Elysia
The evlog/elysia plugin auto-creates a request-scoped logger accessible via log in route context and useLogger(), emitting a wide event when the response completes.
Set up evlog in my Elysia app.
- Install evlog: pnpm add evlog
- Call initLogger({ env: { service: 'my-api' } }) at startup
- Alternatively, use evlog/vite plugin in vite.config.ts for auto-init (replaces initLogger)
- Import evlog from 'evlog/elysia' and add .use(evlog()) to your Elysia app
- Access the logger via the log property in route context destructuring
- Use useLogger() from 'evlog/elysia' to access the logger from anywhere
- Optionally pass drain, enrich, include, and keep options to evlog()
Docs: https://www.evlog.dev/frameworks/elysia
Adapters: https://www.evlog.dev/adapters
Quick Start
1. Install
bun add evlog elysia
2. Initialize and register the plugin
import { Elysia } from 'elysia'
import { initLogger } from 'evlog'
import { evlog } from 'evlog/elysia'
initLogger({
env: { service: 'my-api' },
})
const app = new Elysia()
.use(evlog())
.get('/health', ({ log }) => {
log.set({ route: 'health' })
return { ok: true }
})
.listen(3000)
evlog/vite plugin replaces the initLogger() call with compile-time auto-initialization, strips log.debug() from production builds, and injects source locations.The log property is automatically available in all route handlers via Elysia's derive.
Wide Events
Build up context progressively through your handler. One request = one wide event:
app.get('/users/:id', async ({ log, params }) => {
const userId = params.id
log.set({ user: { id: userId } })
const user = await db.findUser(userId)
log.set({ user: { name: user.name, plan: user.plan } })
const orders = await db.findOrders(userId)
log.set({ orders: { count: orders.length, totalRevenue: sum(orders) } })
return { user, orders }
})
All fields are merged into a single wide event emitted when the request completes:
14:58:15 INFO [my-api] GET /users/usr_123 200 in 12ms
├─ orders: count=2 totalRevenue=6298
├─ user: id=usr_123 name=Alice plan=pro
└─ requestId: 4a8ff3a8-...
useLogger()
Use useLogger() to access the request-scoped logger from anywhere in the call stack without passing the context through your service layer:
import { useLogger } from 'evlog/elysia'
export async function findUser(id: string) {
const log = useLogger()
log.set({ user: { id } })
const user = await db.findUser(id)
log.set({ user: { name: user.name, plan: user.plan } })
return user
}
import { findUser } from './services/user'
app.get('/users/:id', async ({ params }) => {
const user = await findUser(params.id)
return user
})
Both log in context and useLogger() return the same logger instance. useLogger() uses AsyncLocalStorage to propagate the logger across async boundaries.
Error Handling
Use createError for structured errors with why, fix, and link fields. Elysia captures thrown errors via onError:
import { createError, parseError } from 'evlog'
app
.use(evlog())
.get('/checkout', ({ log }) => {
log.set({ cart: { items: 3, total: 9999 } })
throw createError({
message: 'Payment failed',
status: 402,
why: 'Card declined by issuer',
fix: 'Try a different payment method',
link: 'https://docs.example.com/payments/declined',
})
})
.onError(({ error, set }) => {
const parsed = parseError(error)
set.status = parsed.status
return {
message: parsed.message,
why: parsed.why,
fix: parsed.fix,
link: parsed.link,
}
})
The error is captured and logged with both the custom context and structured error fields:
14:58:20 ERROR [my-api] GET /checkout 402 in 3ms
├─ error: name=EvlogError message=Payment failed status=402
├─ cart: items=3 total=9999
└─ requestId: 880a50ac-...
Configuration
See the Configuration reference for all available options (initLogger, middleware options, sampling, silent mode, etc.).
Drain & Enrichers
Configure drain adapters and enrichers directly in the plugin options:
import { createAxiomDrain } from 'evlog/axiom'
import { createUserAgentEnricher } from 'evlog/enrichers'
const userAgent = createUserAgentEnricher()
app.use(evlog({
drain: createAxiomDrain(),
enrich: (ctx) => {
userAgent(ctx)
ctx.event.region = process.env.FLY_REGION
},
}))
Pipeline (Batching & Retry)
For production, wrap your adapter with createDrainPipeline to batch events and retry on failure:
import type { DrainContext } from 'evlog'
import { createAxiomDrain } from 'evlog/axiom'
import { createDrainPipeline } from 'evlog/pipeline'
const pipeline = createDrainPipeline<DrainContext>({
batch: { size: 50, intervalMs: 5000 },
retry: { maxAttempts: 3 },
})
const drain = pipeline(createAxiomDrain())
app.use(evlog({ drain }))
drain.flush() on server shutdown to ensure all buffered events are sent. See the Pipeline docs for all options.Tail Sampling
Use keep to force-retain specific events regardless of head sampling:
app.use(evlog({
drain: createAxiomDrain(),
keep: (ctx) => {
if (ctx.duration && ctx.duration > 2000) ctx.shouldKeep = true
},
}))
Route Filtering
Control which routes are logged with include and exclude patterns:
app.use(evlog({
include: ['/api/**'],
exclude: ['/_internal/**', '/health'],
routes: {
'/api/auth/**': { service: 'auth-service' },
'/api/payment/**': { service: 'payment-service' },
},
}))
Client-Side Logging
Use evlog/browser to send structured logs from any frontend to your Elysia server. This works with any client framework (React, Vue, Svelte, vanilla JS).
Browser setup
import { initLogger, log } from 'evlog'
import { createBrowserLogDrain } from 'evlog/browser'
const drain = createBrowserLogDrain({
drain: { endpoint: '/v1/ingest' },
})
initLogger({ drain })
log.info({ action: 'page_view', path: location.pathname })
Ingest endpoint
Add a POST route to receive batched DrainContext[] from the browser:
import type { DrainContext } from 'evlog'
app.post('/v1/ingest', async ({ body }) => {
const batch = body as DrainContext[]
for (const ctx of batch) {
console.log('[BROWSER]', JSON.stringify(ctx.event))
}
return new Response(null, { status: 204 })
})
Run Locally
git clone https://github.com/HugoRCD/evlog.git
cd evlog
bun install
bun run example:elysia
Open http://localhost:3000 to explore the interactive test UI.