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				| // Go support for leveled logs, analogous to https://code.google.com/p/google-glog/ | |
| // | |
| // Copyright 2013 Google Inc. All Rights Reserved. | |
| // | |
| // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); | |
| // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. | |
| // You may obtain a copy of the License at | |
| // | |
| //     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 | |
| // | |
| // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software | |
| // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, | |
| // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. | |
| // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and | |
| // limitations under the License. | |
|  | |
| // Package glog implements logging analogous to the Google-internal C++ INFO/ERROR/V setup. | |
| // It provides functions Info, Warning, Error, Fatal, plus formatting variants such as | |
| // Infof. It also provides V-style logging controlled by the -v and -vmodule=file=2 flags. | |
| // | |
| // Basic examples: | |
| // | |
| //	glog.Info("Prepare to repel boarders") | |
| // | |
| //	glog.Fatalf("Initialization failed: %s", err) | |
| // | |
| // See the documentation for the V function for an explanation of these examples: | |
| // | |
| //	if glog.V(2) { | |
| //		glog.Info("Starting transaction...") | |
| //	} | |
| // | |
| //	glog.V(2).Infoln("Processed", nItems, "elements") | |
| // | |
| // Log output is buffered and written periodically using Flush. Programs | |
| // should call Flush before exiting to guarantee all log output is written. | |
| // | |
| // By default, all log statements write to files in a temporary directory. | |
| // This package provides several flags that modify this behavior. | |
| // As a result, flag.Parse must be called before any logging is done. | |
| // | |
| //	-logtostderr=false | |
| //		Logs are written to standard error instead of to files. | |
| //	-alsologtostderr=false | |
| //		Logs are written to standard error as well as to files. | |
| //	-stderrthreshold=ERROR | |
| //		Log events at or above this severity are logged to standard | |
| //		error as well as to files. | |
| //	-logdir="" | |
| //		Log files will be written to this directory instead of the | |
| //		default temporary directory. | |
| // | |
| //	Other flags provide aids to debugging. | |
| // | |
| //	-log_backtrace_at="" | |
| //		When set to a file and line number holding a logging statement, | |
| //		such as | |
| //			-log_backtrace_at=gopherflakes.go:234 | |
| //		a stack trace will be written to the Info log whenever execution | |
| //		hits that statement. (Unlike with -vmodule, the ".go" must be | |
| //		present.) | |
| //	-v=0 | |
| //		Enable V-leveled logging at the specified level. | |
| //	-vmodule="" | |
| //		The syntax of the argument is a comma-separated list of pattern=N, | |
| //		where pattern is a literal file name (minus the ".go" suffix) or | |
| //		"glob" pattern and N is a V level. For instance, | |
| //			-vmodule=gopher*=3 | |
| //		sets the V level to 3 in all Go files whose names begin "gopher". | |
| package glog | |
| 
 | |
| import ( | |
| 	"bufio" | |
| 	"bytes" | |
| 	"errors" | |
| 	"fmt" | |
| 	"io" | |
| 	stdLog "log" | |
| 	"os" | |
| 	"path/filepath" | |
| 	"runtime" | |
| 	"strconv" | |
| 	"strings" | |
| 	"sync" | |
| 	"sync/atomic" | |
| 	"time" | |
| 
 | |
| 	flag "github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs/weed/util/fla9" | |
| ) | |
| 
 | |
| // severity identifies the sort of log: info, warning etc. It also implements | |
| // the flag.Value interface. The -stderrthreshold flag is of type severity and | |
| // should be modified only through the flag.Value interface. The values match | |
| // the corresponding constants in C++. | |
| type severity int32 // sync/atomic int32 | |
|  | |
| // These constants identify the log levels in order of increasing severity. | |
| // A message written to a high-severity log file is also written to each | |
| // lower-severity log file. | |
| const ( | |
| 	infoLog severity = iota | |
| 	warningLog | |
| 	errorLog | |
| 	fatalLog | |
| 	numSeverity = 4 | |
| ) | |
| 
 | |
| const severityChar = "IWEF" | |
| 
 | |
| var severityName = []string{ | |
| 	infoLog:    "INFO", | |
| 	warningLog: "WARNING", | |
| 	errorLog:   "ERROR", | |
| 	fatalLog:   "FATAL", | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // get returns the value of the severity. | |
| func (s *severity) get() severity { | |
| 	return severity(atomic.LoadInt32((*int32)(s))) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // set sets the value of the severity. | |
| func (s *severity) set(val severity) { | |
| 	atomic.StoreInt32((*int32)(s), int32(val)) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // String is part of the flag.Value interface. | |
| func (s *severity) String() string { | |
| 	return strconv.FormatInt(int64(*s), 10) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Get is part of the flag.Value interface. | |
| func (s *severity) Get() interface{} { | |
| 	return *s | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Set is part of the flag.Value interface. | |
| func (s *severity) Set(value string) error { | |
| 	var threshold severity | |
| 	// Is it a known name? | |
| 	if v, ok := severityByName(value); ok { | |
| 		threshold = v | |
| 	} else { | |
| 		v, err := strconv.Atoi(value) | |
| 		if err != nil { | |
| 			return err | |
| 		} | |
| 		threshold = severity(v) | |
| 	} | |
| 	logging.stderrThreshold.set(threshold) | |
| 	return nil | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func severityByName(s string) (severity, bool) { | |
| 	s = strings.ToUpper(s) | |
| 	for i, name := range severityName { | |
| 		if name == s { | |
| 			return severity(i), true | |
| 		} | |
| 	} | |
