focal (3) qblog.h.3.gz

Provided by: libqb-dev_1.0.5-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       qblog.h - The logging API provides four main parts (basics, filtering, threading & blackbox).

SYNOPSIS

       #include <stdint.h>
       #include <stdlib.h>
       #include <stdio.h>
       #include <stdarg.h>
       #include <errno.h>
       #include <syslog.h>
       #include <string.h>
       #include <qb/qbutil.h>
       #include <qb/qbconfig.h>
       #include <assert.h>
       #include <dlfcn.h>

   Data Structures
       struct qb_log_callsite
           An instance of this structure is created in a special ELF section at every dynamic debug callsite.
       union qb_log_ctl2_arg_t

   Macros
       #define LOG_TRACE   (LOG_DEBUG + 1)
       #define QB_LOG_MAX_LEN   512
       #define QB_LOG_STRERROR_MAX_LEN   128
       #define QB_ATTR_SECTION   __verbose  /* conforms to C ident. */
       #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_STR   QB_PP_STRINGIFY(QB_ATTR_SECTION)
       #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_START   QB_PP_JOIN(__start_, QB_ATTR_SECTION)
       #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP   QB_PP_JOIN(__stop_, QB_ATTR_SECTION)
       #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_START_STR   QB_PP_STRINGIFY(QB_ATTR_SECTION_START)
       #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP_STR   QB_PP_STRINGIFY(QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP)
       #define QB_NONAPI_LOG_INIT_DATA_EXTRA_(name)
       #define QB_LOG_INIT_DATA(name)
           Optional on-demand self-check of 1/ toolchain sanity (prerequisite for the logging subsystem to work
           properly) and 2/ non-void active use of logging (satisfied with a justifying existence of a logging
           callsite as defined with a qb_logt invocation) at the target (but see below), which is supposedly
           assured by it's author(!) as of relying on this very macro [technically, the symbols that happen to
           be resolved under the respective identifiers do not necessarily originate in the same compilation
           unit as when it's not the end executable (or by induction, a library positioned earlier in the symbol
           lookup order) but a shared library, the former takes a precedence unless that site comes short of
           exercising the logging, making its callsite section empty and, in turn, without such boundary
           symbols, hence making the resolution continue further in the lookup order -- despite fuzzily targeted
           attestation, the check remains reasonable]; only effective when link-time ('run-time amortizing')
           callsite collection is; as a side effect, it can ensure the boundary-denoting symbols for the target
           collection area are kept alive with some otherwise unkind linkers.
       #define QB_LOG_TAG_LIBQB_MSG_BIT   31
       #define QB_LOG_TAG_LIBQB_MSG   (1U << QB_LOG_TAG_LIBQB_MSG_BIT)
       #define qb_logt(priority,  tags,  fmt,  args...)
           This is the function to generate a log message if you want to manually add tags.
       #define qb_log(priority,  fmt,  args...)   qb_logt(priority, 0, fmt, ##args)
           This is the main function to generate a log message.
       #define QB_XC   '...'
       #define QB_XS   '...'
       #define qb_perror(priority,  fmt,  args...)
           This is similar to perror except it goes into the logging system.
       #define qb_enter()   qb_log(LOG_TRACE, 'ENTERING %s()', __func__)
       #define qb_leave()   qb_log(LOG_TRACE, 'LEAVING %s()', __func__)
       #define QB_LOG_CTL2_I32(a)   ((qb_log_ctl2_arg_t) { .i32 = (a) })
       #define QB_LOG_CTL2_S(a)   ((qb_log_ctl2_arg_t) { .s = (a) })

   Typedefs
       typedef const char *(* qb_log_tags_stringify_fn) (uint32_t tags)
       typedef void(* qb_log_filter_fn) (struct qb_log_callsite *cs)
       typedef void(* qb_log_logger_fn) (int32_t t, struct qb_log_callsite *cs, time_t timestamp, const char
           *msg)
       typedef void(* qb_log_vlogger_fn) (int32_t t, struct qb_log_callsite *cs, time_t timestamp, va_list ap)
       typedef void(* qb_log_close_fn) (int32_t t)
       typedef void(* qb_log_reload_fn) (int32_t t)

