laravel http logger

Log HTTP requests in Laravel applications

650
61
PHP

Log HTTP requests

Latest Version on Packagist
run-tests
Total Downloads

This package adds a middleware which can log incoming requests to the default log.
If anything goes wrong during a user’s request, you’ll still be able to access the original request data sent by that user.

This log acts as an extra safety net for critical user submissions, such as forms that generate leads.

Support us

We invest a lot of resources into creating best in class open source packages. You can support us by buying one of our paid products.

We highly appreciate you sending us a postcard from your hometown, mentioning which of our package(s) you are using. You’ll find our address on our contact page. We publish all received postcards on our virtual postcard wall.

Installation

You can install the package via composer:

composer require spatie/laravel-http-logger

Optionally you can publish the config file with:

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Spatie\HttpLogger\HttpLoggerServiceProvider" --tag="config" 

This is the contents of the published config file:

return [

    /*
     * Determine if the http-logger middleware should be enabled.
     */
    'enabled' => env('HTTP_LOGGER_ENABLED', true),

    /*
     * The log profile which determines whether a request should be logged.
     * It should implement `LogProfile`.
     */
    'log_profile' => \Spatie\HttpLogger\LogNonGetRequests::class,

    /*
     * The log writer used to write the request to a log.
     * It should implement `LogWriter`.
     */
    'log_writer' => \Spatie\HttpLogger\DefaultLogWriter::class,
    
    /*
     * The log channel used to write the request.
     */
    'log_channel' => env('LOG_CHANNEL', 'stack'),
    
    /*
     * The log level used to log the request.
     */
    'log_level' => 'info',
    
    /*
     * Filter out body fields which will never be logged.
     */
    'except' => [
        'password',
        'password_confirmation',
    ],
    
    /*
     * List of headers that will be sanitized. For example Authorization, Cookie, Set-Cookie...
     */
    'sanitize_headers' => [],
];

Usage

This packages provides a middleware which can be added as a global middleware or as a single route.

Laravel >= 11:

->withMiddleware(function (Middleware $middleware) {
    $middleware->append(\Spatie\HttpLogger\Middlewares\HttpLogger::class);
})

Laravel <= 10:

// in `app/Http/Kernel.php`

protected $middleware = [
    // ...
    
    \Spatie\HttpLogger\Middlewares\HttpLogger::class
];
// in a routes file

Route::post('/submit-form', function () {
    //
})->middleware(\Spatie\HttpLogger\Middlewares\HttpLogger::class);

Logging

Two classes are used to handle the logging of incoming requests:
a LogProfile class will determine whether the request should be logged,
and LogWriter class will write the request to a log.

A default log implementation is added within this package.
It will only log POST, PUT, PATCH, and DELETE requests
and it will write to the default Laravel logger.
Logging is enabled by default but can be toggled on or off via the HTTP_LOGGER_ENABLED variable in the .env file.

You’re free to implement your own log profile and/or log writer classes,
and configure it in config/http-logger.php.

A custom log profile must implement \Spatie\HttpLogger\LogProfile.
This interface requires you to implement shouldLogRequest.

// Example implementation from `\Spatie\HttpLogger\LogNonGetRequests`

public function shouldLogRequest(Request $request): bool
{
   return in_array(strtolower($request->method()), ['post', 'put', 'patch', 'delete']);
}

A custom log writer must implement \Spatie\HttpLogger\LogWriter.
This interface requires you to implement logRequest.

// Example implementation from `\Spatie\HttpLogger\DefaultLogWriter`

public function logRequest(Request $request): void
{
    $method = strtoupper($request->getMethod());
    
    $uri = $request->getPathInfo();
    
    $bodyAsJson = json_encode($request->except(config('http-logger.except')));

    $message = "{$method} {$uri} - {$bodyAsJson}";

    Log::channel(config('http-logger.log_channel'))->info($message);
}

Hide sensitive headers

You can define headers that you want to sanitize before sending them to the log.
The most common example would be Authorization header. If you don’t want to log jwt token, you can add that header to http-logger.php config file:

// in config/http-logger.php

return [
    // ...
    
    'sanitize_headers' => [
        'Authorization'
    ],
];

Output would be Authorization: "****" instead of Authorization: "Bearer {token}"

Testing

composer test

Changelog

Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.

Contributing

Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.

Security

If you’ve found a bug regarding security please mail [email protected] instead of using the issue tracker.

Credits

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.