Logger (Class)

In: logger.rb
Parent: Object

Description

The Logger class provides a simple but sophisticated logging utility that anyone can use because it’s included in the Ruby 1.8.x standard library. For more advanced logging, see the "Log4r" package on the RAA.

The HOWTOs below give a code-based overview of Logger’s usage, but the basic concept is as follows. You create a Logger object (output to a file or elsewhere), and use it to log messages. The messages will have varying levels (info, error, etc), reflecting their varying importance. The levels, and their meanings, are:

FATAL:an unhandleable error that results in a program crash
ERROR:a handleable error condition
WARN:a warning
INFO:generic (useful) information about system operation
DEBUG:low-level information for developers

So each message has a level, and the Logger itself has a level, which acts as a filter, so you can control the amount of information emitted from the logger without having to remove actual messages.

For instance, in a production system, you may have your logger(s) set to INFO (or WARN if you don’t want the log files growing large with repetitive information). When you are developing it, though, you probably want to know about the program’s internal state, and would set them to DEBUG.

Example

A simple example demonstrates the above explanation:

  log = Logger.new(STDOUT)
  log.level = Logger::WARN

  log.debug("Created logger")
  log.info("Program started")
  log.warn("Nothing to do!")

  begin
    File.each_line(path) do |line|
      unless line =~ /^(\w+) = (.*)$/
        log.error("Line in wrong format: #{line}")
      end
    end
  rescue => err
    log.fatal("Caught exception; exiting")
    log.fatal(err)
  end

Because the Logger’s level is set to WARN, only the warning, error, and fatal messages are recorded. The debug and info messages are silently discarded.

Features

There are several interesting features that Logger provides, like auto-rolling of log files, setting the format of log messages, and specifying a program name in conjunction with the message. The next section shows you how to achieve these things.

See raa.ruby-lang.org/list.rhtml?name=log4r for Log4r, which contains many advanced features like file-based configuration, a wide range of logging targets, simultaneous logging, and hierarchical logging.

HOWTOs

How to create a logger

The options below give you various choices, in more or less increasing complexity.

  1. Create a logger which logs messages to STDERR/STDOUT.
      logger = Logger.new(STDERR)
      logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
    
  2. Create a logger for the file which has the specified name.
      logger = Logger.new('logfile.log')
    
  3. Create a logger for the specified file.
      file = File.open('foo.log', File::WRONLY | File::APPEND)
      # To create new (and to remove old) logfile, add File::CREAT like;
      #   file = open('foo.log', File::WRONLY | File::APPEND | File::CREAT)
      logger = Logger.new(file)
    
  4. Create a logger which ages logfile once it reaches a certain size. Leave 10 "old log files" and each file is about 1,024,000 bytes.
      logger = Logger.new('foo.log', 10, 1024000)
    
  5. Create a logger which ages logfile daily/weekly/monthly.
      logger = Logger.new('foo.log', 'daily')
      logger = Logger.new('foo.log', 'weekly')
      logger = Logger.new('foo.log', 'monthly')
    

How to log a message

Notice the different methods (fatal, error, info) being used to log messages of various levels. Other methods in this family are warn and debug. add is used below to log a message of an arbitrary (perhaps dynamic) level.

  1. Message in block.
      logger.fatal { "Argument 'foo' not given." }
    
  2. Message as a string.
      logger.error "Argument #{ @foo } mismatch."
    
  3. With progname.
      logger.info('initialize') { "Initializing..." }
    
  4. With severity.
      logger.add(Logger::FATAL) { 'Fatal error!' }
    

How to close a logger

     logger.close

Setting severity threshold

  1. Original interface.
      logger.level = Logger::WARN
    
  2. Log4r (somewhat) compatible interface.
      logger.level = Logger::INFO
    
      DEBUG < INFO < WARN < ERROR < FATAL < UNKNOWN
    

Format

Log messages are rendered in the output stream in a certain format. The default format and a sample are shown below:

Log format:

  SeverityID, [Date Time mSec #pid] SeverityLabel -- ProgName: message

Log sample:

  I, [Wed Mar 03 02:34:24 JST 1999 895701 #19074]  INFO -- Main: info.

You may change the date and time format in this manner:

  logger.datetime_format = "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"
        # e.g. "2004-01-03 00:54:26"

There is currently no supported way to change the overall format, but you may have some luck hacking the Format constant.

Methods

<<   add   close   debug   debug?   error   error?   fatal   fatal?   info   info?   log   new   unknown   warn   warn?  

Constants

ProgName = "#{$1}/#{$2}"
SEV_LABEL = %w(DEBUG INFO WARN ERROR FATAL ANY)
  Severity label for logging. (max 5 char)
Format = "%s, [%s#%d] %5s -- %s: %s\n"

External Aliases

level -> sev_threshold
level= -> sev_threshold=

Attributes

datetime_format  [RW]  Logging date-time format (string passed to strftime).
level  [RW]  Logging severity threshold (e.g. Logger::INFO).
progname  [RW]  Logging program name.

