g3log/API.markdown

9.5 KiB

API description

Most of the API that you need for using g3log is described in this readme. For more API documentation and examples please continue to read the API readme. Examples of what you will find here are:

Logging API: LOG calls

It is optional to use either streaming LOG(INFO) << "some text" or printf-like syntax LOGF(WARNING, "some number %d", 123);

Conditional logging is made with LOG_IF(INFO, <boolean-expression>) << " some text" or LOGF_IF(WARNING, <boolean-expression>) << " some text". Only if the expressions evaluates to true will the logging take place.

Example: LOG_IF(INFO, 1 != 200) << " some text"; or LOG_IF(FATAL, SomeFunctionCall()) << " some text";

A call using FATAL logging level, such as the LOG_IF(FATAL,...) example above, will after logging the message at FATALlevel also kill the process. It is essentially the same as a CHECK(<boolea-expression>) << ... with the difference that the CHECK(<boolean-expression) triggers when the expression evaluates to false.

Contract API: CHECK calls

The contract API follows closely the logging API with CHECK(<boolean-expression>) << ... for streaming or (*) CHECKF(<boolean-expression>, ...); for printf-style.

If the <boolean-expression> evaluates to false then the the message for the failed contract will be logged in FIFO order with previously made messages. The process will then shut down after the message is sent to the sinks and the sinks have dealt with the fatal contract message.

(* * CHECK_F(<boolean-expression>, ...); was the the previous API for printf-like CHECK. It is still kept for backwards compatability but is exactly the same as CHECKF *)

Logging levels ```

The default logging levels are DEBUG, INFO, WARNING and FATAL (see FATAL usage above). The logging levels are defined in loglevels.hpp.

For some windows framework there is a clash with the DEBUG logging level. One of the CMake Build options can be used to then change offending default level from DEBUG TO DBUG.

**CMake option: (default OFF) ** cmake -DCHANGE_G3LOG_DEBUG_TO_DBUG=ON ..

disable/enabled levels at runtime

Logging levels can be disabled at runtime. The logic for this happens in loglevels.hpp, loglevels.cpp and g3log.hpp.

There is a cmake option to enable the dynamic enable/disable of levels. When the option is enabled there will be a slight runtime overhead for each LOG call when the enable/disable status is checked. For most intent and purposes this runtime overhead is negligable.

There is no runtime overhead for internally checking if a level is enabled//disabled if the cmake option is turned off. If the dynamic logging cmake option is turned off then all logging levels are enabled.

CMake option: (default OFF) cmake -DUSE_DYNAMIC_LOGGING_LEVELS=ON ..

custom logging levels

Custom logging levels can be created and used. When defining a custom logging level you set the value for it as well as the text for it. You can re-use values for other levels such as INFO, WARNING etc or have your own values.

Any value with equal or higher value than the FATAL value will be considered a FATAL logging level.

Example:

// In CustomLoggingLevels.hpp
#include <g3log/loglevels.hpp>

// all values with a + 1 higher than their closest equivalet
// they could really have the same value as well.

const LEVELS FYI {DEBUG.value + 1, {"For Your Information"}}; 
const LEVELS CUSTOM {INFO.value + 1, {"CUSTOM"}}; 
const LEVELS SEVERE {WARNING.value +1, {"SEVERE"}};
const LEVELS DEADLY {FATAL.value + 1, {"DEADLY"}}; 

Sink creation and utilization

The default sink for g3log is the one as used in g2log. It is a simple file sink with a limited API. The details for the default file sink can be found in filesink.hpp, filesink.cpp, filesinkhelper.ipp

More sinks can be found at g3sinks (log rotate, log rotate with filtering on levels)

A logging sink is not required to be a subclass of a specific type. The only requirement of a logging sink is that it can receive a logging message of

Using the default sink

Sink creation is defined in logworker.hpp and used in logworker.cpp. For in-depth knowlege regarding sink implementation details you can look at sinkhandle.hpp and sinkwrapper.hpp

LOG flushing

The default file sink will flush each log entry as it comes in. For different flushing policies please take a look at g3sinks logrotate and LogRotateWithFilters.

At shutdown all enqueued logs will be flushed to the sink.
At a discovered fatal event (SIGSEGV et.al) all enqueued logs will be flushed to the sink.

A programmatically triggered abrupt process exit such as a call to exit(0) will of course not get the enqueued log entries flushed. Similary a bug that does not trigger a fatal signal but a process exit will also not get the enqueued log entries flushed. G3log can catch several fatal crashes and it deals well with RAII exits but magic is so far out of its' reach.

Fatal handling

The default behaviour for G3log is to catch several fatal events before they force the process to exit. After catching a fatal event a stack dump is generated and all log entries, up to the point of the stack dump are together with the dump flushed to the sink(s).

Linux/*nix

The default fatal handling on Linux deals with fatal signals. At the time of writing these signals were SIGABRT, SIGFPE, SIGILL, SIGILL, SIGSEGV, SIGSEGV, SIGTERM. The Linux fatal handling is handled in crashhandler.hpp and crashhandler_unix.cpp

A signal that commonly is associated with voluntarily process exit is SIGINT (ctrl + c) G3log does not deal with it.

The fatal signals can be disabled or changed/added .

An example of a Linux stackdump as shown in the output from the fatal example g3log-FATAL-sigsegv. ``` ***** FATAL SIGNAL RECEIVED ******* "Received fatal signal: SIGSEGV(11) PID: 6571

***** SIGNAL SIGSEGV(11)

******* STACKDUMP *******
        stack dump [1]  ./g3log-FATAL-sigsegv() [0x42a500]
        stack dump [2]  /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0+0x10340 [0x7f83636d5340]

        stack dump [3]  ./g3log-FATAL-sigsegv : example_fatal::tryToKillWithAccessingIllegalPointer(std::unique_ptr<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> >, std::default_delete<std::__cxx11::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > > >)+0x119 [0x4107b9]
        stack dump [4]  ./g3log-FATAL-sigsegvmain+0xdec [0x40e51c]
        stack dump [5]  /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6__libc_start_main+0xf5 [0x7f8363321ec5]
        stack dump [6]  ./g3log-FATAL-sigsegv() [0x40ffa2]

Exiting after fatal event  (FATAL_SIGNAL). Fatal type:  SIGSEGV
Log content flushed flushed sucessfully to sink

"
g3log g3FileSink shutdown at: 16:33:18

```
### TOWRITE: Windows Windows fatal handling also deals with fatal signals just like Linux. In addition to fatal signals it also deals with unhandled exceptions, vectored exceptions. Windows fatal handling is handled in [crashhandler.hpp](src/g3log/crashhandler.hpp), [crashhandler_windows.cpp](src/crashhandler_windows.cpp), [stacktrace_windows.hpp](src/g3log/stacktrace_windows.hpp), [stacktrace_windows.cpp](src/stacktrace_windows.cpp)

An example of a Windows stackdump as shown in the output from the fatal example g3log-FATAL-sigsegv.

.... MISSING CONTENT..... since my Windows computer is gone!

TOWRITE: Custom fatal handling

TOWRITE: Pre fatal hook

TOWRITE: Override of signal handling

TOWRITE: Disable fatal handling

Build Options

The build options are defined in the file Options.cmake

build options are generated and saved to a header file. This avoid having to set the define options in the client source code