGENTA, ON_CYAN, ON_WHITE
See Term::ANSIColor for a complete list, and information on which are supported by various common
terminal emulators.
The default values for these options are:
Trace
Yellow
Debug
None (whatever the terminal default is)
Info
Green
Warn
Blue
Error
Magenta
Fatal
Red
The constructor "new()" takes an optional parameter "stderr", if set to a true value, the appender will
log all levels to STDERR. If "stderr" is set to a false value, it will log all levels to STDOUT.
Otherwise, "stderr" may be set to a hash, with a key for each "log4p_level" and a truthy value to
dynamically use stderr. The default setting for "stderr" is 1, so all messages will be logged to STDERR
by default.
# All messages/levels to STDERR
my $app = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen->new(
stderr => 1,
);
# Only ERROR and FATAL to STDERR (case-sensitive)
my $app = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen->new(
stderr => { ERROR => 1, FATAL => 1},
);
The constructor can also take an optional parameter "color", whose value is a hashref of color
configuration options, any levels that are not included in the hashref will be set to their default
values.
Using ScreenColoredLevels on Windows
Note that if you're using this appender on Windows, you need to fetch Win32::Console::ANSI from CPAN and
add
use Win32::Console::ANSI;
to your script.
LICENSE
Copyright 2002-2013 by Mike Schilli <m@perlmeister.com> and Kevin Goess <cpan@goess.org>.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
itself.
AUTHOR
Please contribute patches to the project on Github:
http://github.com/mschilli/log4perl
Send bug reports or requests for enhancements to the authors via our
MAILING LIST (questions, bug reports, suggestions/patches): log4perl-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
Authors (please contact them via the list above, not directly): Mike Schilli <m@perlmeister.com>, Kevin
Goess <cpan@goess.org>
Contributors (in alphabetical order): Ateeq Altaf, Cory Bennett, Jens Berthold, Jeremy Bopp, Hutton
Davidson, Chris R. Donnelly, Matisse Enzer, Hugh Esco, Anthony Foiani, James FitzGibbon, Carl Franks,
Dennis Gregorovic, Andy Grundman, Paul Harrington, Alexander Hartmaier David Hull, Robert Jacobson,
Jason Kohles, Jeff Macdonald, Markus Peter, Brett Rann, Peter Rabbitson, Erik Selberg, Aaron Straup Cope,
Lars Thegler, David Viner, Mac Yang.
perl v5.36.0 2022-10-30 Appender::ScreenColoredLevels(3pm)