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Does anyone know of a way to save the console.log output in Chrome to a file? Or how to copy the text out of the console?

Say you are running a few hours of functional tests and you've got thousands of lines of console.log output in Chrome. How do you save it or export it?

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17 Answers 17

253

Good news

Chrome dev tools now allows you to save the console output to a file natively

  1. Open the console
  2. Right-click
  3. Select "save as.."

save console to file

Chrome Developer instructions here.

11
  • 6
    Can this be done using a keyboard shortcut or running a command on console? Aug 26, 2015 at 7:03
  • 1
    Here is a list of all the devTools shortcuts developer.chrome.com/devtools/docs/shortcuts
    – adardesign
    Aug 31, 2015 at 13:27
  • 18
    This doesn't seem to copy the stack trace
    – Michael
    Apr 5, 2016 at 20:39
  • 5
    Can you open up that file in console again? If so, how do you so that? Jan 26, 2017 at 4:33
  • 15
    Note that this won't expand objects - it'll still print large objects in their truncated form, e.g. {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3, ...}.
    – Galen Long
    Oct 24, 2018 at 17:26
121

I needed to do the same thing and this is the solution I found:

  1. Enable logging from the command line using the flags:

    --enable-logging --v=1

This logs everything Chrome does internally, but it also logs all the console.log() messages as well. The log file is called chrome_debug.log and is located in the User Data Directory which can be overridden by supplying --user-data-dir=PATH (more info here).

  1. Filter the log file you get for lines with CONSOLE(\d+).

Note that console logs do not appear with --incognito.

22
  • 6
    seems it doesn't work on my mac os, there are internal logs but no Console.log...
    – Nico
    May 22, 2013 at 15:12
  • 9
    This doesn't save the console.log info to the log file. In Windows 8. May 24, 2013 at 9:00
  • 4
    On Mac I found the log file at ~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/chrome_debug.log Feb 18, 2015 at 3:45
  • 2
    This still works for me on OSX 10.10.3 /Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google\ Chrome --enable-logging --v=1 with the log saved in ~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/chrome_debug.log
    – mateuscb
    Jun 29, 2015 at 14:10
  • 7
    I don't get anything other than the internal chrome logs. My console.log() lines are nowhere in that file. Anyone have a fix for this? Dec 10, 2018 at 21:02
33

I have found a great and easy way for this.

  1. In the console - right click on the console logged object

  2. Click on 'Store as global variable'

  3. See the name of the new variable - e.g. it is variableName1

  4. Type in the console: JSON.stringify(variableName1)

  5. Copy the variable string content: e.g. {"a":1,"b":2,"c":3}

enter image description here

  1. Go to some JSON online editor: e.g. https://jsoneditoronline.org/

enter image description here

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  • 1
    Seems clunky on the surface but it works pretty well. In the later versions, at the bottom of the output there's a "Copy" button. I just press that, then have a small script that saves the clipboard as a .json file and opens in Visual Studio which is very readable. The only change is I do JSON.stringify(temp1, null, 2) to make it easier to read. The trick below to save the console works well as well. Dec 20, 2018 at 1:33
  • This answer doesn't work for long truncated text
    – luiscla27
    Mar 31, 2022 at 17:44
31

There is an open-source javascript plugin that does just that, but for any browser - debugout.js

Debugout.js records and save console.logs so your application can access them. Full disclosure, I wrote it. It formats different types appropriately, can handle nested objects and arrays, and can optionally put a timestamp next to each log. You can also toggle live-logging in one place, and without having to remove all your logging statements.

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  • 4
    For reference, though this looks like a great tool, it will not capture output from the browser, like when image loads fail, or other built-in console output, and it requires that you rewrite your log statements using a special syntax.
    – Lukus
    Apr 13, 2015 at 21:28
  • @Lukus it certainly won't capture browser output (you would need a monkey patch to do that) but there is no special syntax needed. pass the same args as you would console.log
    – inorganik
    Apr 13, 2015 at 21:47
  • 1
    @Inorganik I was searching for a way for selenium tests to capture console output, but it will be used for a testing service so we don't have control of the user's websites. I think your tool is cool, but it would require a user to rewrite their existing console.log statements as bugout.log, that's what I meant by special syntax. It appears so far that there is no cross-browser way to do it a this time.
    – Lukus
    Apr 15, 2015 at 5:09
  • No, it won't work for us. We need to save log of result of testing of the complex website with big amount of 3rd party scripts, which runs on different domains and we can't change most of them. Jun 7, 2017 at 21:49
10

For better log file (without the Chrome-debug nonsense) use:

--enable-logging --log-level=0

instead of --v=1 which is just too much info.

It will still provide the errors and warnings like you would typically see in the Chrome console.

update May 18, 2020: Actually, I think this is no longer true. I couldn't find the console messages within whatever this logging level is.

2
  • Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected identifier
    – Brackets
    Dec 23, 2020 at 7:37
  • June 2022, --enable-logging --v=1 confirmed to show console logs while --enable-logging --log-level=0 does not.
    – Wimateeka
    Jun 29, 2022 at 12:46
7

This may or may not be helpful but on Windows you can read the console log using Event Tracing for Windows

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms751538.aspx

Our integration tests are run in .NET so I use this method to add the console log to our test output. I've made a sample console project to demonstrate here: https://github.com/jkells/chrome-trace

--enable-logging --v=1 doesn't seem to work on the latest version of Chrome.

