Skip to content

ifeanyi-ugwu/winston_rs

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

winston

Crates.io Rust

A fast, flexible logging library for Rust inspired by Winston.js.

Overview

Winston provides structured logging with composable transports, formats, and levels. Built on async foundations with intelligent backpressure handling, it's designed for both development convenience and production performance.

Quick Start

Simple Console Logging

use winston::{log, Logger, transports::stdout};

fn main() {
    let logger = Logger::builder()
        .level("info")
        .transport(stdout())
        .build();

    winston::init(logger);

    log!(info, "Application started");
    log!(warn, "Low disk space", usage = 92);

    winston::close();
}

Multi-Transport Logger

use winston::{Logger, log, format::{timestamp, json, chain}, transports::{stdout, File}};

fn main() {
    let logger = Logger::builder()
        .level("debug")
        .format(chain!(timestamp(), json()))
        .transport(stdout())
        .transport(File::builder().filename("app.log").build())
        .build();

    log!(logger, info, "Logging to console and file");
}

Core Concepts

LogInfo - Structured Log Data

Every log message is represented by a LogInfo struct containing level, message, and metadata:

// Simple log
let info = LogInfo::new("info", "User authenticated");

// With metadata
let info = info.with_meta("user_id", 12345)
               .with_meta("session_id", "abc123");

Transports - Where Logs Go

Transports define output destinations. Each implements the Transport trait:

pub trait Transport: Send + Sync {
    fn log(&self, info: LogInfo);
    fn flush(&self) -> Result<(), String> { Ok(()) }
    fn query(&self, options: &LogQuery) -> Result<Vec<LogInfo>, String> { Ok(Vec::new()) }
}

Built-in transports:

  • stdout() / stderr() - Console output
  • File - File logging with querying support
  • WriterTransport - Generic writer for custom destinations

Multiple transports example:

// Using builder - all transports use logger's global level and format
let logger = Logger::builder()
    .transport(stdout())
    .transport(File::builder().filename("app.log").build())
    .build();

// For custom level/format per transport, you have two options:

// Option 1: Runtime fluent API with logger.transport()
let logger = Logger::new(None);

let console_handle = logger.transport(stdout())
    .with_level("info")
    .with_format(colorize())
    .add();

let file_handle = logger.transport(File::builder().filename("app.log").build())
    .with_level("debug")
    .with_format(json())
    .add();

// Option 2: Pre-configure with LoggerTransport (works both build-time and runtime)
use winston::LoggerTransport;

let console_transport = LoggerTransport::new(stdout())
    .with_level("info")
    .with_format(colorize());

let file_transport = LoggerTransport::new(File::builder().filename("app.log").build())
    .with_level("debug")
    .with_format(json());

// Use in builder (build-time)
let logger = Logger::builder()
    .transport(console_transport.clone())
    .transport(file_transport.clone())
    .build();

// Or add at runtime
let logger = Logger::new(None);
let console_handle = logger.add_transport(console_transport);
let file_handle = logger.add_transport(file_transport);

Levels - Message Priority

Winston uses RFC 5424 severity levels (lower = more critical):

levels: {
    error: 0,   // System errors
    warn:  1,   // Warnings
    info:  2,   // General info
    debug: 3,   // Debug details
    trace: 4    // Verbose tracing
}

Set minimum level to control verbosity:

let logger = Logger::builder()
    .level("info")  // Logs info, warn, error (filters out debug, trace)
    .build();

Formats - Message Styling

Winston uses the powerful logform library for message formatting through composable format chaining:

use winston::format::{timestamp, json, colorize, chain};

// Using the chain method
let logger = Logger::builder()
    .format(
        timestamp()
            .with_format("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S")
            .chain(colorize())
            .chain(json())
    )
    .build();

// Using the chain! macro for cleaner syntax
let logger = Logger::builder()
    .format(chain!(
        timestamp().with_format("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"),
        colorize(),
        json()
    ))
    .build();

Per-transport formatting:

let logger = Logger::builder()
    .transport(stdout())  // Uses logger's global format
    .build();

// Or configure per-transport
let logger = Logger::new(None);

logger.transport(stdout())
    .with_format(chain!(
        timestamp().with_format("%H:%M:%S"),
        colorize()
    ))
    .add();

logger.transport(File::builder().filename("app.log").build())
    .with_format(chain!(
        timestamp().with_format("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"),
        json()
    ))
    .add();

Advanced Features

Custom Log Levels

Define domain-specific severity levels:

use std::collections::HashMap;

let custom_levels = HashMap::from([
    ("critical", 0),
    ("high", 1),
    ("medium", 2),
    ("low", 3)
]);

let logger = Logger::builder()
    .levels(custom_levels)
    .build();

