Logging
Logging is disabled by default, and you can enable it by passing { logger: true }
or { logger: { level: 'info' } }
when you create the fastify instance. Note that if the logger is disabled, it is impossible to enable it at runtime. We use abstract-logging for this purpose.
Since Fastify is really focused on performances, it uses pino as its logger, with the default log level, when enabled, set to 'info'
.
Enabling the logger is extremely easy:
const fastify = require('fastify')({
logger: true
})
fastify.get('/', options, function (request, reply) {
request.log.info('Some info about the current request')
reply.send({ hello: 'world' })
})
If you want to pass some options to the logger, just pass the logger option to Fastify. You can find all the options in the Pino documentation. If you want to specify a file destination, use:
const fastify = require('fastify')({
logger: {
level: 'info',
file: '/path/to/file' // will use pino.destination()
}
})
fastify.get('/', options, function (request, reply) {
request.log.info('Some info about the current request')
reply.send({ hello: 'world' })
})
If you want to pass a custom stream to the Pino instance, just add the stream field to the logger object.
const split = require('split2')
const stream = split(JSON.parse)
const fastify = require('fastify')({
logger: {
level: 'info',
stream: stream
}
})
By default fastify adds an id to every request for easier tracking. If the "request-id" header is present its value is used, otherwise a new incremental id is generated. See Fastify Factory requestIdHeader
and Fastify Factory genReqId
for customization options.
The default logger is configured with a set of standard serializers that serialize objects with req
, res
, and err
properties. This behavior can be customized by specifying custom serializers.
const fastify = require('fastify')({
logger: {
serializers: {
req: function (req) {
return { url: req.url }
}
}
}
})
This option will be ignored by any logger other than Pino.
You can also supply your own logger instance. Instead of passing configuration options, simply pass the instance. The logger you supply must conform to the Pino interface; that is, it must have the following methods: info
, error
, debug
, fatal
, warn
, trace
, child
.
Example:
const log = require('pino')({ level: 'info' })
const fastify = require('fastify')({ logger: log })
log.info('does not have request information')
fastify.get('/', function (request, reply) {
request.log.info('includes request information, but is the same logger instance as `log`')
reply.send({ hello: 'world' })
})
The logger instance for the current request is available in every part of the lifecycle.
Log Redaction
Pino supports low-overhead log redaction for obscuring values of specific properties in recorded logs. As an example, we might want to log all the HTTP headers minus the Authorization
header for security concerns:
const fastify = Fastify({
logger: {
stream: stream,
redact: ['req.headers.authorization'],
level: 'info',
serializers: {
req (req) {
return {
method: req.method,
url: req.url,
headers: req.headers,
hostname: req.hostname,
remoteAddress: req.ip,
remotePort: req.connection.remotePort
}
}
}
}
})
See https://getpino.io/#/docs/redaction for more details.