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go/src/log/log.go
Rob Pike efb9bd5bb1 log: add flag LUTC, to use UTC time zone for time stamp
Issue 9483 suggests several approaches to correlating logs from
machines in different time zones. This approach is the simplest and
really should be sufficient: provide a way to clamp the time stamps
to UTC.

Fixes #9483.

Change-Id: If540b991d758c4d845a719779f8255ece7c452e7
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/8761
Reviewed-by: Ian Lance Taylor <iant@golang.org>
2015-04-11 02:30:24 +00:00

347 lines
10 KiB
Go

// 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.
const (
// 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).
// The prefix is followed by a colon only when Llongfile or Lshortfile
// is specified.
// For example, flags Ldate | Ltime (or LstdFlags) produce,
// 2009/01/23 01:23:23 message
// while flags Ldate | Ltime | Lmicroseconds | Llongfile produce,
// 2009/01/23 01:23:23.123123 /a/b/c/d.go:23: message
Ldate = 1 << iota // the date in the local time zone: 2009/01/23
Ltime // the time in the local time zone: 01:23:23
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
LUTC // if Ldate or Ltime is set, use UTC rather than the local time zone
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}
}
// SetOutput sets the output destination for the logger.
func (l *Logger) SetOutput(w io.Writer) {
l.mu.Lock()
defer l.mu.Unlock()
l.out = w
}
var std = New(os.Stderr, "", LstdFlags)
// Cheap integer to fixed-width decimal ASCII. Give a negative width to avoid zero-padding.
func itoa(buf *[]byte, i int, wid int) {
// Assemble decimal in reverse order.
var b [20]byte
bp := len(b) - 1
for i >= 10 || wid > 1 {
wid--
q := i / 10
b[bp] = byte('0' + i - q*10)
bp--
i = q
}
// i < 10
b[bp] = byte('0' + i)
*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&LUTC != 0 {
t = t.UTC()
}
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)
}
// 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 the count of the number of
// frames to skip when computing the file name and line number
// if Llongfile or Lshortfile is set; a value of 1 will print the details
// for the caller of Output.
func Output(calldepth int, s string) error {
return std.Output(calldepth+1, s) // +1 for this frame.
}