   Enumerations
       enum qb_log_target_slot { QB_LOG_TARGET_START, QB_LOG_TARGET_STATIC_START = QB_LOG_TARGET_START,
           QB_LOG_SYSLOG = QB_LOG_TARGET_STATIC_START, QB_LOG_STDERR, QB_LOG_BLACKBOX, QB_LOG_STDOUT,
           QB_LOG_TARGET_STATIC_MAX, QB_LOG_TARGET_STATIC_END = QB_LOG_TARGET_STATIC_MAX - 1,
           QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_START = QB_LOG_TARGET_STATIC_MAX, QB_LOG_TARGET_MAX = 32,
           QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_END = QB_LOG_TARGET_MAX - 1, QB_LOG_TARGET_END = QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_END }
       enum qb_log_target_state { QB_LOG_STATE_UNUSED = 1, QB_LOG_STATE_DISABLED = 2, QB_LOG_STATE_ENABLED = 3 }
       enum qb_log_conf { QB_LOG_CONF_ENABLED, QB_LOG_CONF_FACILITY, QB_LOG_CONF_DEBUG, QB_LOG_CONF_SIZE,
           QB_LOG_CONF_THREADED, QB_LOG_CONF_PRIORITY_BUMP, QB_LOG_CONF_STATE_GET, QB_LOG_CONF_FILE_SYNC,
           QB_LOG_CONF_EXTENDED, QB_LOG_CONF_IDENT }
       enum qb_log_filter_type { QB_LOG_FILTER_FILE, QB_LOG_FILTER_FUNCTION, QB_LOG_FILTER_FORMAT,
           QB_LOG_FILTER_FILE_REGEX, QB_LOG_FILTER_FUNCTION_REGEX, QB_LOG_FILTER_FORMAT_REGEX }
       enum qb_log_filter_conf { QB_LOG_FILTER_ADD, QB_LOG_FILTER_REMOVE, QB_LOG_FILTER_CLEAR_ALL,
           QB_LOG_TAG_SET, QB_LOG_TAG_CLEAR, QB_LOG_TAG_CLEAR_ALL }

   Functions
       struct qb_log_callsite __attribute__ ((aligned(8)))
       void qb_log_real_ (struct qb_log_callsite *cs,...)
           Internal function: use qb_log() or qb_logt()
       void qb_log_real_va_ (struct qb_log_callsite *cs, va_list ap)
       void qb_log_from_external_source (const char *function, const char *filename, const char *format, uint8_t
           priority, uint32_t lineno, uint32_t tags,...) __attribute__((format(printf
           This function is to import logs from other code (like libraries) that provide a callback with their
           logs.
       void struct qb_log_callsite * qb_log_callsite_get (const char *function, const char *filename, const char
           *format, uint8_t priority, uint32_t lineno, uint32_t tags)
           Get or create a callsite at the given position.
       void qb_log_from_external_source_va (const char *function, const char *filename, const char *format,
           uint8_t priority, uint32_t lineno, uint32_t tags, va_list ap) __attribute__((format(printf
       void qb_log_init (const char *name, int32_t facility, uint8_t priority)
           Init the logging system.
       void qb_log_fini (void)
           Logging system finalization function.
       int32_t qb_log_callsites_register (struct qb_log_callsite *_start, struct qb_log_callsite *_stop)
           If you are using dynamically loadable modules via dlopen() and you load them after qb_log_init() then
           after you load the module you will need to do the following to get the filters to work in that
           module:
       void qb_log_callsites_dump (void)
           Dump the callsite info to stdout.
       int32_t qb_log_ctl (int32_t target, enum qb_log_conf conf_type, int32_t arg)
           Main logging control function.
       int32_t qb_log_ctl2 (int32_t target, enum qb_log_conf conf_type, qb_log_ctl2_arg_t arg)
           Extension of main logging control function accepting also strings.
       int32_t qb_log_filter_ctl (int32_t value, enum qb_log_filter_conf c, enum qb_log_filter_type type, const
           char *text, uint8_t low_priority)
           This allows you modify the 'tags' and 'targets' callsite fields at runtime.
       int32_t qb_log_filter_ctl2 (int32_t value, enum qb_log_filter_conf c, enum qb_log_filter_type type, const
           char *text, uint8_t high_priority, uint8_t low_priority)
           This extends qb_log_filter_ctl() by been able to provide a high_priority.
       int32_t qb_log_filter_fn_set (qb_log_filter_fn fn)
           Instead of using the qb_log_filter_ctl() functions you can apply the filters manually by defining a
           callback and setting the targets field using qb_bit_set() and qb_bit_clear() like the following
           below:
       void qb_log_tags_stringify_fn_set (qb_log_tags_stringify_fn fn)
           Set the callback to map the 'tags' bit map to a string.
       void qb_log_format_set (int32_t t, const char *format)
           Set the format specifiers.
       int32_t qb_log_file_open (const char *filename)
           Open a log file.
       void qb_log_file_close (int32_t t)
           Close a log file and release is resources.
       int32_t qb_log_thread_priority_set (int32_t policy, int32_t priority)
           When using threaded logging set the pthread policy and priority.
       int32_t qb_log_thread_start (void)
           Start the logging pthread.
       ssize_t qb_log_blackbox_write_to_file (const char *filename)
           Write the blackbox to file.
       void qb_log_blackbox_print_from_file (const char *filename)
           Read the blackbox for file and print it out.
       int32_t qb_log_custom_open (qb_log_logger_fn log_fn, qb_log_close_fn close_fn, qb_log_reload_fn
           reload_fn, void *user_data)
           Open a custom log target.
       void qb_log_custom_close (int32_t t)
           Close a custom log target and release is resources.
       void * qb_log_target_user_data_get (int32_t t)
           Retrieve the user data set by either qb_log_custom_open or qb_log_target_user_data_set.
       int32_t qb_log_target_user_data_set (int32_t t, void *user_data)
           Associate user data with this log target.
       void qb_log_target_format (int32_t target, struct qb_log_callsite *cs, time_t timestamp, const char
           *formatted_message, char *output_buffer)
           Format the callsite and timestamp info according to the format.
       int32_t qb_log_facility2int (const char *fname)
           Convert string 'auth' to equivalent number 'LOG_AUTH' etc.
       const char * qb_log_facility2str (int32_t fnum)
           Convert number 'LOG_AUTH' to equivalent string 'auth' etc.