7

For Google Chrome Version 84.0.4147.105 and higher,

just right click and click 'Save as' and 'Save'

then, txt file will be saved

enter image description here

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5

A lot of good answers but why not just use JSON.stringify(your_variable) ? Then take the contents via copy and paste (remove outer quotes). I posted this same answer also at: How to save the output of a console.log(object) to a file?

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  • 1
    For issues about "Uncaught TypeError: Converting circular structure to JSON", maybe this could help.
    – KtX2SkD
    Oct 8, 2017 at 14:24
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There is another open-source tool which allows you to save all console.log output in a file on your server - JS LogFlush (plug!).

JS LogFlush is an integrated JavaScript logging solution which include:

  • cross-browser UI-less replacement of console.log - on client side.
  • log storage system - on server side.

Demo

3

If you're running an Apache server on your localhost (don't do this on a production server), you can also post the results to a script instead of writing it to console.

So instead of console.log, you can write:

JSONP('http://localhost/save.php', {fn: 'filename.txt', data: json});

Then save.php can do this

<?php

 $fn = $_REQUEST['fn'];
 $data = $_REQUEST['data'];

 file_put_contents("path/$fn", $data);
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  • 1
    I truly hope no one ever uploads this to a server in production 🙁. This is wrought with danger to the server. Feb 12, 2017 at 19:06
  • Did you not read the first line: "If you're running an Apache server on your localhost"?
    – supersan
    Feb 13, 2017 at 13:16
  • Your down vote of my post is not justified because that would be incredibly foolish for someone to run a production server on "localhost" (where the JSONP requests posts data).
    – supersan
    Feb 13, 2017 at 14:15
  • I never down voted your answer, I merely pointed out the danger this script poses if ever uploaded to a server available to the public. Feb 13, 2017 at 16:57
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  1. Right-click directly on the logged value you want to copy
  2. In the right-click menu, select "Store as global variable"
  3. You'll see the value saved as something like "temp1" on the next line in the console
  4. In the console, type copy(temp1) and hit return (replace temp1 with the variable name from the previous step). Now the logged value is copied to your clipboard.
  5. Paste the values to wherever you want

This is especially good as an approach if you don't want to mess with changing flags/settings in Chrome and don't want to deal with JSON stringifying and parsing etc.

Update: I just found this explanation of what I suggested with images that's easier to follow https://scottwhittaker.net/chrome-devtools/2016/02/29/chrome-devtools-copy-object.html

0
2

These days it's very easy - right click any item displayed in the console log and select save as and save the whole log output to a file on your computer.

2

On Linux (at least) you can set CHROME_LOG_FILE in the environment to have chrome write a log of the Console activity to the named file each time it runs. The log is overwritten every time chrome starts. This way, if you have an automated session that runs chrome, you don't have a to change the way chrome is started, and the log is there after the session ends.

export CHROME_LOG_FILE=chrome.log

1

the other solutions in this thread weren't working on my mac. Here's a logger that saves a string representation intermittently using ajax. use it with console.save instead of console.log

var logFileString="";
var maxLogLength=1024*128;

console.save=function(){
  var logArgs={};

  for(var i=0; i<arguments.length; i++) logArgs['arg'+i]=arguments[i];
  console.log(logArgs);

  // keep a string representation of every log
  logFileString+=JSON.stringify(logArgs,null,2)+'\n';

  // save the string representation when it gets big
  if(logFileString.length>maxLogLength){
    // send a copy in case race conditions change it mid-save
    saveLog(logFileString);
    logFileString="";
  }
};

depending on what you need, you can save that string or just console.log it and copy and paste. here's an ajax for you in case you want to save it:

function saveLog(data){
  // do some ajax stuff with data.
  var xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();

  xhttp.onreadystatechange = function(){
    if (this.readyState == 4 && this.status == 200) {}
  }

  xhttp.open("POST", 'saveLog.php', true);
  xhttp.send(data);
}

the saveLog.php should append the data to a log file somewhere. I didn't need that part so I'm not including it here. :)

https://www.google.com/search?q=php+append+to+log

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This answer might seem specifically related, but specifically for Network Log, you can visit the following link.

The reason I've post this answer is because in my case, the console.log printed a long truncated text so I couldn't get the value from the console. I solved by getting the api response I was printing directly from the network log.

chrome://net-export/

There you may see a similar windows to this, just press the Start Logging to Disk button and that's it:

enter image description here

1

One approch is to convert results into string and convert that string data to blob and then to data url and make it downloadable using <a> tag and click()

// Convert string data to url
var results = { test1: 'result1', test2: 'result2' }
let blob = new Blob([JSON.stringify(results)], {type: 'text/plain'})
let url = URL.createObjectURL(blob)

// Create anchor tag
let downloadLink = document.createElement('a')
downloadLink.download = 'results.txt'
downloadLink.href = url

// Click to download file
downloadLink.click()
0

Create a batch file using below command and save it as ChromeDebug.bat in your desktop.

start chrome --enable-logging --v=1

Close all other Chrome tabs and windows. Double click ChromeDebug.bat file which will open Chrome and a command prompt with Chrome icon in taskbar. All the web application logs will be stored in below path. Run the below path in Run command to open chrome log file

%LocalAppData%\Google\Chrome\User Data\chrome_debug.log

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