| 	return 0, false | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // OutputStats tracks the number of output lines and bytes written. | |
| type OutputStats struct { | |
| 	lines int64 | |
| 	bytes int64 | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Lines returns the number of lines written. | |
| func (s *OutputStats) Lines() int64 { | |
| 	return atomic.LoadInt64(&s.lines) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Bytes returns the number of bytes written. | |
| func (s *OutputStats) Bytes() int64 { | |
| 	return atomic.LoadInt64(&s.bytes) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Stats tracks the number of lines of output and number of bytes | |
| // per severity level. Values must be read with atomic.LoadInt64. | |
| var Stats struct { | |
| 	Info, Warning, Error OutputStats | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| var severityStats = [numSeverity]*OutputStats{ | |
| 	infoLog:    &Stats.Info, | |
| 	warningLog: &Stats.Warning, | |
| 	errorLog:   &Stats.Error, | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Level is exported because it appears in the arguments to V and is | |
| // the type of the v flag, which can be set programmatically. | |
| // It's a distinct type because we want to discriminate it from logType. | |
| // Variables of type level are only changed under logging.mu. | |
| // The -v flag is read only with atomic ops, so the state of the logging | |
| // module is consistent. | |
|  | |
| // Level is treated as a sync/atomic int32. | |
|  | |
| // Level specifies a level of verbosity for V logs. *Level implements | |
| // flag.Value; the -v flag is of type Level and should be modified | |
| // only through the flag.Value interface. | |
| type Level int32 | |
| 
 | |
| // get returns the value of the Level. | |
| func (l *Level) get() Level { | |
| 	return Level(atomic.LoadInt32((*int32)(l))) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // set sets the value of the Level. | |
| func (l *Level) set(val Level) { | |
| 	atomic.StoreInt32((*int32)(l), int32(val)) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // String is part of the flag.Value interface. | |
| func (l *Level) String() string { | |
| 	return strconv.FormatInt(int64(*l), 10) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Get is part of the flag.Value interface. | |
| func (l *Level) Get() interface{} { | |
| 	return *l | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Set is part of the flag.Value interface. | |
| func (l *Level) Set(value string) error { | |
| 	v, err := strconv.Atoi(value) | |
| 	if err != nil { | |
| 		return err | |
| 	} | |
| 	logging.mu.Lock() | |
| 	defer logging.mu.Unlock() | |
| 	logging.setVState(Level(v), logging.vmodule.filter, false) | |
| 	return nil | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // moduleSpec represents the setting of the -vmodule flag. | |
| type moduleSpec struct { | |
| 	filter []modulePat | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // modulePat contains a filter for the -vmodule flag. | |
| // It holds a verbosity level and a file pattern to match. | |
| type modulePat struct { | |
| 	pattern string | |
| 	literal bool // The pattern is a literal string | |
| 	level   Level | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // match reports whether the file matches the pattern. It uses a string | |
| // comparison if the pattern contains no metacharacters. | |
| func (m *modulePat) match(file string) bool { | |
| 	if m.literal { | |
| 		return file == m.pattern | |
| 	} | |
| 	match, _ := filepath.Match(m.pattern, file) | |
| 	return match | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func (m *moduleSpec) String() string { | |
| 	// Lock because the type is not atomic. TODO: clean this up. | |
| 	logging.mu.Lock() | |
| 	defer logging.mu.Unlock() | |
| 	var b bytes.Buffer | |
| 	for i, f := range m.filter { | |
| 		if i > 0 { | |
| 			b.WriteRune(',') | |
| 		} | |
| 		fmt.Fprintf(&b, "%s=%d", f.pattern, f.level) | |
| 	} | |
| 	return b.String() | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Get is part of the (Go 1.2)  flag.Getter interface. It always returns nil for this flag type since the | |
| // struct is not exported. | |
| func (m *moduleSpec) Get() interface{} { | |
| 	return nil | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| var errVmoduleSyntax = errors.New("syntax error: expect comma-separated list of filename=N") | |
| 
 | |
| // Syntax: -vmodule=recordio=2,file=1,gfs*=3 | |
| func (m *moduleSpec) Set(value string) error { | |
| 	var filter []modulePat | |
| 	for _, pat := range strings.Split(value, ",") { | |
| 		if len(pat) == 0 { | |
| 			// Empty strings such as from a trailing comma can be ignored. | |
| 			continue | |
| 		} | |
| 		patLev := strings.Split(pat, "=") | |
| 		if len(patLev) != 2 || len(patLev[0]) == 0 || len(patLev[1]) == 0 { | |
| 			return errVmoduleSyntax | |
| 		} | |
| 		pattern := patLev[0] | |
| 		v, err := strconv.Atoi(patLev[1]) | |
| 		if err != nil { | |
| 			return errors.New("syntax error: expect comma-separated list of filename=N") | |
| 		} | |
| 		if v < 0 { | |
| 			return errors.New("negative value for vmodule level") | |
| 		} | |
| 		if v == 0 { | |
| 			continue // Ignore. It's harmless but no point in paying the overhead. | |
| 		} | |
| 		// TODO: check syntax of filter? | |
| 		filter = append(filter, modulePat{pattern, isLiteral(pattern), Level(v)}) | |
| 	} | |
| 	logging.mu.Lock() | |
| 	defer logging.mu.Unlock() | |
| 	logging.setVState(logging.verbosity, filter, true) | |
| 	return nil | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // isLiteral reports whether the pattern is a literal string, that is, has no metacharacters | |
| // that require filepath.Match to be called to match the pattern. | |
| func isLiteral(pattern string) bool { | |
