/* Copyright 2001,2002,2003 Roger Dingledine, Matej Pfajfar. * Copyright 2004-2005 Roger Dingledine, Nick Mathewson */ /* See LICENSE for licensing information */ /* $Id$ */ /** * \file log.h * * \brief Headers for logging functions. **/ #ifndef __LOG_H #define LOG_H_ID "$Id$" #include "../common/compat.h" #ifdef HAVE_SYSLOG_H #include #define LOG_WARN LOG_WARNING #if LOG_DEBUG < LOG_ERR #error "Your syslog.h thinks high numbers are more important. We aren't prepared to deal with that." #endif #else /* XXXX Note: The code was originally written to refer to severities, * with 0 being the least severe; while syslog's logging code refers to * priorities, with 0 being the most important. Thus, all our comparisons * needed to be reversed when we added syslog support. * * The upshot of this is that comments about log levels may be messed * up: for "maximum severity" read "most severe" and "numerically * *lowest* severity". */ /** Debug-level severity: for hyper-verbose messages of no interest to * anybody but developers. */ #define LOG_DEBUG 7 /** Info-level severity: for messages that appear frequently during normal * operation. */ #define LOG_INFO 6 /** Notice-level severity: for messages that appear infrequently * during normal operation; that the user will probably care about; * and that are not errors. */ #define LOG_NOTICE 5 /** Warn-level severity: for messages that only appear when something has gone * wrong. */ #define LOG_WARN 4 /** Error-level severity: for messages that only appear when something has gone * very wrong, and the Tor process can no longer proceed. */ #define LOG_ERR 3 #endif typedef void (*log_callback)(int severity, const char *msg); int parse_log_level(const char *level); const char *log_level_to_string(int level); void add_stream_log(int severityMin, int severityMax, const char *name, FILE *stream); int add_file_log(int severityMin, int severityMax, const char *filename); #ifdef HAVE_SYSLOG_H int add_syslog_log(int loglevelMin, int loglevelMax); #endif int add_callback_log(int loglevelMin, int loglevelMax, log_callback cb); int get_min_log_level(void); void switch_logs_debug(void); void close_logs(void); void reset_logs(void); void add_temp_log(void); void close_temp_logs(void); void mark_logs_temp(void); void configure_libevent_logging(void); void suppress_libevent_log_msg(const char *msg); void change_callback_log_severity(int loglevelMin, int loglevelMax, log_callback cb); /* Outputs a message to stdout */ void _log(int severity, const char *format, ...) CHECK_PRINTF(2,3); #ifdef __GNUC__ void _log_fn(int severity, const char *funcname, const char *format, ...) CHECK_PRINTF(3,4); /** Log a message at level severity, using a pretty-printed version * of the current function name. */ #define log_fn(severity, args...) \ _log_fn(severity, __PRETTY_FUNCTION__, args) #elif defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER < 1300 /* MSVC 6 and earlier don't have __FUNCTION__, or even __LINE__. */ #define log_fn _log #else /* We don't have GCC's varargs macros, so use a global variable to pass the * function name to log_fn */ extern const char *_log_fn_function_name; void _log_fn(int severity, const char *format, ...); /* We abuse the comma operator here, since we can't use the standard * do {...} while (0) trick to wrap this macro, since the macro can't take * arguments. */ #define log_fn (_log_fn_function_name=__FUNCTION__),_log_fn #endif #define log _log /* hack it so we don't conflict with log() as much */ # define __LOG_H #endif