   Variables
       const char * function
       const char * filename
       const char * format
       uint8_t priority
       uint32_t lineno
       uint32_t targets
       uint32_t tags
       struct qb_log_callsite QB_ATTR_SECTION_START []
       struct qb_log_callsite QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP []
       enum qb_log_target_slot __attribute__

Detailed Description

       The logging API provides four main parts (basics, filtering, threading & blackbox).

       The idea behind this logging system is not to be prescriptive but to provide a set of tools to help the
       developer achieve what they want quickly and easily.

       Basic logging API.
           Call qb_log() to generate a log message. Then to write the message somewhere meaningful call
           qb_log_ctl() to configure the targets.

       Simplest possible use:

       main() {
            qb_log_init("simple-log", LOG_DAEMON, LOG_INFO);
               // ...
            qb_log(LOG_WARNING, "watch out");
               // ...
            qb_log_fini();
       }

       Note:
           In practice, such a minimalistic approach hardly caters real use cases. Following section discusses
           the customization. Moreover when employing the log module is bound to its active use (some log
           messages are assuredly emitted within the target compilation unit), it's quite vital to instrument
           the target side with QB_LOG_INIT_DATA() macro placed in the top file scope in exactly one source file
           (preferably the main one) to be mixed into the resulting compilation unit. This is a self-defensive
           measure for when the linker-assisted collection of callsite data silently fails, which could
           otherwise go unnoticed, causing troubles down the road, but alas it cannot discern misuse of
           QB_LOG_INIT_DATA() macro in no-logging context from broken callsite section handling assumptions
           owing to overboard fancy linker -- situation that the self-check aims to detect in the first place.

       Configuring log targets.
           A log target can be syslog, stderr, the blackbox, stdout, or a text file. By default, only syslog is
           enabled. While this is customary for daemons, it is rarely appropriate for ordinary programs, which
           should promptly disable that when other targets (read on) are to be utilized:

           qb_log_ctl(B_LOG_SYSLOG, QB_LOG_CONF_ENABLED, QB_FALSE);

       To enable a target do the following:

       qb_log_ctl(QB_LOG_BLACKBOX, QB_LOG_CONF_ENABLED, QB_TRUE);

       syslog, stderr, the blackbox, and stdout are static (they don't need to be created, just enabled or
       disabled). However, you can open multiple logfiles (falling within inclusive range
       QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_START up to QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_END). To do this, use the following code:

       mytarget = qb_log_file_open("/var/log/mylogfile");
       qb_log_ctl(mytarget, QB_LOG_CONF_ENABLED, QB_TRUE);

       Once your targets are enabled/opened, you can configure them as follows: Configure the size of blackbox:

       qb_log_ctl(QB_LOG_BLACKBOX, QB_LOG_CONF_SIZE, 1024*10);

