Provided by: liblog-any-adapter-filehandle-perl_0.008-1_all bug

NAME

       Log::Any::Adapter::FileHandle - A basic Log::Any::Adapter to forward messages to a
       filehandle

VERSION

       version 0.008

SYNOPSIS

         use Log::Any qw($log);
         use Log::Any::Adapter;

         # Send all logs to Log::Any::Adapter::FileHandle
         Log::Any::Adapter->set('FileHandle');

         $log->info("Hello world");

DESCRIPTION

       This module is a basic adapter that will simply forward log messages to a filehandle, or
       any object that supports a 'print' method (IO::String, IO::Socket::INET, Plack's
       $env->{psgi.errors} object, etc).

       I've created it so that my scripts running under damontools or runit can output messages
       to locally defined logs.  It does not timestamp messages, that responsbility  is delegated
       to the external log capture mechanism.

       You can override the default configuration by passing extra arguments to the "Log::Any"
       set_adapter method:

       fh  Pass in your IO::Handle-like object here.  If this isn't specified, it will default to
           opening STDERR.  If the object supports an autoflush method, autoflush will be
           enabled, unless no_autoflush is set.

       no_autoflush
           Disable automatically turning on autoflush on the fh object.

       format
           A sprintf string that controls the formatting of the message.  It is supplied 2
           arguments: the log level as supplied by Log::Any (usually all-lowercase), and the
           message to be logged.  The default is "[%s] %s\n".  This value should contain the log
           record terminator, such as a newline.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright 2010 by Jason Jay Rodrigues <jasonjayr+oss@gmail.com>

       Log::Any::Adapter::FileHandle is provided "as is" and without any express or implied
       warranties, including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantibility and
       fitness for a particular purpose.

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