// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // Package log implements a simple logging package. It defines a type, Logger, // with methods for formatting output. It also has a predefined 'standard' // Logger accessible through helper functions Print[f|ln], Fatal[f|ln], and // Panic[f|ln], which are easier to use than creating a Logger manually. // That logger writes to standard error and prints the date and time // of each logged message. // The Fatal functions call os.Exit(1) after writing the log message. // The Panic functions call panic after writing the log message. package log import ( "fmt" "io" "os" "runtime" "sync" "time" ) // These flags define which text to prefix to each log entry generated by the Logger. // Bits or'ed together to control what's printed. There is no control over the // order they appear (the order listed here) or the format they present (as // described in the comments). A colon appears after these items: // 2009/01/23 01:23:23.123123 /a/b/c/d.go:23: message const ( Ldate = 1 << iota // the date: 2009/01/23 Ltime Lmicroseconds // microsecond resolution: 01:23:23.123123. assumes Ltime. Llongfile // full file name and line number: /a/b/c/d.go:23 Lshortfile // final file name element and line number: d.go:23. overrides Llongfile LstdFlags = Ldate | Ltime // initial values for the standard logger ) // A Logger represents an active logging object that generates lines of // output to an io.Writer. Each logging operation makes a single call to // the Writer's Write method. A Logger can be used simultaneously from // multiple goroutines; it guarantees to serialize access to the Writer. type Logger struct { mu sync.Mutex // ensures atomic writes; protects the following fields prefix string // prefix to write at beginning of each line flag int // properties out io.Writer // destination for output buf []byte // for accumulating text to write } // New creates a new Logger. The out variable sets the // destination to which log data will be written. // The prefix appears at the beginning of each generated log line. // The flag argument defines the logging properties. func New(out io.Writer, prefix string, flag int) *Logger { return &Logger{out: out, prefix: prefix, flag: flag} } var std = New(os.Stderr, "", LstdFlags) // Error is an error logger var Error = New(os.Stderr, "", 0) // Debug is an error logger var Debug = New(os.Stderr, "", 0) // Trace is an error logger var Trace = New(os.Stderr, "", 0) // Cheap integer to fixed-width decimal ASCII. Give a negative width to avoid zero-padding. // Knows the buffer has capacity. func itoa(buf *[]byte, i int, wid int) { var u = uint(i) if u == 0 && wid <= 1 { *buf = append(*buf, '0') return } // Assemble decimal in reverse order. var b [32]byte bp := len(b) for ; u > 0 || wid > 0; u /= 10 { bp-- wid-- b[bp] = byte(u%10) + '0' } *buf = append(*buf, b[bp:]...) } func (l *Logger) formatHeader(buf *[]byte, t time.Time, file string, line int) { *buf = append(*buf, l.prefix...) if l.flag&(Ldate|Ltime|Lmicroseconds) != 0 { if l.flag&Ldate != 0 { year, month, day := t.Date() itoa(buf, year, 4) *buf = append(*buf, '/') itoa(buf, int(month), 2) *buf = append(*buf, '/') itoa(buf, day, 2) *buf = append(*buf, ' ') } if l.flag&(Ltime|Lmicroseconds) != 0 { hour, min, sec := t.Clock() itoa(buf, hour, 2) *buf = append(*buf, ':') itoa(buf, min, 2) *buf = append(*buf, ':') itoa(buf, sec, 2) if l.flag&Lmicroseconds != 0 { *buf = append(*buf, '.') itoa(buf, t.Nanosecond()/1e3, 6) } *buf = append(*buf, ' ') } } if l.flag&(Lshortfile|Llongfile) != 0 { if l.flag&Lshortfile != 0 { short := file for i := len(file) - 1; i > 0; i-- { if file[i] == '/' { short = file[i+1:] break } } file = short } *buf = append(*buf, file...) *buf = append(*buf, ':') itoa(buf, line, -1) *buf = append(*buf, ": "...) } } // Output writes the output for a logging event. The string s contains // the text to print after the prefix specified by the flags of the // Logger. A newline is appended if the last character of s is not // already a newline. Calldepth is used to recover the PC and is // provided for generality, although at the moment on all pre-defined // paths it will be 2. func (l *Logger) Output(calldepth int, s string) error { now := time.Now() // get this early. var file string var line int l.mu.Lock() defer l.mu.Unlock() if l.flag&(Lshortfile|Llongfile) != 0 { // release lock while getting caller info - it's expensive. l.mu.Unlock() var ok bool _, file, line, ok = runtime.Caller(calldepth) if !ok { file = "???" line = 0 } l.mu.Lock() } l.buf = l.buf[:0] l.formatHeader(&l.buf, now, file, line) l.buf = append(l.buf, s...) if len(s) > 0 && s[len(s)-1] != '\n' { l.buf = append(l.buf, '\n') } _, err := l.out.Write(l.buf) return err } // Printf calls l.Output to print to the logger. // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Printf. func (l *Logger) Printf(format string, v ...interface{}) { l.Output(2, fmt.Sprintf(format, v...)) } // Print calls l.Output to print to the logger. // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Print. func (l *Logger) Print(v ...interface{}) { l.Output(2, fmt.Sprint(v...)) } // Println calls l.Output to print to the logger. // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Println. func (l *Logger) Println(v ...interface{}) { l.Output(2, fmt.Sprintln(v...)) } // Fatal is equivalent to l.Print() followed by a call to os.Exit(1). func (l *Logger) Fatal(v ...interface{}) { l.Output(2, fmt.Sprint(v...)) os.Exit(1) } // Fatalf is equivalent to l.Printf() followed by a call to os.Exit(1). func (l *Logger) Fatalf(format string, v ...interface{}) { l.Output(2, fmt.Sprintf(format, v...)) os.Exit(1) } // Fatalln is equivalent to l.Println() followed by a call to os.Exit(1). func (l *Logger) Fatalln(v ...interface{}) { l.Output(2, fmt.Sprintln(v...)) os.Exit(1) } // Panic is equivalent to l.Print() followed by a call to panic(). func (l *Logger) Panic(v ...interface{}) { s := fmt.Sprint(v...) l.Output(2, s) panic(s) } // Panicf is equivalent to l.Printf() followed by a call to panic(). func (l *Logger) Panicf(format string, v ...interface{}) { s := fmt.Sprintf(format, v...) l.Output(2, s) panic(s) } // Panicln is equivalent to l.Println() followed by a call to panic(). func (l *Logger) Panicln(v ...interface{}) { s := fmt.Sprintln(v...) l.Output(2, s) panic(s) } // Flags returns the output flags for the logger. func (l *Logger) Flags() int { l.mu.Lock() defer l.mu.Unlock() return l.flag } // SetFlags sets the output flags for the logger. func (l *Logger) SetFlags(flag int) { l.mu.Lock() defer l.mu.Unlock() l.flag = flag } // Prefix returns the output prefix for the logger. func (l *Logger) Prefix() string { l.mu.Lock() defer l.mu.Unlock() return l.prefix } // SetPrefix sets the output prefix for the logger. func (l *Logger) SetPrefix(prefix string) { l.mu.Lock() defer l.mu.Unlock() l.prefix = prefix } // SetOutput sets the output destination for the standard logger. func SetOutput(w io.Writer) { std.mu.Lock() defer std.mu.Unlock() std.out = w } // Flags returns the output flags for the standard logger. func Flags() int { return std.Flags() } // SetFlags sets the output flags for the standard logger. func SetFlags(flag int) { std.SetFlags(flag) } // Prefix returns the output prefix for the standard logger. func Prefix() string { return std.Prefix() } // SetPrefix sets the output prefix for the standard logger. func SetPrefix(prefix string) { std.SetPrefix(prefix) } // These functions write to the standard logger. // Print calls Output to print to the standard logger. // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Print. func Print(v ...interface{}) { std.Output(2, fmt.Sprint(v...)) } // Printf calls Output to print to the standard logger. // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Printf. func Printf(format string, v ...interface{}) { std.Output(2, fmt.Sprintf(format, v...)) } // Println calls Output to print to the standard logger. // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Println. func Println(v ...interface{}) { std.Output(2, fmt.Sprintln(v...)) } // Fatal is equivalent to Print() followed by a call to os.Exit(1). func Fatal(v ...interface{}) { std.Output(2, fmt.Sprint(v...)) os.Exit(1) } // Fatalf is equivalent to Printf() followed by a call to os.Exit(1). func Fatalf(format string, v ...interface{}) { std.Output(2, fmt.Sprintf(format, v...)) os.Exit(1) } // Fatalln is equivalent to Println() followed by a call to os.Exit(1). func Fatalln(v ...interface{}) { std.Output(2, fmt.Sprintln(v...)) os.Exit(1) } // Panic is equivalent to Print() followed by a call to panic(). func Panic(v ...interface{}) { s := fmt.Sprint(v...) std.Output(2, s) panic(s) } // Panicf is equivalent to Printf() followed by a call to panic(). func Panicf(format string, v ...interface{}) { s := fmt.Sprintf(format, v...) std.Output(2, s) panic(s) } // Panicln is equivalent to Println() followed by a call to panic(). func Panicln(v ...interface{}) { s := fmt.Sprintln(v...) std.Output(2, s) panic(s) }