| 	return !strings.ContainsAny(pattern, `\*?[]`) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // traceLocation represents the setting of the -log_backtrace_at flag. | |
| type traceLocation struct { | |
| 	file string | |
| 	line int | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // isSet reports whether the trace location has been specified. | |
| // logging.mu is held. | |
| func (t *traceLocation) isSet() bool { | |
| 	return t.line > 0 | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // match reports whether the specified file and line matches the trace location. | |
| // The argument file name is the full path, not the basename specified in the flag. | |
| // logging.mu is held. | |
| func (t *traceLocation) match(file string, line int) bool { | |
| 	if t.line != line { | |
| 		return false | |
| 	} | |
| 	if i := strings.LastIndex(file, "/"); i >= 0 { | |
| 		file = file[i+1:] | |
| 	} | |
| 	return t.file == file | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func (t *traceLocation) String() string { | |
| 	// Lock because the type is not atomic. TODO: clean this up. | |
| 	logging.mu.Lock() | |
| 	defer logging.mu.Unlock() | |
| 	return fmt.Sprintf("%s:%d", t.file, t.line) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Get is part of the (Go 1.2) flag.Getter interface. It always returns nil for this flag type since the | |
| // struct is not exported | |
| func (t *traceLocation) Get() interface{} { | |
| 	return nil | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| var errTraceSyntax = errors.New("syntax error: expect file.go:234") | |
| 
 | |
| // Syntax: -log_backtrace_at=gopherflakes.go:234 | |
| // Note that unlike vmodule the file extension is included here. | |
| func (t *traceLocation) Set(value string) error { | |
| 	if value == "" { | |
| 		// Unset. | |
| 		t.line = 0 | |
| 		t.file = "" | |
| 	} | |
| 	fields := strings.Split(value, ":") | |
| 	if len(fields) != 2 { | |
| 		return errTraceSyntax | |
| 	} | |
| 	file, line := fields[0], fields[1] | |
| 	if !strings.Contains(file, ".") { | |
| 		return errTraceSyntax | |
| 	} | |
| 	v, err := strconv.Atoi(line) | |
| 	if err != nil { | |
| 		return errTraceSyntax | |
| 	} | |
| 	if v <= 0 { | |
| 		return errors.New("negative or zero value for level") | |
| 	} | |
| 	logging.mu.Lock() | |
| 	defer logging.mu.Unlock() | |
| 	t.line = v | |
| 	t.file = file | |
| 	return nil | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // flushSyncWriter is the interface satisfied by logging destinations. | |
| type flushSyncWriter interface { | |
| 	Flush() error | |
| 	Sync() error | |
| 	io.Writer | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func init() { | |
| 	flag.BoolVar(&logging.toStderr, "logtostderr", false, "log to standard error instead of files") | |
| 	flag.BoolVar(&logging.alsoToStderr, "alsologtostderr", true, "log to standard error as well as files") | |
| 	flag.Var(&logging.verbosity, "v", "log levels [0|1|2|3|4], default to 0") | |
| 	flag.Var(&logging.stderrThreshold, "stderrthreshold", "logs at or above this threshold go to stderr") | |
| 	flag.Var(&logging.vmodule, "vmodule", "comma-separated list of pattern=N settings for file-filtered logging") | |
| 	flag.Var(&logging.traceLocation, "log_backtrace_at", "when logging hits line file:N, emit a stack trace") | |
| 
 | |
| 	// Default stderrThreshold is ERROR. | |
| 	logging.stderrThreshold = errorLog | |
| 
 | |
| 	logging.setVState(0, nil, false) | |
| 	go logging.flushDaemon() | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Flush flushes all pending log I/O. | |
| func Flush() { | |
| 	logging.lockAndFlushAll() | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // loggingT collects all the global state of the logging setup. | |
| type loggingT struct { | |
| 	// Boolean flags. Not handled atomically because the flag.Value interface | |
| 	// does not let us avoid the =true, and that shorthand is necessary for | |
| 	// compatibility. TODO: does this matter enough to fix? Seems unlikely. | |
| 	toStderr     bool // The -logtostderr flag. | |
| 	alsoToStderr bool // The -alsologtostderr flag. | |
|  | |
| 	// Level flag. Handled atomically. | |
| 	stderrThreshold severity // The -stderrthreshold flag. | |
|  | |
| 	// freeList is a list of byte buffers, maintained under freeListMu. | |
| 	freeList *buffer | |
| 	// freeListMu maintains the free list. It is separate from the main mutex | |
| 	// so buffers can be grabbed and printed to without holding the main lock, | |
| 	// for better parallelization. | |
| 	freeListMu sync.Mutex | |
| 
 | |
| 	// mu protects the remaining elements of this structure and is | |
| 	// used to synchronize logging. | |
| 	mu sync.Mutex | |
| 	// file holds writer for each of the log types. | |
| 	file [numSeverity]flushSyncWriter | |
| 	// pcs is used in V to avoid an allocation when computing the caller's PC. | |
| 	pcs [1]uintptr | |
| 	// vmap is a cache of the V Level for each V() call site, identified by PC. | |
| 	// It is wiped whenever the vmodule flag changes state. | |
| 	vmap map[uintptr]Level | |
| 	// filterLength stores the length of the vmodule filter chain. If greater | |
| 	// than zero, it means vmodule is enabled. It may be read safely | |
| 	// using sync.LoadInt32, but is only modified under mu. | |
| 	filterLength int32 | |
| 	// traceLocation is the state of the -log_backtrace_at flag. | |
| 	traceLocation traceLocation | |
| 	// These flags are modified only under lock, although verbosity may be fetched | |
| 	// safely using atomic.LoadInt32. | |
| 	vmodule   moduleSpec // The state of the -vmodule flag. | |
| 	verbosity Level      // V logging level, the value of the -v flag/ | |
|  | |
| 	// added by seaweedfs | |
| 	exited bool | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // buffer holds a byte Buffer for reuse. The zero value is ready for use. | |
| type buffer struct { | |
