To help you learn more about what's happening within your application, Laravel provides robust logging services that allow you to log messages to files, the system error log, and even to Slack to notify your entire team.
Under the hood, Laravel utilizes the Monolog library, which provides support for a variety of powerful log handlers. Laravel makes it a cinch to configure these handlers, allowing you to mix and match them to customize your application's log handling.
All of the configuration for your application's logging system is housed in the config/logging.php
configuration file. This file allows you to configure your application's log channels, so be sure to review each of the available channels and their options. We'll review a few common options below.
By default, Laravel will use the stack
channel when logging messages. The stack
channel is used to aggregate multiple log channels into a single channel. For more information on building stacks, check out the documentation below.
By default, Monolog is instantiated with a "channel name" that matches the current environment, such as production
or local
. To change this value, add a name
option to your channel's configuration:
'stack' => [
'driver' => 'stack',
'name' => 'channel-name',
'channels' => ['single', 'slack'],
],
Name | Description |
---|---|
stack |
A wrapper to facilitate creating "multi-channel" channels |
single |
A single file or path based logger channel (StreamHandler ) |
daily |
A RotatingFileHandler based Monolog driver which rotates daily |
slack |
A SlackWebhookHandler based Monolog driver |
papertrail |
A SyslogUdpHandler based Monolog driver |
syslog |
A SyslogHandler based Monolog driver |
errorlog |
A ErrorLogHandler based Monolog driver |
monolog |
A Monolog factory driver that may use any supported Monolog handler |
custom |
A driver that calls a specified factory to create a channel |
{tip} Check out the documentation on advanced channel customization to learn more about the
monolog
andcustom
drivers.
The single
and daily
channels have three optional configuration options: bubble
, permission
, and locking
.
Name | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
bubble |
Indicates if messages should bubble up to other channels after being handled | true |
permission |
The log file's permissions | 0644 |
locking |
Attempt to lock the log file before writing to it | false |
The papertrail
channel requires the url
and port
configuration options. You can obtain these values from Papertrail.
The slack
channel requires a url
configuration option. This URL should match a URL for an incoming webhook that you have configured for your Slack team. By default, Slack will only receive logs at the critical
level and above; however, you can adjust this in your logging
configuration file.
As previously mentioned, the stack
driver allows you to combine multiple channels into a single log channel. To illustrate how to use log stacks, let's take a look at an example configuration that you might see in a production application:
'channels' => [
'stack' => [
'driver' => 'stack',
'channels' => ['syslog', 'slack'],
],
'syslog' => [
'driver' => 'syslog',
'level' => 'debug',
],
'slack' => [
'driver' => 'slack',
'url' => env('LOG_SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL'),
'username' => 'Laravel Log',
'emoji' => ':boom:',
'level' => 'critical',
],
],
Let's dissect this configuration. First, notice our stack
channel aggregates two other channels via its channels
option: syslog
and slack
. So, when logging messages, both of these channels will have the opportunity to log the message.
Take note of the level
configuration option present on the syslog
and slack
channel configurations in the example above. This option determines the minimum "level" a message must be in order to be logged by the channel. Monolog, which powers Laravel's logging services, offers all of the log levels defined in the RFC 5424 specification: emergency, alert, critical, error, warning, notice, info, and debug.
So, imagine we log a message using the debug
method:
Log::debug('An informational message.');
Given our configuration, the syslog
channel will write the message to the system log; however, since the error message is not critical
or above, it will not be sent to Slack. However, if we log an emergency
message, it will be sent to both the system log and Slack since the emergency
level is above our minimum level threshold for both channels:
Log::emergency('The system is down!');
You may write information to the logs using the Log
facade. As previously mentioned, the logger provides the eight logging levels defined in the RFC 5424 specification: emergency, alert, critical, error, warning, notice, info and debug:
Log::emergency($message);
Log::alert($message);
Log::critical($message);
Log::error($message);
Log::warning($message);
Log::notice($message);
Log::info($message);
Log::debug($message);
So, you may call any of these methods to log a message for the corresponding level. By default, the message will be written to the default log channel as configured by your config/logging.php
configuration file:
<?php
namespace App\Http\Controllers;
use App\Http\Controllers\Controller;
use App\User;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Log;
class UserController extends Controller
{
/**
* Show the profile for the given user.