       Make logging to file threaded:

       qb_log_ctl(mytarget, QB_LOG_CONF_THREADED, QB_TRUE);

       Sometimes, syslog daemons are (pre)configured to filter messages not exceeding a particular priority.
       When this happens to be the logging target, the designated priority of the message is passed along
       unchanged, possibly resulting in message loss. For messages up to LOG_DEBUG importance, this can be
       worked around by proportionally bumping the priorities to be passed to syslog (here, the step is such
       that LOG_DEBUG gets promoted to LOG_INFO):

       qb_log_ctl(QB_LOG_SYSLOG, QB_LOG_CONF_PRIORITY_BUMP,
                  LOG_INFO - LOG_DEBUG);

       To ensure all logs to file targets are fsync'ed (new messages expressly transferred to the storage device
       as they keep coming, otherwise defaults to QB_FALSE):

       qb_log_ctl(mytarget, QB_LOG_CONF_FILE_SYNC, QB_TRUE);

       Filtering messages.
           To have more power over what log messages go to which target you can apply filters to the targets.
           What happens is the desired callsites have the correct bit set. Then when the log message is
           generated it gets sent to the targets based on which bit is set in the callsite's 'target' bitmap.
           Messages can be filtered based on the:

           1.  filename + priority

           2.  function name + priority

           3.  format string + priority

       So to make all logs from evil_function() go to stderr, do the following:

       qb_log_filter_ctl(QB_LOG_STDERR, QB_LOG_FILTER_ADD,
                    QB_LOG_FILTER_FUNCTION, "evil_function", LOG_TRACE);

       So to make all logs from totem* (with a priority <= LOG_INFO) go to stderr, do the following:

       qb_log_filter_ctl(QB_LOG_STDERR, QB_LOG_FILTER_ADD,
                    QB_LOG_FILTER_FILE, "totem", LOG_INFO);

       So to make all logs with the substring 'ringbuffer' go to stderr, do the following:

       qb_log_filter_ctl(QB_LOG_STDERR, QB_LOG_FILTER_ADD,
                    QB_LOG_FILTER_FORMAT, "ringbuffer", LOG_TRACE);

       Thread safe non-blocking logging.
           Logging is only thread safe when threaded logging is in use. If you plan on logging from multiple
           threads, you must initialize libqb's logger thread and use qb_log_filter_ctl to set the
           QB_LOG_CONF_THREADED flag on all the logging targets in use.

       To achieve non-blocking logging, so that any calls to write() or syslog() will not hold up your program,
       you can use threaded logging as well.

       Threaded logging use:

       main() {
            qb_log_init("simple-log", LOG_DAEMON, LOG_INFO);
            qb_log_ctl(QB_LOG_SYSLOG, QB_LOG_CONF_THREADED, QB_TRUE);
               // ...
               daemonize();
               // call this after you fork()
               qb_log_thread_start();
               // ...
            qb_log(LOG_WARNING, "watch out");
               // ...
            qb_log_fini();
       }

       A blackbox for in-field diagnosis.
           This stores log messages in a ringbuffer so they can be written to file if the program crashes (you
           will need to catch SIGSEGV). These can then be easily printed out later.

       Note:
           the blackbox is not enabled by default.

       Blackbox usage:

       static void sigsegv_handler(int sig)
       {
               (void)signal (SIGSEGV, SIG_DFL);
               qb_log_blackbox_write_to_file("simple-log.fdata");
               qb_log_fini();
               raise(SIGSEGV);
       }

       main() {

            signal(SIGSEGV, sigsegv_handler);

            qb_log_init("simple-log", LOG_DAEMON, LOG_INFO);
            qb_log_filter_ctl(QB_LOG_BLACKBOX, QB_LOG_FILTER_ADD,
                         QB_LOG_FILTER_FILE, "*", LOG_DEBUG);
            qb_log_ctl(QB_LOG_BLACKBOX, QB_LOG_CONF_SIZE, 1024*10);
            qb_log_ctl(QB_LOG_BLACKBOX, QB_LOG_CONF_ENABLED, QB_TRUE);
               // ...
            qb_log(LOG_WARNING, "watch out");
               // ...
            qb_log_fini();
       }

       Tagging messages.
           You can tag messages using the second argument to qb_logt() or by using qb_log_filter_ctl(). This can
           be used to add feature or sub-system information to the logs.