| 	bytes.Buffer | |
| 	tmp  [64]byte // temporary byte array for creating headers. | |
| 	next *buffer | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| var logging loggingT | |
| 
 | |
| // setVState sets a consistent state for V logging. | |
| // l.mu is held. | |
| func (l *loggingT) setVState(verbosity Level, filter []modulePat, setFilter bool) { | |
| 	// Turn verbosity off so V will not fire while we are in transition. | |
| 	logging.verbosity.set(0) | |
| 	// Ditto for filter length. | |
| 	atomic.StoreInt32(&logging.filterLength, 0) | |
| 
 | |
| 	// Set the new filters and wipe the pc->Level map if the filter has changed. | |
| 	if setFilter { | |
| 		logging.vmodule.filter = filter | |
| 		logging.vmap = make(map[uintptr]Level) | |
| 	} | |
| 
 | |
| 	// Things are consistent now, so enable filtering and verbosity. | |
| 	// They are enabled in order opposite to that in V. | |
| 	atomic.StoreInt32(&logging.filterLength, int32(len(filter))) | |
| 	logging.verbosity.set(verbosity) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // getBuffer returns a new, ready-to-use buffer. | |
| func (l *loggingT) getBuffer() *buffer { | |
| 	l.freeListMu.Lock() | |
| 	b := l.freeList | |
| 	if b != nil { | |
| 		l.freeList = b.next | |
| 	} | |
| 	l.freeListMu.Unlock() | |
| 	if b == nil { | |
| 		b = new(buffer) | |
| 	} else { | |
| 		b.next = nil | |
| 		b.Reset() | |
| 	} | |
| 	return b | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // putBuffer returns a buffer to the free list. | |
| func (l *loggingT) putBuffer(b *buffer) { | |
| 	if b.Len() >= 256 { | |
| 		// Let big buffers die a natural death. | |
| 		return | |
| 	} | |
| 	l.freeListMu.Lock() | |
| 	b.next = l.freeList | |
| 	l.freeList = b | |
| 	l.freeListMu.Unlock() | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| var timeNow = time.Now // Stubbed out for testing. | |
|  | |
| /* | |
| header formats a log header as defined by the C++ implementation. | |
| It returns a buffer containing the formatted header and the user's file and line number. | |
| The depth specifies how many stack frames above lives the source line to be identified in the log message. | |
|  | |
| Log lines have this form: | |
|  | |
| 	Lmmdd hh:mm:ss.uuuuuu threadid file:line] msg... | |
|  | |
| where the fields are defined as follows: | |
|  | |
| 	L                A single character, representing the log level (eg 'I' for INFO) | |
| 	mm               The month (zero padded; ie May is '05') | |
| 	dd               The day (zero padded) | |
| 	hh:mm:ss.uuuuuu  Time in hours, minutes and fractional seconds | |
| 	threadid         The space-padded thread ID as returned by GetTID() | |
| 	file             The file name | |
| 	line             The line number | |
| 	msg              The user-supplied message | |
| */ | |
| func (l *loggingT) header(s severity, depth int) (*buffer, string, int) { | |
| 	_, file, line, ok := runtime.Caller(3 + depth) | |
| 	if !ok { | |
| 		file = "???" | |
| 		line = 1 | |
| 	} else { | |
| 		slash := strings.LastIndex(file, "/") | |
| 		if slash >= 0 { | |
| 			file = file[slash+1:] | |
| 		} | |
| 	} | |
| 	return l.formatHeader(s, file, line), file, line | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // formatHeader formats a log header using the provided file name and line number. | |
| func (l *loggingT) formatHeader(s severity, file string, line int) *buffer { | |
| 	now := timeNow() | |
| 	if line < 0 { | |
| 		line = 0 // not a real line number, but acceptable to someDigits | |
| 	} | |
| 	if s > fatalLog { | |
| 		s = infoLog // for safety. | |
| 	} | |
| 	buf := l.getBuffer() | |
| 
 | |
| 	// Avoid Fprintf, for speed. The format is so simple that we can do it quickly by hand. | |
| 	// It's worth about 3X. Fprintf is hard. | |
| 	_, month, day := now.Date() | |
| 	hour, minute, second := now.Clock() | |
| 	// Lmmdd hh:mm:ss.uuuuuu threadid file:line] | |
| 	buf.tmp[0] = severityChar[s] | |
| 	buf.twoDigits(1, int(month)) | |
| 	buf.twoDigits(3, day) | |
| 	buf.tmp[5] = ' ' | |
| 	buf.twoDigits(6, hour) | |
| 	buf.tmp[8] = ':' | |
| 	buf.twoDigits(9, minute) | |
| 	buf.tmp[11] = ':' | |
| 	buf.twoDigits(12, second) | |
| 	buf.tmp[14] = '.' | |
| 	buf.nDigits(6, 15, now.Nanosecond()/1000, '0') | |
| 	buf.tmp[21] = ' ' | |
| 	buf.Write(buf.tmp[:22]) | |
| 	buf.WriteString(file) | |
| 	buf.tmp[0] = ':' | |
| 	n := buf.someDigits(1, line) | |
| 	buf.tmp[n+1] = ' ' | |
| 	buf.Write(buf.tmp[:n+2]) | |
| 	return buf | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Some custom tiny helper functions to print the log header efficiently. | |
|  | |
| const digits = "0123456789" | |
| 
 | |
| // twoDigits formats a zero-prefixed two-digit integer at buf.tmp[i]. | |
| func (buf *buffer) twoDigits(i, d int) { | |
| 	buf.tmp[i+1] = digits[d%10] | |
| 	d /= 10 | |
| 	buf.tmp[i] = digits[d%10] | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // nDigits formats an n-digit integer at buf.tmp[i], | |
| // padding with pad on the left. | |
| // It assumes d >= 0. | |
| func (buf *buffer) nDigits(n, i, d int, pad byte) { | |
| 	j := n - 1 | |
| 	for ; j >= 0 && d > 0; j-- { | |
| 		buf.tmp[i+j] = digits[d%10] | |
| 		d /= 10 | |
| 	} | |
| 	for ; j >= 0; j-- { | |
| 		buf.tmp[i+j] = pad | |
| 	} | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // someDigits formats a zero-prefixed variable-width integer at buf.tmp[i]. | |
| func (buf *buffer) someDigits(i, d int) int { | |
| 	// Print into the top, then copy down. We know there's space for at least | |
| 	// a 10-digit number. | |
| 	j := len(buf.tmp) | |
| 	for { | |
| 		j-- | |
| 		buf.tmp[j] = digits[d%10] | |
| 		d /= 10 | |
| 		if d == 0 { | |
| 			break | |
| 		} | |
| 	} | |
| 	return copy(buf.tmp[i:], buf.tmp[j:]) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func (l *loggingT) println(s severity, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	buf, file, line := l.header(s, 0) | |
