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g3sinks

sinks to g3logger

Sinks

Each sink will have its own LICENSE file. Make sure to understand what the sink provides before you use it.

Log Rotate + Log Rotate with Filter

Adapted from vrecan/g2log-dev https://bitbucket.org/vrecan/g2log-dev Rotation of logs. The license is public domain, a.k.a the UNLICENSE. See details at the sink location.

Snippets

Code snippet examples and a short description. These are not installed but can be used as helpful examples on how to create your custom sinks

More ...

For more information please look at the Readme and API documentation i.e. https://github.com/KjellKod/g3log For detailed sink usage please see the header files and tests in his repository. They are written so that The sink usage should be clear.

Building g3sinks

Requirements

g3log
G3sinks requires g3log to be installed. The g3log install location has to be specified during the cmake build step. In the example below the g3log installation location is /usr/local with libraries in '/usr/local/lib' and 'headers in '/usr/local/include' The given argument for the location would then be : 'cmake -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/usr/local/'

boost
G3sinks requires boost to be installed. For installing boost please follow their instructions.

The boost install location BOOST_ROOT or Boost_INCLUDE_DIR has to be specified during the cmake build step. In the example below the boost installation location is /usr/local

ZLIB
The ZLIB library must be installed for the logrotate to be able to compress the old log files in Ubuntu it can be installed with sudo apt-get install zlib1g-dev. Please see your specific platform for details or go to the zlib page

Building with unit tests added

cd g3sinks
cd 3rdparty
unzip gtest-1.7.0.zip
cd ..
cd logrotate
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/usr/local/ -DBOOST_ROOT=/usr/local -DADD_LOGROTATE_UNIT_TEST=ON ..
make -j

Executing the unit tests

./UnitTestRunneer

Installing

sudo make install

Alternative on Debian systems

make package
sudo dpkg -i g3LogRotate-<package_version>Linux.deb

G3log and Sink Usage Code Example

Example usage where a logrotate sink is added. The logrotate limit is changed from the default to instead be 10MB. The limit is changed by calling the sink handler which passes the function call through to the actual logrotate sink object.


// main.cpp
#include <g3log/g3log.hpp>
#include <g3log/logworker.h>
#include <g3sinks/logrotate.hpp>
#include <g3log/std2_make_unique.hpp>

int main(int argc, char**argv) {
   using namespace g3;
   std::unique_ptr<LogWorker> logworker{ LogWorker::createLogWorker() };
   auto sinkHandle = logworker->addSink(std2::make_unique<LogRotate>(),
                                          &LogRotate::save);
   
   // initialize the logger before it can receive LOG calls
   initializeLogging(logworker.get());            
            
   // You can call in a thread safe manner public functions on the logrotate sink
   // The call is asynchronously executed on your custom sink.
   const int k10MBInBytes = 10 * 1024 * 1024;
   std::future<void> received = sinkHandle->call(&LogRotate::setMaxLogSize, k10MBInBytes);
   
   // Run the main part of the application. This can be anything of course, in this example
   // we'll call it "RunApplication". Once this call exits we are in shutdown mode
   RunApplication();

   // If the LogWorker is initialized then at scope exit the g3::shutDownLogging() will be 
   // called automatically. 
   //  
   // This is important since it protects from LOG calls from static or other entities that will go out of
   // scope at a later time. 
   //
   // It can also be called manually if for some reason your setup is different then the one highlighted in
   // this example
   g3::shutDownLogging();
}

Say Thanks

These sinks for the g3logger are available for free and all of its source code is public domain. A great way of saying thanks is to send a donation. It would go a long way not only to show your support but also to boost continued development.

Donate

  • $5 for a cup of coffee
  • $10 for pizza
  • $25 for a lunch or two
  • $100 for a date night with my wife (which buys family credit for evening coding)
  • $$$ for upgrading my development environment
  • $$$$ :)

Cheers

Kjell

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