       const char* my_tags_stringify(uint32_t tags) {
               if (qb_bit_is_set(tags, QB_LOG_TAG_LIBQB_MSG_BIT) {
                       return "libqb";
               } else if (tags == 3) {
                       return "three";
               } else {
                       return "MAIN";
               }
       }
       main() {
               // ...
               qb_log_tags_stringify_fn_set(my_tags_stringify);
               qb_log_format_set(QB_LOG_STDERR, "[%5g] %p %b");
               // ...
               qb_logt(LOG_INFO, 3, "hello");
               qb_logt(LOG_INFO, 0, "hello");
       }

        The code above will produce:

       [libqb] some message
       [three] info hello
       [MAIN ] info hello

Macro Definition Documentation

   #define LOG_TRACE   (LOG_DEBUG + 1)
   #define QB_ATTR_SECTION   __verbose  /* conforms to C ident. */
   #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_START   QB_PP_JOIN(__start_, QB_ATTR_SECTION)
   #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_START_STR   QB_PP_STRINGIFY(QB_ATTR_SECTION_START)
   #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP   QB_PP_JOIN(__stop_, QB_ATTR_SECTION)
   #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP_STR   QB_PP_STRINGIFY(QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP)
   #define QB_ATTR_SECTION_STR   QB_PP_STRINGIFY(QB_ATTR_SECTION)
   #define qb_enter()   qb_log(LOG_TRACE, 'ENTERING %s()', __func__)
   #define qb_leave()   qb_log(LOG_TRACE, 'LEAVING %s()', __func__)
   #define qb_log(priority, fmt, args...)   qb_logt(priority, 0, fmt, ##args)
       This is the main function to generate a log message.

       Parameters:
           priority this takes syslog priorities.
           fmt usual printf style format specifiers
           args usual printf style args

   #define QB_LOG_CTL2_I32(a)   ((qb_log_ctl2_arg_t) { .i32 = (a) })
   #define QB_LOG_CTL2_S(a)   ((qb_log_ctl2_arg_t) { .s = (a) })
   #define QB_LOG_INIT_DATA(name)
       Value:

       void name(void);                                                     void name(void) {                                                       void *work_handle; struct qb_log_callsite *work_s1, *work_s2;           /* our own (target's) sanity, or possibly that of higher priority          symbol resolution site (unless target equals end executable)            or even the lower one if no such predecessor defines these */        if ((work_handle = dlopen(NULL, RTLD_LOCAL|RTLD_LAZY)) != NULL) {           work_s1 = (struct qb_log_callsite *)                                              dlsym(work_handle, QB_ATTR_SECTION_START_STR);                work_s2 = (struct qb_log_callsite *)                                              dlsym(work_handle, QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP_STR);                 assert("implicit callsite section is observable, otherwise arget's and/or libqb's build is at fault, preventing reliable logging"                && work_s1 != NULL && work_s2 != NULL);                          dlclose(work_handle);  /* perhaps overly eager thing to do */ }     QB_NONAPI_LOG_INIT_DATA_EXTRA_(name);                                   /* finally, original, straightforward check */                          assert("implicit callsite section is populated, otherwise arget's build is at fault, preventing reliable logging"                    && QB_ATTR_SECTION_START != QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP); }             void __attribute__ ((constructor)) name(void);

       Optional on-demand self-check of 1/ toolchain sanity (prerequisite for the logging subsystem to work
       properly) and 2/ non-void active use of logging (satisfied with a justifying existence of a logging
       callsite as defined with a qb_logt invocation) at the target (but see below), which is supposedly assured
       by it's author(!) as of relying on this very macro [technically, the symbols that happen to be resolved
       under the respective identifiers do not necessarily originate in the same compilation unit as when it's
       not the end executable (or by induction, a library positioned earlier in the symbol lookup order) but a
       shared library, the former takes a precedence unless that site comes short of exercising the logging,
       making its callsite section empty and, in turn, without such boundary symbols, hence making the
       resolution continue further in the lookup order -- despite fuzzily targeted attestation, the check
       remains reasonable]; only effective when link-time ('run-time amortizing') callsite collection is; as a
       side effect, it can ensure the boundary-denoting symbols for the target collection area are kept alive
       with some otherwise unkind linkers. Applying this macro in the target program/library is strongly
       recommended whenever the logging as framed by this header file is in use. Moreover, it's important to
       state that using this check while not ensuring _GNU_SOURCE macro definition is present at compile-time
       means only half of the available sanity checking will be performed, possibly resulting in libqb's own
       internally logged messages being lost without warning.