| 	fmt.Fprintln(buf, args...) | |
| 	l.output(s, buf, file, line, false) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func (l *loggingT) print(s severity, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	l.printDepth(s, 1, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func (l *loggingT) printDepth(s severity, depth int, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	buf, file, line := l.header(s, depth) | |
| 	fmt.Fprint(buf, args...) | |
| 	if buf.Bytes()[buf.Len()-1] != '\n' { | |
| 		buf.WriteByte('\n') | |
| 	} | |
| 	l.output(s, buf, file, line, false) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func (l *loggingT) printf(s severity, format string, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	buf, file, line := l.header(s, 0) | |
| 	fmt.Fprintf(buf, format, args...) | |
| 	if buf.Bytes()[buf.Len()-1] != '\n' { | |
| 		buf.WriteByte('\n') | |
| 	} | |
| 	l.output(s, buf, file, line, false) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // printWithFileLine behaves like print but uses the provided file and line number.  If | |
| // alsoLogToStderr is true, the log message always appears on standard error; it | |
| // will also appear in the log file unless --logtostderr is set. | |
| func (l *loggingT) printWithFileLine(s severity, file string, line int, alsoToStderr bool, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	buf := l.formatHeader(s, file, line) | |
| 	fmt.Fprint(buf, args...) | |
| 	if buf.Bytes()[buf.Len()-1] != '\n' { | |
| 		buf.WriteByte('\n') | |
| 	} | |
| 	l.output(s, buf, file, line, alsoToStderr) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // output writes the data to the log files and releases the buffer. | |
| func (l *loggingT) output(s severity, buf *buffer, file string, line int, alsoToStderr bool) { | |
| 	l.mu.Lock() | |
| 	if l.traceLocation.isSet() { | |
| 		if l.traceLocation.match(file, line) { | |
| 			buf.Write(stacks(false)) | |
| 		} | |
| 	} | |
| 	data := buf.Bytes() | |
| 	if l.toStderr { | |
| 		os.Stderr.Write(data) | |
| 	} else { | |
| 		if alsoToStderr || l.alsoToStderr || s >= l.stderrThreshold.get() { | |
| 			os.Stderr.Write(data) | |
| 		} | |
| 		if l.file[s] == nil { | |
| 			if err := l.createFiles(s); err != nil { | |
| 				os.Stderr.Write(data) // Make sure the message appears somewhere. | |
| 				l.exit(err) | |
| 			} | |
| 		} | |
| 		// After exit is called, don't try to write to files | |
| 		if !l.exited { | |
| 			switch s { | |
| 			case fatalLog: | |
| 				if l.file[fatalLog] != nil { | |
| 					l.file[fatalLog].Write(data) | |
| 				} | |
| 				fallthrough | |
| 			case errorLog: | |
| 				if l.file[errorLog] != nil { | |
| 					l.file[errorLog].Write(data) | |
| 				} | |
| 				fallthrough | |
| 			case warningLog: | |
| 				if l.file[warningLog] != nil { | |
| 					l.file[warningLog].Write(data) | |
| 				} | |
| 				fallthrough | |
| 			case infoLog: | |
| 				if l.file[infoLog] != nil { | |
| 					l.file[infoLog].Write(data) | |
| 				} | |
| 			} | |
| 		} | |
| 	} | |
| 	if s == fatalLog { | |
| 		// If we got here via Exit rather than Fatal, print no stacks. | |
| 		if atomic.LoadUint32(&fatalNoStacks) > 0 { | |
| 			l.mu.Unlock() | |
| 			timeoutFlush(10 * time.Second) | |
| 			os.Exit(1) | |
| 		} | |
| 		// Dump all goroutine stacks before exiting. | |
| 		// First, make sure we see the trace for the current goroutine on standard error. | |
| 		// If -logtostderr has been specified, the loop below will do that anyway | |
| 		// as the first stack in the full dump. | |
| 		if !l.toStderr { | |
| 			os.Stderr.Write(stacks(false)) | |
| 		} | |
| 		// Write the stack trace for all goroutines to the files. | |
| 		trace := stacks(true) | |
| 		logExitFunc = func(error) {} // If we get a write error, we'll still exit below. | |
| 		for log := fatalLog; log >= infoLog; log-- { | |
| 			if f := l.file[log]; f != nil { // Can be nil if -logtostderr is set. | |
| 				f.Write(trace) | |
| 			} | |
| 		} | |
| 		l.mu.Unlock() | |
| 		timeoutFlush(10 * time.Second) | |
| 		os.Exit(255) // C++ uses -1, which is silly because it's anded with 255 anyway. | |
| 	} | |
| 	l.putBuffer(buf) | |
| 	l.mu.Unlock() | |
| 	if stats := severityStats[s]; stats != nil { | |
| 		atomic.AddInt64(&stats.lines, 1) | |
| 		atomic.AddInt64(&stats.bytes, int64(len(data))) | |
| 	} | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // timeoutFlush calls Flush and returns when it completes or after timeout | |
| // elapses, whichever happens first.  This is needed because the hooks invoked | |
| // by Flush may deadlock when glog.Fatal is called from a hook that holds | |
| // a lock. | |
| func timeoutFlush(timeout time.Duration) { | |
| 	done := make(chan bool, 1) | |
| 	go func() { | |
| 		Flush() // calls logging.lockAndFlushAll() | |
| 		done <- true | |
| 	}() | |
| 	select { | |
| 	case <-done: | |
| 	case <-time.After(timeout): | |
| 		fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "glog: Flush took longer than", timeout) | |
| 	} | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // stacks is a wrapper for runtime.Stack that attempts to recover the data for all goroutines. | |
| func stacks(all bool) []byte { | |
| 	// We don't know how big the traces are, so grow a few times if they don't fit. Start large, though. | |
| 	n := 10000 | |
| 	if all { | |
| 		n = 100000 | |
| 	} | |
| 	var trace []byte | |
| 	for i := 0; i < 5; i++ { | |
| 		trace = make([]byte, n) | |
| 		nbytes := runtime.Stack(trace, all) | |
| 		if nbytes < len(trace) { | |
| 			return trace[:nbytes] | |
| 		} | |
| 		n *= 2 | |
| 	} | |
| 	return trace | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // logExitFunc provides a simple mechanism to override the default behavior | |
| // of exiting on error. Used in testing and to guarantee we reach a required exit | |
