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- QsLog - the simple Qt logger
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- QsLog is an easy to use logger that is based on Qt's QDebug class.
- Features
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- * Six logging levels (from trace to fatal)
- * Logging level threshold configurable at runtime.
- * Minimum overhead when logging is turned off.
- * Multiple destinations, comes with file and debug destinations.
- * Thread-safe
- * Logging of common Qt types out of the box.
- * Immediate logging or queueing messages in a separate thread.
- * Small dependency: just drop it in your project directly.
- Usage
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- By directly including QsLog in your project:
- 1. Include QsLog.pri in your pro file
- 2. Include QsLog.h in your C++ files. Include QsLogDest.h only where you create/add destinations.
- 3. Get the instance of the logger by calling QsLogging::Logger::instance();
- 4. Optionally set the logging level. Info is default.
- 5. Create as many destinations as you want by using the QsLogging::DestinationFactory.
- 6. Add the destinations to the logger instance by calling addDestination.
- 7. Start logging!
- Note: when you want to use QsLog both from an executable and a shared library you have to
- link dynamically with QsLog due to a limitation with static variables.
- By linking to QsLog dynamically:
- 1. Build QsLog using the QsLogSharedLibrary.pro.
- 2. Add the QsLog shared library to your LIBS project dependencies.
- 3. Follow the steps in "directly including QsLog in your project" starting with step 2.
- Configuration
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- QsLog has several configurable parameters:
- * defining QS_LOG_LINE_NUMBERS in the .pri file enables writing the file and line number
- automatically for each logging call
- * defining QS_LOG_SEPARATE_THREAD will route all log messages to a separate thread.
- Sometimes it's necessary to turn off logging. This can be done in several ways:
- * globally, at compile time, by enabling the QS_LOG_DISABLE macro in the .pri file.
- * globally, at run time, by setting the log level to "OffLevel".
- * per file, at compile time, by including QsLogDisableForThisFile.h in the target file.
- Thread safety
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- The Qt docs say: A thread-safe function can be called simultaneously from multiple threads,
- even when the invocations use shared data, because all references to the shared data are serialized.
- A reentrant function can also be called simultaneously from multiple threads, but only if each
- invocation uses its own data.
- Since sending the log message to the destinations is protected by a mutex, the logging macros are
- thread-safe provided that the log has been initialized - i.e: instance() has been called.
- The instance function and the setup functions (e.g: setLoggingLevel, addDestination) are NOT
- thread-safe and are NOT reentrant.
- IMPORTANT: when using a separate thread for logging, your program might crash at exit time on some
- operating systems if you won't call Logger::destroyInstance() before your program exits.
- This function can be called either before returning from main in a console app or
- inside QCoreApplication::aboutToQuit in a Qt GUI app.
- The reason is that the logging thread is still running as some objects are destroyed by
- the OS. Calling destroyInstance will wait for the thread to finish.
- Nothing will happen if you forget to call the function when not using a separate thread
- for logging.
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