   #define QB_LOG_MAX_LEN   512
   #define QB_LOG_STRERROR_MAX_LEN   128
   #define QB_LOG_TAG_LIBQB_MSG   (1U << QB_LOG_TAG_LIBQB_MSG_BIT)
   #define QB_LOG_TAG_LIBQB_MSG_BIT   31
   #define qb_logt(priority, tags, fmt, args...)
       Value:

       do {                         static struct qb_log_callsite descriptor                                __attribute__((section(QB_ATTR_SECTION_STR), aligned(8))) =             { __func__, __FILE__, fmt, priority, __LINE__, 0, tags };               qb_log_real_(&descriptor, ##args);                                  } while(0)

       This is the function to generate a log message if you want to manually add tags.

       Parameters:
           priority this takes syslog priorities.
           tags this is a uint32_t that you can use with qb_log_tags_stringify_fn_set() to 'tag' a log message
           with a feature or sub-system then you can use '%g' in the format specifer to print it out.
           fmt usual printf style format specifiers
           args usual printf style args

   #define QB_NONAPI_LOG_INIT_DATA_EXTRA_(name)
       Value:

       _Pragma(QB_PP_STRINGIFY(GCC warning QB_PP_STRINGIFY(                                without "_GNU_SOURCE" defined (directly or not)                         QB_LOG_INIT_DATA cannot check sanity of libqb proper                    nor of the target site originating this check alone)))

   #define qb_perror(priority, fmt, args...)
       Value:

       do {                                      char _perr_buf_[QB_LOG_STRERROR_MAX_LEN];                               const char *_perr_str_ = qb_strerror_r(errno, _perr_buf_, sizeof(_perr_buf_));          qb_logt(priority, 0, fmt ": %s (%d)", ##args, _perr_str_, errno);     } while(0)

       This is similar to perror except it goes into the logging system.

       Parameters:
           priority this takes syslog priorities.
           fmt usual printf style format specifiers
           args usual printf style args

       Note:
           Because qb_perror() adds the system error message and error number onto the end of the given fmt,
           that information will become extended information if QB_XS is used inside fmt and will not show up in
           any logs that strip extended information.

   #define QB_XC   ''
   #define QB_XS   ''

Typedef Documentation

   typedef void(* qb_log_close_fn) (int32_t t)
   typedef void(* qb_log_filter_fn) (struct qb_log_callsite *cs)
   typedef void(* qb_log_logger_fn) (int32_t t, struct qb_log_callsite *cs, time_t timestamp, const char *msg)
   typedef void(* qb_log_reload_fn) (int32_t t)
   typedef const char*(* qb_log_tags_stringify_fn) (uint32_t tags)
   typedef void(* qb_log_vlogger_fn) (int32_t t, struct qb_log_callsite *cs, time_t timestamp, va_list ap)

Enumeration Type Documentation

   enum qb_log_conf
       Enumerator

       QB_LOG_CONF_ENABLED

       QB_LOG_CONF_FACILITY

       QB_LOG_CONF_DEBUG

       QB_LOG_CONF_SIZE

       QB_LOG_CONF_THREADED

       QB_LOG_CONF_PRIORITY_BUMP

       QB_LOG_CONF_STATE_GET

       QB_LOG_CONF_FILE_SYNC

       QB_LOG_CONF_EXTENDED

       QB_LOG_CONF_IDENT

   enum qb_log_filter_conf
       Enumerator

       QB_LOG_FILTER_ADD

       QB_LOG_FILTER_REMOVE

       QB_LOG_FILTER_CLEAR_ALL

       QB_LOG_TAG_SET

       QB_LOG_TAG_CLEAR

       QB_LOG_TAG_CLEAR_ALL

   enum qb_log_filter_type
       Enumerator

       QB_LOG_FILTER_FILE

       QB_LOG_FILTER_FUNCTION

       QB_LOG_FILTER_FORMAT

       QB_LOG_FILTER_FILE_REGEX

       QB_LOG_FILTER_FUNCTION_REGEX

       QB_LOG_FILTER_FORMAT_REGEX

   enum qb_log_target_slot
       Enumerator

       QB_LOG_TARGET_START

       QB_LOG_TARGET_STATIC_START

       QB_LOG_SYSLOG

       QB_LOG_STDERR

       QB_LOG_BLACKBOX

       QB_LOG_STDOUT

       QB_LOG_TARGET_STATIC_MAX

       QB_LOG_TARGET_STATIC_END

       QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_START

       QB_LOG_TARGET_MAX

       QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_END

       QB_LOG_TARGET_END

   enum qb_log_target_state
       Enumerator

       QB_LOG_STATE_UNUSED

       QB_LOG_STATE_DISABLED

       QB_LOG_STATE_ENABLED

Function Documentation

   struct qb_log_callsite __attribute__ ((aligned(8)))
   void qb_log_blackbox_print_from_file (const char * filename)
       Read the blackbox for file and print it out.