| // for fatal logs. Instead, exit could be a function rather than a method but that | |
| // would make its use clumsier. | |
| var logExitFunc func(error) | |
| 
 | |
| // exit is called if there is trouble creating or writing log files. | |
| // It flushes the logs and exits the program; there's no point in hanging around. | |
| // l.mu is held. | |
| func (l *loggingT) exit(err error) { | |
| 	fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "glog: exiting because of error: %s\n", err) | |
| 	// If logExitFunc is set, we do that instead of exiting. | |
| 	if logExitFunc != nil { | |
| 		logExitFunc(err) | |
| 		return | |
| 	} | |
| 	l.flushAll() | |
| 	l.exited = true // os.Exit(2) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // syncBuffer joins a bufio.Writer to its underlying file, providing access to the | |
| // file's Sync method and providing a wrapper for the Write method that provides log | |
| // file rotation. There are conflicting methods, so the file cannot be embedded. | |
| // l.mu is held for all its methods. | |
| type syncBuffer struct { | |
| 	logger *loggingT | |
| 	*bufio.Writer | |
| 	file   *os.File | |
| 	sev    severity | |
| 	nbytes uint64 // The number of bytes written to this file | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func (sb *syncBuffer) Sync() error { | |
| 	return sb.file.Sync() | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| func (sb *syncBuffer) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) { | |
| 	if sb.logger.exited { | |
| 		return | |
| 	} | |
| 	// Check if Writer is nil (can happen if rotateFile failed) | |
| 	if sb.Writer == nil { | |
| 		return 0, errors.New("log writer is nil") | |
| 	} | |
| 	if sb.nbytes+uint64(len(p)) >= MaxSize { | |
| 		if err := sb.rotateFile(time.Now()); err != nil { | |
| 			sb.logger.exit(err) | |
| 			return 0, err | |
| 		} | |
| 	} | |
| 	n, err = sb.Writer.Write(p) | |
| 	sb.nbytes += uint64(n) | |
| 	if err != nil { | |
| 		sb.logger.exit(err) | |
| 	} | |
| 	return | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // rotateFile closes the syncBuffer's file and starts a new one. | |
| func (sb *syncBuffer) rotateFile(now time.Time) error { | |
| 	if sb.file != nil { | |
| 		sb.Flush() | |
| 		sb.file.Close() | |
| 	} | |
| 	var err error | |
| 	sb.file, _, err = create(severityName[sb.sev], now) | |
| 	sb.nbytes = 0 | |
| 	if err != nil { | |
| 		return err | |
| 	} | |
| 
 | |
| 	sb.Writer = bufio.NewWriterSize(sb.file, bufferSize) | |
| 
 | |
| 	// Write header. | |
| 	var buf bytes.Buffer | |
| 	fmt.Fprintf(&buf, "Log file created at: %s\n", now.Format("2006/01/02 15:04:05")) | |
| 	fmt.Fprintf(&buf, "Running on machine: %s\n", host) | |
| 	fmt.Fprintf(&buf, "Binary: Built with %s %s for %s/%s\n", runtime.Compiler, runtime.Version(), runtime.GOOS, runtime.GOARCH) | |
| 	fmt.Fprintf(&buf, "Log line format: [IWEF]mmdd hh:mm:ss threadid file:line] msg\n") | |
| 	n, err := sb.file.Write(buf.Bytes()) | |
| 	sb.nbytes += uint64(n) | |
| 	return err | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // bufferSize sizes the buffer associated with each log file. It's large | |
| // so that log records can accumulate without the logging thread blocking | |
| // on disk I/O. The flushDaemon will block instead. | |
| const bufferSize = 256 * 1024 | |
| 
 | |
| // createFiles creates all the log files for severity from sev down to infoLog. | |
| // l.mu is held. | |
| func (l *loggingT) createFiles(sev severity) error { | |
| 	now := time.Now() | |
| 	// Files are created in decreasing severity order, so as soon as we find one | |
| 	// has already been created, we can stop. | |
| 	for s := sev; s >= infoLog && l.file[s] == nil; s-- { | |
| 		sb := &syncBuffer{ | |
| 			logger: l, | |
| 			sev:    s, | |
| 		} | |
| 		if err := sb.rotateFile(now); err != nil { | |
| 			return err | |
| 		} | |
| 		l.file[s] = sb | |
| 	} | |
| 	return nil | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| const flushInterval = 30 * time.Second | |
| 
 | |
| // flushDaemon periodically flushes the log file buffers. | |
| func (l *loggingT) flushDaemon() { | |
| 	for _ = range time.NewTicker(flushInterval).C { | |
| 		l.lockAndFlushAll() | |
| 	} | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // lockAndFlushAll is like flushAll but locks l.mu first. | |
| func (l *loggingT) lockAndFlushAll() { | |
| 	l.mu.Lock() | |
| 	l.flushAll() | |
| 	l.mu.Unlock() | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // flushAll flushes all the logs and attempts to "sync" their data to disk. | |
| // l.mu is held. | |
| func (l *loggingT) flushAll() { | |
| 	// Flush from fatal down, in case there's trouble flushing. | |
| 	for s := fatalLog; s >= infoLog; s-- { | |
| 		file := l.file[s] | |
| 		if file != nil { | |
| 			file.Flush() // ignore error | |
| 			file.Sync()  // ignore error | |
| 		} | |
| 	} | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // CopyStandardLogTo arranges for messages written to the Go "log" package's | |
| // default logs to also appear in the Google logs for the named and lower | |
| // severities.  Subsequent changes to the standard log's default output location | |
| // or format may break this behavior. | |
| // | |
| // Valid names are "INFO", "WARNING", "ERROR", and "FATAL".  If the name is not | |
| // recognized, CopyStandardLogTo panics. | |
| func CopyStandardLogTo(name string) { | |
| 	sev, ok := severityByName(name) | |
| 	if !ok { | |
| 		panic(fmt.Sprintf("log.CopyStandardLogTo(%q): unrecognized severity name", name)) | |
| 	} | |
| 	// Set a log format that captures the user's file and line: | |
| 	//   d.go:23: message | |
| 	stdLog.SetFlags(stdLog.Lshortfile) | |
| 	stdLog.SetOutput(logBridge(sev)) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // logBridge provides the Write method that enables CopyStandardLogTo to connect | |
