Module std.experimental.logger
Implements logging facilities.
Authors
Basic Logging
Message logging is a common approach to expose runtime information of a
program. Logging should be easy, but also flexible and powerful, therefore
D provides a standard interface for logging.
The easiest way to create a log message is to write:
import std .experimental .logger;
void main() {
log("Hello World");
}
This will print a message to the stderr device. The message will contain
the filename, the line number, the name of the surrounding function, the time
and the message.
More complex log call can go along the lines like:
log("Logging to the sharedLog with its default LogLevel");
logf(LogLevel .info, 5 < 6, "%s to the sharedLog with its LogLevel.info", "Logging");
info("Logging to the sharedLog with its info LogLevel");
warning(5 < 6, "Logging to the sharedLog with its LogLevel.warning if 5 is less than 6");
error("Logging to the sharedLog with its error LogLevel");
errorf("Logging %s the sharedLog %s its error LogLevel", "to", "with");
critical("Logging to the"," sharedLog with its error LogLevel");
fatal("Logging to the sharedLog with its fatal LogLevel");
auto fLogger = new FileLogger("NameOfTheLogFile");
fLogger .log("Logging to the fileLogger with its default LogLevel");
fLogger .info("Logging to the fileLogger with its default LogLevel");
fLogger .warning(5 < 6, "Logging to the fileLogger with its LogLevel.warning if 5 is less than 6");
fLogger .warningf(5 < 6, "Logging to the fileLogger with its LogLevel.warning if %s is %s than 6", 5, "less");
fLogger .critical("Logging to the fileLogger with its info LogLevel");
fLogger .log(LogLevel .trace, 5 < 6, "Logging to the fileLogger"," with its default LogLevel if 5 is less than 6");
fLogger .fatal("Logging to the fileLogger with its warning LogLevel");
Additionally, this example shows how a new FileLogger is created.
Individual Logger and the global log functions share commonly named
functions to log data.
The names of the functions are as follows:
logtraceinfowarningcriticalfatal
Logger will by default log to stderr and has a default
LogLevel of LogLevel .all. The default Logger can be accessed by
using the property called sharedLog. This property is a reference to the
current default Logger. This reference can be used to assign a new
default Logger.
sharedLog = new FileLogger("New_Default_Log_File.log");
Additional Logger can be created by creating a new instance of the
required Logger.
Logging Fundamentals
LogLevel
TheLogLevel of a log call can be defined in two ways. The first is by
calling log and passing the LogLevel explicitly as the first argument.
The second way of setting the LogLevel of a
log call, is by calling either trace, info, warning,
critical, or fatal. The log call will then have the respective
LogLevel. If no LogLevel is defined the log call will use the
current LogLevel of the used Logger. If data is logged with
LogLevel fatal by default an Error will be thrown.
This behaviour can be modified by using the member fatalHandler to
assign a custom delegate to handle log call with LogLevel fatal.
Conditional Logging
Conditional logging can be achieved be passing abool as first
argument to a log function. If conditional logging is used the condition must
be true in order to have the log message logged.
In order to combine an explicit LogLevel passing with conditional
logging, the LogLevel has to be passed as first argument followed by the
bool.
Filtering Log Messages
Messages are logged if theLogLevel of the log message is greater than or
equal to the LogLevel of the used Logger and additionally if the
LogLevel of the log message is greater than or equal to the global LogLevel.
If a condition is passed into the log call, this condition must be true.
The global LogLevel is accessible by using globalLogLevel.
To assign a LogLevel of a Logger use the logLevel property of
the logger.
Printf Style Logging
Ifprintf-style logging is needed add a f to the logging call, such as
myLogger .infof("Hello %s", "world"); or fatalf("errno %d", 1337).
The additional f appended to the function name enables printf-style
logging for all combinations of explicit LogLevel and conditional
logging functions and methods.
Thread Local Redirection
Calls to the free standing log functions are not directly forwarded to the globalLogger sharedLog. Actually, a thread local Logger of
type StdForwardLogger processes the log call and then, by default, forwards
the created Logger .LogEntry to the sharedLog Logger.
The thread local Logger is accessible by the stdThreadLocalLog
property. This property allows to assign user defined Logger. The default
LogLevel of the stdThreadLocalLog Logger is LogLevel .all
and it will therefore forward all messages to the sharedLog Logger.
The LogLevel of the stdThreadLocalLog can be used to filter log
calls before they reach the sharedLog Logger.
User Defined Logger
To customize theLogger behavior, create a new class that inherits from
the abstract Logger class, and implements the writeLogMsg
method.
class MyCustomLogger : Logger
{
this(LogLevel lv) @safe
{
super(lv);
}
override void writeLogMsg(ref LogEntry payload)
{
// log message in my custom way
}
}
auto logger = new MyCustomLogger(LogLevel .info);
logger .log("Awesome log message with LogLevel.info");
To gain more precise control over the logging process, additionally to
overriding the writeLogMsg method the methods beginLogMsg,
logMsgPart and finishLogMsg can be overridden.
Compile Time Disabling of Logger
In order to disable logging at compile time, pass StdLoggerDisableLogging as a
version argument to the D compiler when compiling your program code.
This will disable all logging functionality.
Specific LogLevel can be disabled at compile time as well.
In order to disable logging with the trace LogLevel pass
StdLoggerDisableTrace as a version.
The following table shows which version statement disables which
LogLevel.
LogLevel | StdLoggerDisableTrace |
LogLevel | StdLoggerDisableInfo |
LogLevel | StdLoggerDisableWarning |
LogLevel | StdLoggerDisableError |
LogLevel | StdLoggerDisableCritical |
LogLevel | StdLoggerDisableFatal |
Provided Logger
By default fourLogger implementations are given. The FileLogger
logs data to files. It can also be used to log to stdout and stderr
as these devices are files as well. A Logger that logs to stdout can
therefore be created by new FileLogger(stdout).
The MultiLogger is basically an associative array of strings to
Logger. It propagates log calls to its stored Logger. The
ArrayLogger contains an array of Logger and also propagates log
calls to its stored Logger. The NullLogger does not do anything. It
will never log a message and will never throw on a log call with LogLevel
error.