   ssize_t qb_log_blackbox_write_to_file (const char * filename)
       Write the blackbox to file.

   void struct qb_log_callsite* qb_log_callsite_get (const char * function, const char * filename, const char *
       format, uint8_t priority, uint32_t lineno, uint32_t tags)
       Get or create a callsite at the given position. The result can then be passed into qb_log_real_()

       Parameters:
           function originating function name
           filename originating filename
           format format string
           priority this takes syslog priorities.
           lineno file line number
           tags the tag

   void qb_log_callsites_dump (void)
       Dump the callsite info to stdout.

   int32_t qb_log_callsites_register (struct qb_log_callsite * _start, struct qb_log_callsite * _stop)
       If you are using dynamically loadable modules via dlopen() and you load them after qb_log_init() then
       after you load the module you will need to do the following to get the filters to work in that module:

          _start = dlsym (dl_handle, QB_ATTR_SECTION_START_STR);
       _stop = dlsym (dl_handle, QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP_STR);
       qb_log_callsites_register(_start, _stop);

   int32_t qb_log_ctl (int32_t target, enum qb_log_conf conf_type, int32_t arg)
       Main logging control function.

       Parameters:
           target QB_LOG_SYSLOG, QB_LOG_STDERR or result from qb_log_file_open()
           conf_type configuration directive ('what to configure') that accepts int32_t argument determining the
           new value unless ignored for particular directive altogether (incompatible directives:
           QB_LOG_CONF_IDENT)
           arg the new value for a state-changing configuration directive, ignored otherwise

       See also:
           qb_log_conf

       Return values:
           -errno on error
           0 on success
           qb_log_target_state for QB_LOG_CONF_STATE_GET

   int32_t qb_log_ctl2 (int32_t target, enum qb_log_conf conf_type, qb_log_ctl2_arg_t arg)
       Extension of main logging control function accepting also strings.

       Parameters:
           target QB_LOG_SYSLOG, QB_LOG_STDERR or result from qb_log_file_open()
           conf_type configuration directive ('what to configure') that accepts either int32_t or a null-
           terminated string argument determining the new value unless ignored for particular directive
           (compatible directives: those valid for qb_log_ctl

           • QB_LOG_CONF_IDENT)

           arg the new value for a state-changing configuration directive, ignored otherwise; for
           QB_LOG_CONF_IDENT, 's' member as new identifier to openlog(), for all qb_log_ctl-compatible ones,
           'i32' member is assumed (although a preferred way is to use that original function directly as it
           allows for more type safety)

       See also:
           qb_log_ctl

       Note:
           You can use QB_LOG_CTL2_I32 and QB_LOG_CTL2_S macros for a convenient on-the-fly construction of the
           object to be passed as an arg argument.

   void qb_log_custom_close (int32_t t)
       Close a custom log target and release is resources.

   int32_t qb_log_custom_open (qb_log_logger_fn log_fn, qb_log_close_fn close_fn, qb_log_reload_fn reload_fn,
       void * user_data)
       Open a custom log target.

       Return values:
           -errno on error
           value in inclusive range QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_START to QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_END (to be passed into
           other qb_log_* functions)

   int32_t qb_log_facility2int (const char * fname)
       Convert string 'auth' to equivalent number 'LOG_AUTH' etc.

   const char* qb_log_facility2str (int32_t fnum)
       Convert number 'LOG_AUTH' to equivalent string 'auth' etc.

   void qb_log_file_close (int32_t t)
       Close a log file and release is resources.

   int32_t qb_log_file_open (const char * filename)
       Open a log file.