| // Go's standard logs to the logs provided by this package. | |
| type logBridge severity | |
| 
 | |
| // Write parses the standard logging line and passes its components to the | |
| // logger for severity(lb). | |
| func (lb logBridge) Write(b []byte) (n int, err error) { | |
| 	var ( | |
| 		file = "???" | |
| 		line = 1 | |
| 		text string | |
| 	) | |
| 	// Split "d.go:23: message" into "d.go", "23", and "message". | |
| 	if parts := bytes.SplitN(b, []byte{':'}, 3); len(parts) != 3 || len(parts[0]) < 1 || len(parts[2]) < 1 { | |
| 		text = fmt.Sprintf("bad log format: %s", b) | |
| 	} else { | |
| 		file = string(parts[0]) | |
| 		text = string(parts[2][1:]) // skip leading space | |
| 		line, err = strconv.Atoi(string(parts[1])) | |
| 		if err != nil { | |
| 			text = fmt.Sprintf("bad line number: %s", b) | |
| 			line = 1 | |
| 		} | |
| 	} | |
| 	// printWithFileLine with alsoToStderr=true, so standard log messages | |
| 	// always appear on standard error. | |
| 	logging.printWithFileLine(severity(lb), file, line, true, text) | |
| 	return len(b), nil | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // setV computes and remembers the V level for a given PC | |
| // when vmodule is enabled. | |
| // File pattern matching takes the basename of the file, stripped | |
| // of its .go suffix, and uses filepath.Match, which is a little more | |
| // general than the *? matching used in C++. | |
| // l.mu is held. | |
| func (l *loggingT) setV(pc uintptr) Level { | |
| 	fn := runtime.FuncForPC(pc) | |
| 	file, _ := fn.FileLine(pc) | |
| 	// The file is something like /a/b/c/d.go. We want just the d. | |
| 	if strings.HasSuffix(file, ".go") { | |
| 		file = file[:len(file)-3] | |
| 	} | |
| 	if slash := strings.LastIndex(file, "/"); slash >= 0 { | |
| 		file = file[slash+1:] | |
| 	} | |
| 	for _, filter := range l.vmodule.filter { | |
| 		if filter.match(file) { | |
| 			l.vmap[pc] = filter.level | |
| 			return filter.level | |
| 		} | |
| 	} | |
| 	l.vmap[pc] = 0 | |
| 	return 0 | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Verbose is a boolean type that implements Infof (like Printf) etc. | |
| // See the documentation of V for more information. | |
| type Verbose bool | |
| 
 | |
| // V reports whether verbosity at the call site is at least the requested level. | |
| // The returned value is a boolean of type Verbose, which implements Info, Infoln | |
| // and Infof. These methods will write to the Info log if called. | |
| // Thus, one may write either | |
| // | |
| //	if glog.V(2) { glog.Info("log this") } | |
| // | |
| // or | |
| // | |
| //	glog.V(2).Info("log this") | |
| // | |
| // The second form is shorter but the first is cheaper if logging is off because it does | |
| // not evaluate its arguments. | |
| // | |
| // Whether an individual call to V generates a log record depends on the setting of | |
| // the -v and --vmodule flags; both are off by default. If the level in the call to | |
| // V is at least the value of -v, or of -vmodule for the source file containing the | |
| // call, the V call will log. | |
| func V(level Level) Verbose { | |
| 	// This function tries hard to be cheap unless there's work to do. | |
| 	// The fast path is two atomic loads and compares. | |
|  | |
| 	// Here is a cheap but safe test to see if V logging is enabled globally. | |
| 	if logging.verbosity.get() >= level { | |
| 		return Verbose(true) | |
| 	} | |
| 
 | |
| 	// It's off globally but it vmodule may still be set. | |
| 	// Here is another cheap but safe test to see if vmodule is enabled. | |
| 	if atomic.LoadInt32(&logging.filterLength) > 0 { | |
| 		// Now we need a proper lock to use the logging structure. The pcs field | |
| 		// is shared so we must lock before accessing it. This is fairly expensive, | |
| 		// but if V logging is enabled we're slow anyway. | |
| 		logging.mu.Lock() | |
| 		defer logging.mu.Unlock() | |
| 		if runtime.Callers(2, logging.pcs[:]) == 0 { | |
| 			return Verbose(false) | |
| 		} | |
| 		v, ok := logging.vmap[logging.pcs[0]] | |
| 		if !ok { | |
| 			v = logging.setV(logging.pcs[0]) | |
| 		} | |
| 		return Verbose(v >= level) | |
| 	} | |
| 	return Verbose(false) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Info is equivalent to the global Info function, guarded by the value of v. | |
| // See the documentation of V for usage. | |
| func (v Verbose) Info(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	if v { | |
| 		logging.print(infoLog, args...) | |
| 	} | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Infoln is equivalent to the global Infoln function, guarded by the value of v. | |
| // See the documentation of V for usage. | |
| func (v Verbose) Infoln(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	if v { | |
| 		logging.println(infoLog, args...) | |
| 	} | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Infof is equivalent to the global Infof function, guarded by the value of v. | |
| // See the documentation of V for usage. | |
| func (v Verbose) Infof(format string, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	if v { | |
| 		logging.printf(infoLog, format, args...) | |
| 	} | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Info logs to the INFO log. | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Print; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Info(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.print(infoLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // InfoDepth acts as Info but uses depth to determine which call frame to log. | |
| // InfoDepth(0, "msg") is the same as Info("msg"). | |