*
* @param int $id
* @return Response
*/
public function showProfile($id)
{
Log::info('Showing user profile for user: '.$id);
return view('user.profile', ['user' => User::findOrFail($id)]);
}
}
An array of contextual data may also be passed to the log methods. This contextual data will be formatted and displayed with the log message:
Log::info('User failed to login.', ['id' => $user->id]);
Sometimes you may wish to log a message to a channel other than your application's default channel. You may use the channel
method on the Log
facade to retrieve and log to any channel defined in your configuration file:
Log::channel('slack')->info('Something happened!');
If you would like to create an on-demand logging stack consisting of multiple channels, you may use the stack
method:
Log::stack(['single', 'slack'])->info('Something happened!');
Sometimes you may need complete control over how Monolog is configured for an existing channel. For example, you may want to configure a custom Monolog FormatterInterface
implementation for a given channel's handlers.
To get started, define a tap
array on the channel's configuration. The tap
array should contain a list of classes that should have an opportunity to customize (or "tap" into) the Monolog instance after it is created:
'single' => [
'driver' => 'single',
'tap' => [App\Logging\CustomizeFormatter::class],
'path' => storage_path('logs/laravel.log'),
'level' => 'debug',
],
Once you have configured the tap
option on your channel, you're ready to define the class that will customize your Monolog instance. This class only needs a single method: __invoke
, which receives an Illuminate\Log\Logger
instance. The Illuminate\Log\Logger
instance proxies all method calls to the underlying Monolog instance:
<?php
namespace App\Logging;
use Monolog\Formatter\LineFormatter;
class CustomizeFormatter
{
/**
* Customize the given logger instance.
*
* @param \Illuminate\Log\Logger $logger
* @return void
*/
public function __invoke($logger)
{
foreach ($logger->getHandlers() as $handler) {
$handler->setFormatter(new LineFormatter(
'[%datetime%] %channel%.%level_name%: %message% %context% %extra%'
));
}
}
}
{tip} All of your "tap" classes are resolved by the service container, so any constructor dependencies they require will automatically be injected.
Monolog has a variety of available handlers. In some cases, the type of logger you wish to create is merely a Monolog driver with an instance of a specific handler. These channels can be created using the monolog
driver.
When using the monolog
driver, the handler
configuration option is used to specify which handler will be instantiated. Optionally, any constructor parameters the handler needs may be specified using the with
configuration option:
'logentries' => [
'driver' => 'monolog',
'handler' => Monolog\Handler\SyslogUdpHandler::class,
'with' => [
'host' => 'my.logentries.internal.datahubhost.company.com',
'port' => '10000',
],
],
When using the monolog
driver, the Monolog LineFormatter
will be used as the default formatter. However, you may customize the type of formatter passed to the handler using the formatter
and formatter_with
configuration options:
'browser' => [
'driver' => 'monolog',
'handler' => Monolog\Handler\BrowserConsoleHandler::class,
'formatter' => Monolog\Formatter\HtmlFormatter::class,
'formatter_with' => [
'dateFormat' => 'Y-m-d',
],
],
If you are using a Monolog handler that is capable of providing its own formatter, you may set the value of the formatter
configuration option to default
:
'newrelic' => [
'driver' => 'monolog',
'handler' => Monolog\Handler\NewRelicHandler::class,
'formatter' => 'default',
],
If you would like to define an entirely custom channel in which you have full control over Monolog's instantiation and configuration, you may specify a custom
driver type in your config/logging.php
configuration file. Your configuration should include a via
option to point to the factory class which will be invoked to create the Monolog instance:
'channels' => [
'custom' => [
'driver' => 'custom',
'via' => App\Logging\CreateCustomLogger::class,
],
],
Once you have configured the custom
channel, you're ready to define the class that will create your Monolog instance. This class only needs a single method: __invoke
, which should return the Monolog instance:
<?php
namespace App\Logging;
use Monolog\Logger;
class CreateCustomLogger
{
/**
* Create a custom Monolog instance.
*
* @param array $config
* @return \Monolog\Logger
*/
public function __invoke(array $config)
{
return new Logger(...);
}
}