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# Synchronous File Appender
The sync file appender writes log events to a file, the only difference to the normal file appender is that all the writes are synchronous. This can make writing tests easier, or in situations where you need an absolute guarantee that a log message has been written to the file. Making synchronous I/O calls does mean you lose a lot of the benefits of using node.js though. It supports an optional maximum file size, and will keep a configurable number of backups. Note that the synchronous file appender, unlike the asynchronous version, does not support compressing the backup files.
## Configuration
- `type` - `"fileSync"`
- `filename` - `string` - the path of the file where you want your logs written.
- `maxLogSize` - `integer` (optional, defaults to undefined) - the maximum size (in bytes) for the log file. If not specified or 0, then no log rolling will happen.
`maxLogSize` can also accept `string` with the size suffixes: **_K_**, **_M_**, **_G_** such as `1K`, `1M`, `1G`.
- `backups` - `integer` (optional, defaults to 5) - the number of old log files to keep during log rolling (excluding the hot file).
- `layout` - (optional, defaults to basic layout) - see [layouts](layouts.md)
Any other configuration parameters will be passed to the underlying node.js core stream implementation:
- `encoding` - `string` (default "utf-8")
- `mode` - `integer` (default 0o600 - [node.js file modes](https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v12.x/docs/api/fs.html#fs_file_modes))
- `flags` - `string` (default 'a')
## Example
```javascript
log4js.configure({
appenders: {
everything: { type: "fileSync", filename: "all-the-logs.log" },
},
categories: {
default: { appenders: ["everything"], level: "debug" },
},
});
const logger = log4js.getLogger();
logger.debug("I will be logged in all-the-logs.log");
```
This example will result in a single log file (`all-the-logs.log`) containing the log messages.
## Example with log rolling
```javascript
log4js.configure({
appenders: {
everything: {
type: "file",
filename: "all-the-logs.log",
maxLogSize: 10458760,
backups: 3,
},
},
categories: {
default: { appenders: ["everything"], level: "debug" },
},
});
```
This will result in one current log file (`all-the-logs.log`). When that reaches 10Mb in size, it will be renamed and compressed to `all-the-logs.log.1.gz` and a new file opened called `all-the-logs.log`. When `all-the-logs.log` reaches 10Mb again, then `all-the-logs.log.1.gz` will be renamed to `all-the-logs.log.2.gz`, and so on.
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