Boost C++ Libraries

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Setting up sinks

Sometimes trivial logging doesn't provide enough flexibility. For example, one may want a more sophisticated logic of log processing, rather than simply printing it on the console. In order to customize this, you have to construct logging sinks and register them with the logging core. This should normally be done only once somewhere in the startup code of your application.

[Note] Note

It must be mentioned that in the previous sections we did not initialize any sinks, and trivial logging worked somehow anyway. This is because the library contains a default sink that is used as a fallback when the user did not set up any sinks. This sink always prints log records to the console in a fixed format which we saw in our previous examples. The default sink is mostly provided to allow trivial logging to be used right away, without any library initialization whatsoever. Once you add any sinks to the logging core, the default sink will no longer be used. You will still be able to use trivial logging macros though.

File logging unleashed

As a starting point, here is how you would initialize logging to a file:

void init()
{
    logging::add_file_log("sample.log");

    logging::core::get()->set_filter
    (
        logging::trivial::severity >= logging::trivial::info
    );
}

The added piece is the call to the add_file_log function. As the name implies, the function initializes a logging sink that stores log records into a text file. The function also accepts a number of customization options, such as the file rotation interval and size limits. For instance:

void init()
{
    logging::add_file_log
    (
        keywords::file_name = "sample_%N.log",                                        1
        keywords::rotation_size = 10 * 1024 * 1024,                                   2
        keywords::time_based_rotation = sinks::file::rotation_at_time_point(0, 0, 0), 3
        keywords::format = "[%TimeStamp%]: %Message%"                                 4
    );

    logging::core::get()->set_filter
    (
        logging::trivial::severity >= logging::trivial::info
    );
}

1

file name pattern

2

rotate files every 10 MiB...

3

...or at midnight

4

log record format

See the complete code.

You can see that the options are passed to the function in the named form. This approach is also taken in many other places of the library. You'll get used to it. The meaning of the parameters is mostly self-explaining and is documented in this manual (see here for what regards the text file sink). This and other convenience initialization functions are described in this section.

[Tip] Tip

You can register more than one sink. Each sink will receive and process log records as you emit them independently from others.

Sinks in depth: More sinks

If you don't want to go into details, you can skip this section and continue reading from the next one. Otherwise, if you need more comprehensive control over sink configuration or want to use more sinks than those available through helper functions, you can register sinks manually.

In the simplest form, the call to the add_file_log function in the section above is nearly equivalent to this:

void init()
{
    // Construct the sink
    typedef sinks::synchronous_sink< sinks::text_ostream_backend > text_sink;
    boost::shared_ptr< text_sink > sink = boost::make_shared< text_sink >();

    // Add a stream to write log to
    sink->locked_backend()->add_stream(
        boost::make_shared< std::ofstream >("sample.log"));

    // Register the sink in the logging core
    logging::core::get()->add_sink(sink);
}

See the complete code.

Ok, the first thing you may have noticed about sinks is that they are composed of two classes: the frontend and the backend. The frontend (which is the synchronous_sink class template in the snippet above) is responsible for various common tasks for all sinks, such as thread synchronization model, filtering and, for text-based sinks, formatting. The backend (the text_ostream_backend class above) implements everything specific to the sink, such as writing to a file in this case. The library provides a number of frontends and backends that can be used with each other out of the box.

The synchronous_sink class template above indicates that the sink is synchronous, that is, it allows for several threads to log simultaneously and will block in case of contention. This means that the backend text_ostream_backend doesn't have to worry about multithreading at all. There are other sink frontends available, you can read more about them here.

The text_ostream_backend class writes formatted log records into standard library-compatible streams. We have used a file stream above but we could have used any type of stream. For example, adding output to console could look as follows:

#include <boost/core/null_deleter.hpp>

// We have to provide an empty deleter to avoid destroying the global stream object
boost::shared_ptr< std::ostream > stream(&std::clog, boost::null_deleter());
sink->locked_backend()->add_stream(stream);

The text_ostream_backend supports adding several streams. In that case its output will be duplicated to all added streams. It can be useful to duplicate the output to console and file since all the filtering, formatting and other overhead of the library happen only once per record for the sink.

[Note] Note

Please note the difference between registering several distinct sinks and registering one sink with several target streams. While the former allows for independently customizing output to each sink, the latter would work considerably faster if such customization is not needed. This feature is specific to this particular backend.

The library provides a number of backends that provide different log processing logic. For instance, by specifying the syslog backend you can send log records over the network to the syslog server, or by setting up the Windows NT event log backend you can monitor your application run time with the standard Windows tools.

The last thing worth noting here is the locked_backend member function call to access the sink backend. It is used to get thread-safe exclusive access to the backend and is provided by all sink frontends. This function returns a smart-pointer to the backend and as long as it exists the backend is locked (which means even if another thread tries to log and the log record is passed to the sink, it will not be logged until you release the backend). The only exception is the unlocked_sink frontend which does not synchronize at all and simply returns an unlocked pointer to the backend.


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