A simple syslog component for esphome. The component is designed to auto attach itself to the logger core module (like the MQTT component does with the log_topic
)
This component uses the https://github.com/arcao/Syslog library version 2.0 at its core
To install, locate your esphome
folder, create a folder named custom_components
got into it and execute
git clone https://github.com/TheStaticTurtle/esphome_syslog.git syslog
Simply add this to the configuration of your esphome node:
syslog:
When used like this, the component will simply broadcast its log to everyone on the network to change this behavior you can add the ip_address
and port
option like this:
syslog:
ip_address: "192.168.1.53"
port: 514
Default behavior strips the esphome color tags from the log (The 033[0;xxx
and the #033[0m
) if you do not want this set the strip_colors
option to False
.
Default behavior also sets enable_logger
to True
if you wish to disable sending logger messages and only use the syslog.log
action you can do so by setting it to False
:
The action syslog.log
has 3 settings:
then:
- syslog.log:
level: 7
tag: "custom_action"
payload: "My log message"
Due to the differences in log levels of syslog and esphome I had to translate them, here is a table:
Esphome level | Syslog level |
---|---|
ESPHOME_LOG_LEVEL_NONE | LOG_EMERG |
ESPHOME_LOG_LEVEL_ERROR | LOG_ERR |
ESPHOME_LOG_LEVEL_WARN | LOG_WARNING |
ESPHOME_LOG_LEVEL_INFO | LOG_INFO |
ESPHOME_LOG_LEVEL_CONFIG | LOG_NOTICE |
ESPHOME_LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG | LOG_DEBUG |
ESPHOME_LOG_LEVEL_VERBOSE | LOG_DEBUG |
ESPHOME_LOG_LEVEL_VERY_VERBOSE | LOG_DEBUG |
This table is however open to discussion as it's my interpretation, if you want to change it you can do so in the syslog_component.cpp
file and change the array at line 22
This component should not break anything and should work with everything however if it doesn't please open an issue. I have successfully tested this component with an esp8266 and an esp32. BUT The esp32 seems to have issue when there is a lot of thing to send very fast which you can see turing boot when it prints the config, see my comment in issue #7 for more details .