       Return values:
           -errno on error
           value in inclusive range QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_START to QB_LOG_TARGET_DYNAMIC_END (to be passed into
           other qb_log_* functions)

   int32_t qb_log_filter_ctl (int32_t value, enum qb_log_filter_conf c, enum qb_log_filter_type type, const char
       * text, uint8_t low_priority)
       This allows you modify the 'tags' and 'targets' callsite fields at runtime.

   int32_t qb_log_filter_ctl2 (int32_t value, enum qb_log_filter_conf c, enum qb_log_filter_type type, const
       char * text, uint8_t high_priority, uint8_t low_priority)
       This extends qb_log_filter_ctl() by been able to provide a high_priority.

   int32_t qb_log_filter_fn_set (qb_log_filter_fn fn)
       Instead of using the qb_log_filter_ctl() functions you can apply the filters manually by defining a
       callback and setting the targets field using qb_bit_set() and qb_bit_clear() like the following below:

       static void
       m_filter(struct qb_log_callsite *cs)
       {
               if ((cs->priority >= LOG_ALERT &&
                    cs->priority <= LOG_DEBUG) &&
                    strcmp(cs->filename, "my_c_file.c") == 0) {
                       qb_bit_set(cs->targets, QB_LOG_SYSLOG);
               } else {
                       qb_bit_clear(cs->targets, QB_LOG_SYSLOG);
               }
       }

   void qb_log_fini (void)
       Logging system finalization function. It releases any shared memory. Stops the logging thread if running.
       Flushes the last messages to their destinations.

   void qb_log_format_set (int32_t t, const char * format)
       Set the format specifiers. n FUNCTION NAME f FILENAME l FILELINE p PRIORITY t TIMESTAMP b BUFFER g TAGS N
       name (passed into qb_log_init) P PID H hostname

       Any number between % and character specify field length to pad or chop.

       Note:
           Some of the fields are immediately evaluated and remembered for performance reasons, so when there's
           an objective for log messages to carry PIDs (not in the default setup) and, moreover, precisely, this
           function needs to be reinvoked upon fork (clone) in the respective children. When already linking to
           libpthread, pthread_atfork callback registration could be useful.

   void qb_log_from_external_source (const char * function, const char * filename, const char * format, uint8_t
       priority, uint32_t lineno, uint32_t tags,  ...)
       This function is to import logs from other code (like libraries) that provide a callback with their logs.

       Note:
           the performance of this will not impress you, as the filtering is done on each log message, not
           beforehand. So try doing basic pre-filtering.

       Parameters:
           function originating function name
           filename originating filename
           format format string
           priority this takes syslog priorities.
           lineno file line number
           tags this is a uint32_t that you can use with qb_log_tags_stringify_fn_set() to 'tag' a log message
           with a feature or sub-system then you can use '%g' in the format specifer to print it out.

   void qb_log_from_external_source_va (const char * function, const char * filename, const char * format,
       uint8_t priority, uint32_t lineno, uint32_t tags, va_list ap)
   void qb_log_init (const char * name, int32_t facility, uint8_t priority)
       Init the logging system.

       Parameters:
           name will be passed into openlog()
           facility default for all new targets.
           priority a basic filter with this priority will be added.

   void qb_log_real_ (struct qb_log_callsite * cs,  ...)
       Internal function: use qb_log() or qb_logt()

   void qb_log_real_va_ (struct qb_log_callsite * cs, va_list ap)
   void qb_log_tags_stringify_fn_set (qb_log_tags_stringify_fn fn)
       Set the callback to map the 'tags' bit map to a string.

   void qb_log_target_format (int32_t target, struct qb_log_callsite * cs, time_t timestamp, const char *
       formatted_message, char * output_buffer)
       Format the callsite and timestamp info according to the format. set using qb_log_format_set() It is
       intended to be used from your custom logger function.

   void* qb_log_target_user_data_get (int32_t t)
       Retrieve the user data set by either qb_log_custom_open or qb_log_target_user_data_set.

   int32_t qb_log_target_user_data_set (int32_t t, void * user_data)
       Associate user data with this log target.

       Note:
           only use this with custom targets

   int32_t qb_log_thread_priority_set (int32_t policy, int32_t priority)
       When using threaded logging set the pthread policy and priority.

       Return values:
           -errno on error
           0 success

   int32_t qb_log_thread_start (void)
       Start the logging pthread.

Variable Documentation

   enum qb_log_target_slot  __attribute__
   const char* filename
   const char* format
   const char* function
   uint32_t lineno
   uint8_t priority
   struct qb_log_callsite QB_ATTR_SECTION_START[]
   struct qb_log_callsite QB_ATTR_SECTION_STOP[]
   uint32_t tags
   uint32_t targets

Author

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