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/*
* Copyright (C) 2007 Xagasoft, All rights reserved.
*
* This file is part of the libbu++ library and is released under the
* terms of the license contained in the file LICENSE.
*/
#ifndef BU_LOGGER_H
#define BU_LOGGER_H
#include "bu/singleton.h"
#include "bu/fstring.h"
namespace Bu
{
/**
* Simple logging facility. All output goes straight to stdout, unlike the
* old multi-log system. Generally we expect any program complex enough to
* want to use this will have other facilities for processing the logging
* output, but if we need it we can add other output methods.
*
* Currently implemented as a singleton to avoid clutter with globals, you
* generally never want to use the logging system directly, it's annoying.
* Instead use the handy macros lineLog, setLogMask, setLogFormat, and
* setLogLevel. They do all the real work for you.
*
* In the log format, you can specify extra information that will be written
* to the log with every message, and extras in printf style. Use %X flags
* where X is one of the following:
* - L - Logging level of the log message (not the current mask)
* - y - Full year
* - m - Month
* - d - Day of month
* - h - Hour (24-hour format)
* - M - Minutes
* - s - Seconds
* - f - Source file
* - l - Line number
* - F - function name
* - t - Text of message (usually important)
*
* You can include anything extra that you would like, a newline will always
* be added automatically, so no need to worry about that. You can also
* include any extra printf style formatting that you would like, for
* example: "%h:%02M:%02s" for the time 4:02:09 instead of 4:2:9.
*
* It's generally handy to create an enum of values you use as levels during
* program execution (such as error, warning, info, debug, etc). These
* levels should be treated as bitflags, and the most desirable messages,
* i.e. serious errors and the like should be low order (0x01), and the much
* less desirable messages, like debugging info, should be higher order
* (0xF0). During operation you can then set either an explicit mask,
* selecting just the levels that you would like to see printed, or set the
* mask using the setLevel helper function, which simulates verbosity
* levels, enabling every flag lower order than the highest order set bit
* passed. I.E. if you had the following enumerated levels:
*
*@code
enum {
logError = 0x01,
logWarning = 0x02,
logInfo = 0x04,
logDebug = 0x08
};
@endcode
* And you set the mask with setMask( logInfo ) the only messages you would
* see are the ones catagorized logInfo. However, if you used
* setLevel( logInfo ) then you would see logInfo, logWarning, and logError
* type messages, since they are lower order.
*/
class Logger : public Bu::Singleton<Bu::Logger>
{
friend class Bu::Singleton<Bu::Logger>;
private:
Logger();
virtual ~Logger();
public:
void log( uint32_t nLevel, const char *sFile, const char *sFunction, int nLine, const char *sFormat, ...);
void setFormat( const Bu::FString &str );
void setMask( uint32_t n );
void setLevel( uint32_t n );
uint32_t getMask();
void hexDump( uint32_t nLevel, const char *sFile, const char *sFunction, int nLine, const void *pData, long nDataLen, const char *lpName );
private:
Bu::FString sLogFormat;
uint32_t nLevelMask;
};
}
/**
* Use Bu::Logger to log a message at the given level and with the given message
* using printf style formatting, and include extra data such as the current
* file, line number, and function.
*/
#define lineLog( nLevel, sFrmt, ...) \
Bu::Logger::getInstance().log( nLevel, __FILE__, __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, __LINE__, sFrmt, ##__VA_ARGS__ )
#define logHexDump( nLevel, pData, iSize, sName ) \
Bu::Logger::getInstance().hexDump( nLevel, __FILE__, __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, __LINE__, pData, iSize, sName )
/**
* Set the Bu::Logger logging mask directly. See Bu::Logger::setMask for
* details.
*/
#define setLogMask( nLevel ) \
Bu::Logger::getInstance().setMask( nLevel )
/**
* Set the Bu::Logger format. See Bu::Logger::setFormat for details.
*/
#define setLogFormat( sFrmt ) \
Bu::Logger::getInstance().setFormat( sFrmt )
/**
* Set the Bu::Logger logging mask simulating levels. See Bu::Logger::setLevel
* for details.
*/
#define setLogLevel( nLevel ) \
Bu::Logger::getInstance().setLevel( nLevel )
#endif
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