Severity label for logging (max 5 chars).
Description
The Logger class provides a simple but sophisticated logging utility that you can use to output messages.
The messages have associated levels, such as INFO
or
ERROR
that indicate their importance. You can then give the
Logger a level, and only messages at that level
or higher will be printed.
The levels are:
-
UNKNOWN
-
An unknown message that should always be logged.
-
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.
For instance, in a production system, you may have your Logger set to INFO
or even
WARN
. When you are developing the system, however, you
probably want to know about the program's internal state, and would set
the Logger to DEBUG
.
Note: Logger does not escape or sanitize any messages passed to it. Developers should be aware of when potentially malicious data (user-input) is passed to Logger, and manually escape the untrusted data:
logger.info("User-input: #{input.dump}") logger.info("User-input: %p" % input)
You can use formatter= for escaping all data.
original_formatter = Logger::Formatter.new logger.formatter = proc { |severity, datetime, progname, msg| original_formatter.call(severity, datetime, progname, msg.dump) } logger.info(input)
Example
This creates a Logger that outputs to the
standard output stream, with a level of WARN
:
require 'logger' logger = Logger.new(STDOUT) logger.level = Logger::WARN logger.debug("Created logger") logger.info("Program started") logger.warn("Nothing to do!") path = "a_non_existent_file" begin File.foreach(path) do |line| unless line =~ /^(\w+) = (.*)$/ logger.error("Line in wrong format: #{line.chomp}") end end rescue => err logger.fatal("Caught exception; exiting") logger.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.
HOWTOs
How to create a logger
The options below give you various choices, in more or less increasing complexity.
-
Create a logger which logs messages to STDERR/STDOUT.
logger = Logger.new(STDERR) logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
-
Create a logger for the file which has the specified name.
logger = Logger.new('logfile.log')
-
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 = File.open('foo.log', File::WRONLY | File::APPEND | File::CREAT) logger = Logger.new(file)
-
Create a logger which ages the logfile once it reaches a certain size. Leave 10 “old” log files where each file is about 1,024,000 bytes.
logger = Logger.new('foo.log', 10, 1024000)
-
Create a logger which ages the 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.
-
Message in a block.
logger.fatal { "Argument 'foo' not given." }
-
Message as a string.
logger.error "Argument #{@foo} mismatch."
-
With progname.
logger.info('initialize') { "Initializing..." }
-
With severity.
logger.add(Logger::FATAL) { 'Fatal error!' }
The block form allows you to create potentially complex log messages, but to delay their evaluation until and unless the message is logged. For example, if we have the following:
logger.debug { "This is a " + potentially + " expensive operation" }
If the logger's level is INFO
or higher, no debug messages
will be logged, and the entire block will not even be evaluated. Compare
to this:
logger.debug("This is a " + potentially + " expensive operation")
Here, the string concatenation is done every time, even if the log level is not set to show the debug message.
How to close a logger
logger.close
Setting severity threshold
-
Original interface.
logger.sev_threshold = Logger::WARN
-
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 by default. The default format and a sample are shown below:
Log format:
SeverityID, [DateTime #pid] SeverityLabel -- ProgName: message
Log sample:
I, [1999-03-03T02:34:24.895701 #19074] INFO -- Main: info.
You may change the date and time format via datetime_format=.
logger.datetime_format = '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S' # e.g. "2004-01-03 00:54:26"
Or, you may change the overall format via the formatter= method.
logger.formatter = proc do |severity, datetime, progname, msg| "#{datetime}: #{msg}\n" end # e.g. "2005-09-22 08:51:08 +0900: hello world"