logger -
System to control logging of events.
package require Tcl 8.2
package require logger ? 0.9 ?
logger::init service
logger::import ? -all ? ? -force ? ? -prefix prefix ? ? -namespace namespace ? service
logger::initNamespace ns ? level ?
logger::services
logger::enable level
logger::disable level
logger::setlevel level
logger::levels
logger::servicecmd service
${log}::debug message
${log}::info message
${log}::notice message
${log}::warn message
${log}::error message
${log}::critical message
${log}::alert message
${log}::emergency message
${log}::setlevel level
${log}::enable level
${log}::disable level
${log}::lvlchangeproc command
${log}::lvlchangeproc
${log}::logproc level
${log}::logproc level command
${log}::logproc level argname body
${log}::services
${log}::servicename
${log}::currentloglevel
${log}::delproc command
${log}::delproc
${log}::delete
${log}::trace command
${log}::trace on
${log}::trace off
${log}::trace status ? procName ? ? ... ?
${log}::trace add procName ? ... ?
${log}::trace add ? -ns ? nsName ? ... ?
${log}::trace remove procName ? ... ?
${log}::trace remove ? -ns ? nsName ? ... ?
The logger package provides a flexible system for logging messages
from different services, at priority levels, with different commands.
To begin using the logger package, we do the following:
package require logger
set log [logger::init myservice]
${log}::notice "Initialized myservice logging"
... code ...
${log}::notice "Ending myservice logging"
${log}::delete
In the above code, after the package is loaded, the following things
happen:
-
logger::init service
-
Initializes the service service for logging. The service names
are actually Tcl namespace names, so they are separated with '::'.
The service name may not be the empty string or only ':'s.
When a logger service is initialized, it "inherits" properties from its
parents. For instance, if there were a service foo, and
we did a logger::init foo::bar (to create a bar
service underneath foo), bar would copy the current
configuration of the foo service, although it would of
course, also be possible to then separately configure bar.
If a logger service is initialized and the parent does not yet exist, the
parent is also created.
The new logger service is initialized with the default loglevel set
with logger::setlevel.
-
logger::import ? -all ? ? -force ? ? -prefix prefix ? ? -namespace namespace ? service
-
Import the logger service commands into the current namespace. Without the -all option
only the commands corresponding to the log levels are imported. If -all is given,
all the ${log}::cmd style commands are imported. If the import would overwrite a command
an error is returned and no command is imported. Use the -force option to force the import
and overwrite existing commands without complaining.
If the -prefix option is given, the commands are imported with the given prefix
prepended to their names.
If the -namespace option is given, the commands are imported into the given namespace. If the
namespace does not exist, it is created. If a namespace without a leading :: is given, it is interpreted as
a child namespace to the current namespace.
-
logger::initNamespace ns ? level ?
-
Convenience command for setting up a namespace for logging. Creates a
logger service named after the namespace ns (a :: prefix is
stripped), imports all the log commands into the namespace, and sets
the default logging level, either to the specified level, or the
default level, "warn".
-
logger::services
-
Returns a list of all the available services.
-
logger::enable level
-
Globally enables logging at and "above" the given level. Levels are
debug, info, notice, warn, error,
critical, alert, emergency.
-
logger::disable level
-
Globally disables logging at and "below" the given level. Levels are
those listed above.
-
logger::setlevel level
-
Globally enable logging at and "above" the given level. Levels are those
listed above. This command changes the default loglevel for new loggers
created with logger::init.
-
logger::levels
-
Returns a list of the available log levels (also listed above under enable).
-
logger::servicecmd service
-
Returns the ${log} token created by logger::init for this service.
-
${log}::debug message
-
-
${log}::info message
-
-
${log}::notice message
-
-
${log}::warn message
-
-
${log}::error message
-
-
${log}::critical message
-
-
${log}::alert message
-
-
${log}::emergency message
-
These are the commands called to actually log a message about an
event. ${log} is the variable obtained from logger::init.
-
${log}::setlevel level
-
Enable logging, in the service referenced by ${log}, and its
children, at and above the level specified, and disable logging below
it.
-
${log}::enable level
-
Enable logging, in the service referenced by ${log}, and its
children, at and above the level specified. Note that this does not disable logging below this level, so you should probably use
setlevel instead.
-
${log}::disable level
-
Disable logging, in the service referenced by ${log}, and its
children, at and below the level specified. Note that this does not enable logging above this level,
so you should probably use setlevel instead.
Disabling the loglevel emergency switches logging off for the service and its children.
-
${log}::lvlchangeproc command
-
-
${log}::lvlchangeproc
-
Set the script to call when the log instance in question changes its log level.
If called without a command it returns the currently registered command. The command gets two arguments
appended, the old and the new loglevel. The callback is invoked after all changes have been done.
If child loggers are affected, their callbacks are called before their parents callback.
proc lvlcallback {old new} {
puts "Loglevel changed from $old to $new"
}
${log}::lvlchangeproc lvlcallback
-
${log}::logproc level
-
-
${log}::logproc level command
-
-
${log}::logproc level argname body
-
This command comes in three forms - the third, older one is deprecated
and may be removed from future versions of the logger package.
The current set version takes one argument, a command to be executed when the
level is called. The callback command takes on argument, the text to
be logged. If called only with a valid level logproc returns the name of the command
currently registered as callback command.
logproc specifies which command will perform the actual logging
for a given level. The logger package ships with default commands for
all log levels, but with logproc it is possible to replace them
with custom code. This would let you send your logs over the network,
to a database, or anything else. For example:
proc logtoserver {txt} {
variable socket
puts $socket "Notice: $txt"
}
${log}::logproc notice logtoserver
Trace logs are slightly different: instead of a plain text argument,
the argument provided to the logproc is a dictionary consisting of the
enter or leave keyword along with another dictionary of
details about the trace. These include:
- proc - Name of the procedure being traced.
- level - The stack level for the procedure invocation
(from info level).
- script - The name of the file in which the procedure is
defined, or an empty string if defined in interactive mode.
- caller - The name of the procedure calling the procedure
being traced, or an empty string if the procedure was called from the
global scope (stack level 0).
- procargs - A dictionary consisting of the names of arguments
to the procedure paired with values given for those arguments (enter
traces only).
- status - The Tcl return code (e.g. ok,
continue, etc.) (leave traces only).
- result - The value returned by the procedure (leave
traces only).
-
${log}::services
-
Returns a list of the registered logging services which are children of this service.
-
${log}::servicename
-
Returns the name of this service.
-
${log}::currentloglevel
-
Returns the currently enabled log level for this service. If no logging is enabled returns none.
-
${log}::delproc command
-
-
${log}::delproc
-
Set the script to call when the log instance in question is deleted.
If called without a command it returns the currently registered command.
For example:
${log}::delproc [list closesock $logsock]
-
${log}::delete
-
This command deletes a particular logging service, and its children.
You must call this to clean up the resources used by a service.
-
${log}::trace command
-
This command controls logging of enter/leave traces for specified procedures.
It is used to enable and disable tracing, query tracing status, and
specify procedures are to be traced. Trace handlers are unregistered when
tracing is disabled. As a result, there is not performance impact to a
library when tracing is disabled, just as with other log level commands.
proc tracecmd { dict } {
puts $dict
}
set log [::logger::init example]
${log}::logproc trace tracecmd
proc foo { args } {
puts "In foo"
bar 1
return "foo_result"
}
proc bar { x } {
puts "In bar"
return "bar_result"
}
${log}::trace add foo bar
${log}::trace on
foo
# Output:
enter {proc ::foo level 1 script {} caller {} procargs {args {}}}
In foo
enter {proc ::bar level 2 script {} caller ::foo procargs {x 1}}
In bar
leave {proc ::bar level 2 script {} caller ::foo status ok result bar_result}
leave {proc ::foo level 1 script {} caller {} status ok result foo_result}
-
${log}::trace on
-
Turns on trace logging for procedures registered through the trace
add command. This is similar to the enable command for other
logging levels, but allows trace logging to take place at any level.
The trace logging mechanism takes advantage of the execution trace feature
of Tcl 8.4 and later. The trace on command will return an
error if called from earlier versions of Tcl.
-
${log}::trace off
-
Turns off trace logging for procedures registered for trace logging
through the trace add command. This is similar to the
disable command for other logging levels, but allows trace logging
to take place at any level.
Procedures are not unregistered, so logging for them can be turned back
on with the trace on command. There is no overhead imposed
by trace registration when trace logging is disabled.
-
${log}::trace status ? procName ? ? ... ?
-
This command returns a list of the procedures currently registered for
trace logging, or a flag indicating whether or not a trace is registered
for one or more specified procedures.
-
${log}::trace add procName ? ... ?
-
-
${log}::trace add ? -ns ? nsName ? ... ?
-
This command registers one or more procedures for logging of entry/exit
traces. Procedures can be specified via a list of procedure names or
namespace names (in which case all procedure within the namespace
are targeted by the operation). By default, each name is first
interpreted as a procedure name or glob-style search pattern, and if
not found its interpreted as a namespace name. The -ns option can
be used to force interpretation of all provided arguments as namespace names.
Procedures must be defined prior to registering them for tracing
through the trace add command. Any procedure or namespace
names/patterns that don't match any existing procedures will be
silently ignored.
-
${log}::trace remove procName ? ... ?
-
-
${log}::trace remove ? -ns ? nsName ? ... ?
-
This command unregisters one or more procedures so that they will no
longer have trace logging performed, with the same matching rules as
that of the trace add command.
The logger package is implemented in such a way as to optimize (for
Tcl 8.4 and newer) log procedures which are disabled. They are
aliased to a proc which has no body, which is compiled to a no op in
bytecode. This should make the peformance hit minimal. If you really
want to pull out all the stops, you can replace the ${log} token in
your code with the actual namespace and command (${log}::warn becomes
::logger::tree::myservice::warn), so that no variable lookup is done.
This puts the performance of disabled logger commands very close to no
logging at all.
The "object orientation" is done through a hierarchy of namespaces.
Using an actual object oriented system would probably be a better way
of doing things, or at least provide for a cleaner implementation.
The service "object orientation" is done with namespaces.
The logger package takes extra care to keep the logproc out of the call stack.
This enables logprocs to execute code in the callers scope by using uplevel or
linking to local variables by using upvar. This may fire traces with all usual
side effects.
# Print caller and current vars in the calling proc
proc log_local_var {txt} {
set caller [info level -1]
set vars [uplevel 1 info vars]
foreach var [lsort $vars] {
if {[uplevel 1 [list array exists $var]] == 1} {
lappend val $var <Array>
} else {
lappend val $var [uplevel 1 [list set $var]]
}
}
puts "$txt"
puts "Caller: $caller"
puts "Variables in callers scope:"
foreach {var value} $val {
puts "$var = $value"
}
}
# install as logproc
${log}::logproc debug log_local_var
This document, and the package it describes, will undoubtedly contain
bugs and other problems.
Please report such in the category
logger of the
http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=12883.
Please also report any ideas for enhancements you may have for either
package and/or documentation.
logger, log, service, log level