Included Modules

Severity

Public Class methods

Synopsis

  Logger.new(name, shift_age = 7, shift_size = 1048576)
  Logger.new(name, shift_age = 'weekly')

Args

logdev:The log device. This is a filename (String) or IO object (typically STDOUT, STDERR, or an open file).
shift_age:Number of old log files to keep, or frequency of rotation (daily, weekly or monthly).
shift_size:Maximum logfile size (only applies when shift_age is a number).

Description

Create an instance. See Logger::LogDevice.new for more information if required.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 249
  def initialize(logdev, shift_age = 0, shift_size = 1048576)
    @logdev = nil
    @progname = nil
    @level = DEBUG
    @datetime_format = nil
    @logdev = nil
    if logdev
      @logdev = LogDevice.new(logdev, :shift_age => shift_age, :shift_size => shift_size)
    end
  end

Public Instance methods

Dump given message to the log device without any formatting. If no log device exists, return nil.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 334
  def <<(msg)
    unless @logdev.nil?
      @logdev.write(msg)
    end
  end

Synopsis

  Logger#add(severity, message = nil, progname = nil) { ... }

Args

severity:Severity. Constants are defined in Logger namespace: DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, FATAL, or UNKNOWN.
message:The log message. A String or Exception.
progname:Program name string. Can be omitted. Treated as a message if no message and block are given.
block:Can be omitted. Called to get a message string if message is nil.

Return

true if successful, false otherwise.

When the given severity is not high enough (for this particular logger), log no message, and return true.

Description

Log a message if the given severity is high enough. This is the generic logging method. Users will be more inclined to use debug, info, warn, error, and fatal.

Message format: message can be any object, but it has to be converted to a String in order to log it. Generally, inspect is used if the given object is not a String. A special case is an Exception object, which will be printed in detail, including message, class, and backtrace. See msg2str for the implementation if required.

Bugs

  • Logfile is not locked.
  • Append open does not need to lock file.
  • But on the OS which supports multi I/O, records possibly be mixed.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 304
  def add(severity, message = nil, progname = nil, &block)
    severity ||= UNKNOWN
    if @logdev.nil? or severity < @level
      return true
    end
    progname ||= @progname
    if message.nil?
      if block_given?
        message = yield
      else
        message = progname
        progname = @progname
      end
    end
    @logdev.write(
      format_message(
        format_severity(severity),
        format_datetime(Time.now),
        msg2str(message),
        progname
      )
    )
    true
  end

Close the logging device.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 415
  def close
    @logdev.close if @logdev
  end

Log a DEBUG message.

See info for more information.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 345
  def debug(progname = nil, &block)
    add(DEBUG, nil, progname, &block)
  end

Returns true iff the current severity level allows for the printing of DEBUG messages.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 209
  def debug?; @level <= DEBUG; end

Log an ERROR message.

See info for more information.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 389
  def error(progname = nil, &block)
    add(ERROR, nil, progname, &block)
  end

Returns true iff the current severity level allows for the printing of ERROR messages.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 221
  def error?; @level <= ERROR; end

Log a FATAL message.

See info for more information.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 398
  def fatal(progname = nil, &block)
    add(FATAL, nil, progname, &block)
  end

Returns true iff the current severity level allows for the printing of FATAL messages.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 225
  def fatal?; @level <= FATAL; end

Log an INFO message.

The message can come either from the progname argument or the block. If both are provided, then the block is used as the message, and progname is used as the program name.

Examples

  logger.info("MainApp") { "Received connection from #{ip}" }
  # ...
  logger.info "Waiting for input from user"
  # ...
  logger.info { "User typed #{input}" }

You‘ll probably stick to the second form above, unless you want to provide a program name (which you can do with Logger#progname= as well).

Return

See add.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 371
  def info(progname = nil, &block)
    add(INFO, nil, progname, &block)
  end

Returns true iff the current severity level allows for the printing of INFO messages.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 213
  def info?; @level <= INFO; end
log(severity, message = nil, progname = nil, &block)

Alias for add

Log an UNKNOWN message. This will be printed no matter what the logger level.

See info for more information.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 408
  def unknown(progname = nil, &block)
    add(UNKNOWN, nil, progname, &block)
  end

Log a WARN message.

See info for more information.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 380
  def warn(progname = nil, &block)
    add(WARN, nil, progname, &block)
  end

Returns true iff the current severity level allows for the printing of WARN messages.

[Source]

# File logger.rb, line 217
  def warn?; @level <= WARN; end

[Validate]