Create custom logging methods and macros:

winston::create_log_methods!(critical, high, medium, low);
winston::create_level_macros!(critical, high, medium, low);

// Now you can use:
logger.critical("System failure", None);
high!(logger, "Priority task failed", retries = 3);

Dynamic Transport Management

Add and remove transports at runtime:

let logger = Logger::new(None);

// Add transports and get handles
let console_handle = logger.add_transport(stdout());
let file_handle = logger.transport(File::builder().filename("app.log").build())
    .with_level("debug")
    .add();

// Later, remove specific transports
logger.remove_transport(console_handle);  // Stop console logging
logger.remove_transport(file_handle);     // Stop file logging

Backpressure Management

Control behavior when the log buffer fills up:

use winston::BackpressureStrategy;

let logger = Logger::builder()
    .channel_capacity(1000)
    .backpressure_strategy(BackpressureStrategy::DropOldest)  // or Block, DropCurrent
    .build();

Strategy recommendations:

  • Block - Best for critical logs where no messages should be lost
  • DropOldest - Good for high-volume applications where recent logs matter most
  • DropCurrent - Suitable when preserving historical context is more important

Log Querying

Retrieve historical logs from queryable transports:

use winston::LogQuery;

let query = LogQuery::new()
    .from("2 hours ago")
    .until("now")
    .levels(vec!["error", "warn"])
    .search_term("database")
    .limit(50);

let results = logger.query(query)?;

Query options:

  • from / until - Time range (supports natural language via parse_datetime)
  • levels - Filter by severity
  • search_term - Text search in messages
  • limit / start - Pagination
  • order - asc or desc
  • fields - Projection (which fields to return)

Runtime Reconfiguration

Change logger settings dynamically:

logger.configure(
    LoggerOptions::new()
        .level("debug")
        .transport(File::builder().filename("debug.log").build())
);

Custom Transports

Implement the Transport trait for custom destinations:

use winston::{Transport, LogInfo};

struct DatabaseTransport {
    connection: DatabaseConnection,
}

impl Transport for DatabaseTransport {
    fn log(&self, info: LogInfo) {
        // Insert log into database
        self.connection.execute("INSERT INTO logs ...", &info);
    }

    fn query(&self, options: &LogQuery) -> Result<Vec<LogInfo>, String> {
        // Query logs from database
        self.connection.query_logs(options)
    }
}

Global vs Instance Logging

Global Logger (Singleton)

Convenient for application-wide logging:

use winston::{Logger, log, transports::stdout};

fn main() {
    let logger = Logger::builder()
        .transport(stdout())
        .build();

    winston::init(logger);
    log!(info, "Using global logger");
    winston::flush().unwrap(); // Important: flush before app exit
    winston::close();
}

Logger Instances

Better for libraries or multi-tenant applications:

let logger = Logger::builder()
    .transport(stdout())
    .build();

log!(logger, info, "Using specific logger instance");
// Automatic cleanup on drop

Performance Tips

  1. Buffer sizing: Tune channel_capacity based on log volume
  2. Transport selection: File transport is faster than stdout for high-volume logging
  3. Format efficiency: Simple formats are faster than complex chained formats
  4. Level filtering: Set appropriate minimum levels to avoid unnecessary processing
  5. Format chaining order: Place expensive formats (like colorization) last in the chain

Integration with the log Crate

Winston can also act as a backend for the widely used log facade.
This means that existing libraries and crates which emit logs via log will automatically route their output through Winston's transports and formatting system.

Enable the feature in Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
winston = { version = "0.5", features = ["log-backend"] }

Then initialize Winston as the global logger:

use winston::{Logger, transports::stdout};

fn main() {
    // Initialize winston
    let logger = Logger::builder()
        .transport(stdout())
        .build();

    winston::init(logger);
    winston::register_with_log().unwrap();

    log::info!("Hello from the log crate!");
    log::warn!("This also goes through Winston transports");

    winston::close();
}

Notes:

  • Key–value metadata support from log is available with the log-backend-kv feature.
  • Winston's transports, levels, formats, and backpressure strategies apply seamlessly.
  • Useful when integrating Winston into projects that already rely on the log ecosystem.

Installation

Add to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
winston = "0.5"

Or use cargo:

cargo add winston

Contributing

Contributions welcome! Please submit issues and pull requests on GitHub.

License

MIT License

Acknowledgments

Inspired by the excellent Winston.js logging library.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages