error_logger
Module
error_logger
Module Summary
Erlang error logger.
Description
The Erlang error logger is an event manager (see OTP Design Principles
and gen_event(3)
), registered as error_logger
. Errors, warnings, and info events are sent to the error logger from the Erlang runtime system and the different Erlang/OTP applications. The events are, by default, logged to the terminal. Notice that an event from a process P
is logged at the node of the group leader of P
. This means that log output is directed to the node from which a process was created, which not necessarily is the same node as where it is executing.
Initially, error_logger
has only a primitive event handler, which buffers and prints the raw event messages. During system startup, the Kernel application replaces this with a standard event handler, by default one that writes nicely formatted output to the terminal. Kernel can also be configured so that events are logged to a file instead, or not logged at all, see kernel(6)
.
Also the SASL application, if started, adds its own event handler, which by default writes supervisor, crash, and progress reports to the terminal. See sasl(6)
.
It is recommended that user-defined applications report errors through the error logger to get uniform reports. User-defined event handlers can be added to handle application-specific events, see add_report_handler/1,2
. Also, a useful event handler is provided in STDLIB for multi-file logging of events, see log_mf_h(3)
.
Warning events were introduced in Erlang/OTP R9C and are enabled by default as from Erlang/OTP 18.0. To retain backwards compatibility with existing user-defined event handlers, the warning events can be tagged as errors
or info
using command-line flag +W <e | i | w>
, thus showing up as ERROR REPORT
or INFO REPORT
in the logs.
Data Types
report() =
[{Tag :: term(), Data :: term()} | term()] | string() | term()
Exports
Types
Adds a new event handler to the error logger. The event handler must be implemented as a gen_event
callback module, see gen_event(3)
.
Handler
is typically the name of the callback module and Args
is an optional term (defaults to []) passed to the initialization callback function Handler:init/1
. The function returns ok
if successful.
The event handler must be able to handle the events in this module, see section Events
.
Types
Deletes an event handler from the error logger by calling gen_event:delete_handler(error_logger, Handler, [])
, see gen_event(3)
.
Types
Sends a standard error event to the error logger. The Format
and Data
arguments are the same as the arguments of io:format/2
in STDLIB. The event is handled by the standard event handler.
Example:
1> error_logger:error_msg("An error occurred in ~p~n", [a_module]). =ERROR REPORT==== 11-Aug-2005::14:03:19 === An error occurred in a_module ok
If called with bad arguments, this function can crash the standard event handler, meaning no further events are logged. When in doubt, use error_report/1
instead.
If the Unicode translation modifier (t
) is used in the format string, all error handlers must ensure that the formatted output is correctly encoded for the I/O device.
Types
Sends a standard error report event to the error logger. The event is handled by the standard event handler.
Example:
2> error_logger:error_report([{tag1,data1},a_term,{tag2,data}]). =ERROR REPORT==== 11-Aug-2005::13:45:41 === tag1: data1 a_term tag2: data ok 3> error_logger:error_report("Serious error in my module"). =ERROR REPORT==== 11-Aug-2005::13:45:49 === Serious error in my module ok
Types
Sends a user-defined error report event to the error logger. An event handler to handle the event is supposed to have been added. The event is ignored by the standard event handler.
It is recommended that Report
follows the same structure as for error_report/1
.
Returns max(10, Depth)
, where Depth
is the value of error_logger_format_depth
in the Kernel application, if Depth is an integer. Otherwise, unlimited
is returned.
Types
Sends a standard information event to the error logger. The Format
and Data
arguments are the same as the arguments of io:format/2
in STDLIB. The event is handled by the standard event handler.
Example:
1> error_logger:info_msg("Something happened in ~p~n", [a_module]). =INFO REPORT==== 11-Aug-2005::14:06:15 === Something happened in a_module ok
If called with bad arguments, this function can crash the standard event handler, meaning no further events are logged. When in doubt, use info_report/1
instead.
If the Unicode translation modifier (t
) is used in the format string, all error handlers must ensure that the formatted output is correctly encoded for the I/O device.
Types
Sends a standard information report event to the error logger. The event is handled by the standard event handler.
Example:
2> error_logger:info_report([{tag1,data1},a_term,{tag2,data}]). =INFO REPORT==== 11-Aug-2005::13:55:09 === tag1: data1 a_term tag2: data ok 3> error_logger:info_report("Something strange happened"). =INFO REPORT==== 11-Aug-2005::13:55:36 === Something strange happened ok
Types
Sends a user-defined information report event to the error logger. An event handler to handle the event is supposed to have been added. The event is ignored by the standard event handler.
It is recommended that Report
follows the same structure as for info_report/1
.
Types
Enables or disables printout of standard events to a file.
This is done by adding or deleting the standard event handler for output to file. Thus, calling this function overrides the value of the Kernel error_logger
configuration parameter.
Enabling file logging can be used together with calling tty(false)
, to have a silent system where all standard events are logged to a file only. Only one log file can be active at a time.
Request
is one of the following:
{open, Filename}
-
Opens log file
Filename
. Returnsok
if successful, or{error, allready_have_logfile}
if logging to file is already enabled, or an error tuple if another error occurred (for example, ifFilename
cannot be opened). The file is opened with encoding UTF-8. close
-
Closes the current log file. Returns
ok
, or{error, module_not_found}
. filename
-
Returns the name of the log file
Filename
, or{error, no_log_file}
if logging to file is not enabled.
Types
Enables (Flag == true
) or disables (Flag == false
) printout of standard events to the terminal.
This is done by adding or deleting the standard event handler for output to the terminal. Thus, calling this function overrides the value of the Kernel error_logger
configuration parameter.
Types
Returns the current mapping for warning events. Events sent using warning_msg/1,2
or warning_report/1,2
are tagged as errors, warnings (default), or info, depending on the value of command-line flag +W
.
Example:
os$ erl Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 5.4.8 [hipe] [threads:0] [kernel-poll] Eshell V5.4.8 (abort with ^G) 1> error_logger:warning_map(). warning 2> error_logger:warning_msg("Warnings tagged as: ~p~n", [warning]). =WARNING REPORT==== 11-Aug-2005::15:31:55 === Warnings tagged as: warning ok 3> User switch command --> q os$ erl +W e Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 5.4.8 [hipe] [threads:0] [kernel-poll] Eshell V5.4.8 (abort with ^G) 1> error_logger:warning_map(). error 2> error_logger:warning_msg("Warnings tagged as: ~p~n", [error]). =ERROR REPORT==== 11-Aug-2005::15:31:23 === Warnings tagged as: error ok
Types
Sends a standard warning event to the error logger. The Format
and Data
arguments are the same as the arguments of io:format/2
in STDLIB. The event is handled by the standard event handler. It is tagged as an error, warning, or info, see warning_map/0
.
If called with bad arguments, this function can crash the standard event handler, meaning no further events are logged. When in doubt, use warning_report/1
instead.
If the Unicode translation modifier (t
) is used in the format string, all error handlers must ensure that the formatted output is correctly encoded for the I/O device.
Types
Sends a standard warning report event to the error logger. The event is handled by the standard event handler. It is tagged as an error, warning, or info, see warning_map/0
.
Types
Sends a user-defined warning report event to the error logger. An event handler to handle the event is supposed to have been added. The event is ignored by the standard event handler. It is tagged as an error, warning, or info, depending on the value of warning_map/0
.
Events
All event handlers added to the error logger must handle the following events. Gleader
is the group leader pid of the process that sent the event, and Pid
is the process that sent the event.
{error, Gleader, {Pid, Format, Data}}
-
Generated when
error_msg/1,2
orformat
is called. {error_report, Gleader, {Pid, std_error, Report}}
-
Generated when
error_report/1
is called. {error_report, Gleader, {Pid, Type, Report}}
-
Generated when
error_report/2
is called. {warning_msg, Gleader, {Pid, Format, Data}}
-
Generated when
warning_msg/1,2
is called if warnings are set to be tagged as warnings. {warning_report, Gleader, {Pid, std_warning, Report}}
-
Generated when
warning_report/1
is called if warnings are set to be tagged as warnings. {warning_report, Gleader, {Pid, Type, Report}}
-
Generated when
warning_report/2
is called if warnings are set to be tagged as warnings. {info_msg, Gleader, {Pid, Format, Data}}
-
Generated when
info_msg/1,2
is called. {info_report, Gleader, {Pid, std_info, Report}}
-
Generated when
info_report/1
is called. {info_report, Gleader, {Pid, Type, Report}}
-
Generated when
info_report/2
is called.
Notice that some system-internal events can also be received. Therefore a catch-all clause last in the definition of the event handler callback function Module:handle_event/2
is necessary. This also applies for Module:handle_info/2
, as the event handler must also take care of some system-internal messages.
See Also
gen_event(3)
, log_mf_h(3)
kernel(6)
sasl(6)
© 2010–2017 Ericsson AB
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.