| func InfoDepth(depth int, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.printDepth(infoLog, depth, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Infoln logs to the INFO log. | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Println; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Infoln(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.println(infoLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Infof logs to the INFO log. | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Printf; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Infof(format string, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.printf(infoLog, format, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Warning logs to the WARNING and INFO logs. | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Print; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Warning(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.print(warningLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // WarningDepth acts as Warning but uses depth to determine which call frame to log. | |
| // WarningDepth(0, "msg") is the same as Warning("msg"). | |
| func WarningDepth(depth int, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.printDepth(warningLog, depth, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Warningln logs to the WARNING and INFO logs. | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Println; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Warningln(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.println(warningLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Warningf logs to the WARNING and INFO logs. | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Printf; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Warningf(format string, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.printf(warningLog, format, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Error logs to the ERROR, WARNING, and INFO logs. | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Print; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Error(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.print(errorLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // ErrorDepth acts as Error but uses depth to determine which call frame to log. | |
| // ErrorDepth(0, "msg") is the same as Error("msg"). | |
| func ErrorDepth(depth int, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.printDepth(errorLog, depth, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Errorln logs to the ERROR, WARNING, and INFO logs. | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Println; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Errorln(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.println(errorLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Errorf logs to the ERROR, WARNING, and INFO logs. | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Printf; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Errorf(format string, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.printf(errorLog, format, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Fatal logs to the FATAL, ERROR, WARNING, and INFO logs, | |
| // including a stack trace of all running goroutines, then calls os.Exit(255). | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Print; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Fatal(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.print(fatalLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // FatalDepth acts as Fatal but uses depth to determine which call frame to log. | |
| // FatalDepth(0, "msg") is the same as Fatal("msg"). | |
| func FatalDepth(depth int, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.printDepth(fatalLog, depth, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Fatalln logs to the FATAL, ERROR, WARNING, and INFO logs, | |
| // including a stack trace of all running goroutines, then calls os.Exit(255). | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Println; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Fatalln(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.println(fatalLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Fatalf logs to the FATAL, ERROR, WARNING, and INFO logs, | |
| // including a stack trace of all running goroutines, then calls os.Exit(255). | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Printf; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Fatalf(format string, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	logging.printf(fatalLog, format, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // fatalNoStacks is non-zero if we are to exit without dumping goroutine stacks. | |
| // It allows Exit and relatives to use the Fatal logs. | |
| var fatalNoStacks uint32 | |
| 
 | |
| // Exit logs to the FATAL, ERROR, WARNING, and INFO logs, then calls os.Exit(1). | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Print; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Exit(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	atomic.StoreUint32(&fatalNoStacks, 1) | |
| 	logging.print(fatalLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // ExitDepth acts as Exit but uses depth to determine which call frame to log. | |
| // ExitDepth(0, "msg") is the same as Exit("msg"). | |
| func ExitDepth(depth int, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	atomic.StoreUint32(&fatalNoStacks, 1) | |
| 	logging.printDepth(fatalLog, depth, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Exitln logs to the FATAL, ERROR, WARNING, and INFO logs, then calls os.Exit(1). | |
| func Exitln(args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	atomic.StoreUint32(&fatalNoStacks, 1) | |
| 	logging.println(fatalLog, args...) | |
| } | |
| 
 | |
| // Exitf logs to the FATAL, ERROR, WARNING, and INFO logs, then calls os.Exit(1). | |
| // Arguments are handled in the manner of fmt.Printf; a newline is appended if missing. | |
| func Exitf(format string, args ...interface{}) { | |
| 	atomic.StoreUint32(&fatalNoStacks, 1) | |
| 	logging.printf(fatalLog, format, args...) | |
| }
 |