Logging
=======

> Note: This chapter is under development.

Yii provides flexible and extensible logger that is able to handle messages according to severity level or their type.
You may filter messages by multiple criteria and forward them to files, email, debugger etc.

Logging basics
--------------

Basic logging is as simple as calling one method:

```php
\Yii::info('Hello, I am a test log message');
```

### Message category

Additionally to the message itself message category could be specified in order to allow filtering such messages and
handing these differently. Message category is passed as a second argument of logging methods and is `application` by
default.

### Severity levels

There are multiple severity levels and corresponding methods available:

- [[Yii::trace]] used maily for development purpose to indicate workflow of some code. Note that it only works in
  development mode when `YII_DEBUG` is set to `true`.
- [[Yii::error]] used when there's unrecoverable error.
- [[Yii::warning]] used when an error occurred but execution can be continued.
- [[Yii::info]] used to keep record of important events such as administrator logins.

Log targets
-----------

When one of the logging methods is called, message is passed to [[yii\log\Logger]] component accessible as
`Yii::getLogger()`. Logger accumulates messages in memory and then when there are enough messages
or when the current request finishes, sends them to different log targets, such as file or email.

You may configure the targets in application configuration, like the following:

```php
[
    'components' => [
        'log' => [
            'targets' => [
                'file' => [
                    'class' => 'yii\log\FileTarget',
                    'levels' => ['trace', 'info'],
                    'categories' => ['yii\*'],
                ],
                'email' => [
                    'class' => 'yii\log\EmailTarget',
                    'levels' => ['error', 'warning'],
                    'message' => [
                        'to' => ['admin@example.com', 'developer@example.com'],
                        'subject' => 'New example.com log message',
                    ],
                ],
            ],
        ],
    ],
]
```

In the config above we are defining two log targets: [[yii\log\FileTarget|file]] and [[yii\log\EmailTarget|email]].
In both cases we are filtering messages handles by these targets by severity. In case of file target we're
additionally filter by category. `yii\*` means all categories starting with `yii\`.

Each log target can have a name and can be referenced via the [[yii\log\Logger::targets|targets]] property as follows:

```php
Yii::$app->log->targets['file']->enabled = false;
```

When the application ends or [[yii\log\Logger::flushInterval|flushInterval]] is reached, Logger will call
[[yii\log\Logger::flush()|flush()]] to send logged messages to different log targets, such as file, email, web.


Profiling
---------

Performance profiling is a special type of message logging that can be used to measure the time needed for the
specified code blocks to execute and find out what the performance bottleneck is.

To use it we need to identify which code blocks need to be profiled. Then we mark the beginning and the end of each code
block by inserting the following methods:

```php
\Yii::beginProfile('myBenchmark');
...code block being profiled...
\Yii::endProfile('myBenchmark');
```

where `myBenchmark` uniquely identifies the code block.

Note, code blocks need to be nested properly such as

```php
\Yii::beginProfile('block1');
    // some code to be profiled
    \Yii::beginProfile('block2');
        // some other code to be profiled
    \Yii::endProfile('block2');
\Yii::endProfile('block1');
```

Profiling results [could be displayed in debugger](module-debug.md).