1# env_logger 2 3[![Maintenance](https://img.shields.io/badge/maintenance-actively%20maintained-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/env-logger-rs/env_logger) 4[![crates.io](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/env_logger.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/env_logger) 5[![Documentation](https://docs.rs/env_logger/badge.svg)](https://docs.rs/env_logger) 6[![Documentation](https://img.shields.io/badge/docs-master-blue.svg)](https://env-logger-rs.github.io/env_logger/env_logger/index.html) 7========== 8 9Implements a logger that can be configured via environment variables. 10 11## Usage 12 13### In libraries 14 15`env_logger` makes sense when used in executables (binary projects). Libraries should use the [`log`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/log) crate instead. 16 17### In executables 18 19It must be added along with `log` to the project dependencies: 20 21```toml 22[dependencies] 23log = "0.4.0" 24env_logger = "0.8.3" 25``` 26 27`env_logger` must be initialized as early as possible in the project. After it's initialized, you can use the `log` macros to do actual logging. 28 29```rust 30#[macro_use] 31extern crate log; 32 33fn main() { 34 env_logger::init(); 35 36 info!("starting up"); 37 38 // ... 39} 40``` 41 42Then when running the executable, specify a value for the **`RUST_LOG`** 43environment variable that corresponds with the log messages you want to show. 44 45```bash 46$ RUST_LOG=info ./main 47[2018-11-03T06:09:06Z INFO default] starting up 48``` 49 50The letter case is not significant for the logging level names; e.g., `debug`, 51`DEBUG`, and `dEbuG` all represent the same logging level. Therefore, the 52previous example could also have been written this way, specifying the log 53level as `INFO` rather than as `info`: 54 55```bash 56$ RUST_LOG=INFO ./main 57[2018-11-03T06:09:06Z INFO default] starting up 58``` 59 60So which form should you use? For consistency, our convention is to use lower 61case names. Where our docs do use other forms, they do so in the context of 62specific examples, so you won't be surprised if you see similar usage in the 63wild. 64 65The log levels that may be specified correspond to the [`log::Level`][level-enum] 66enum from the `log` crate. They are: 67 68 * `error` 69 * `warn` 70 * `info` 71 * `debug` 72 * `trace` 73 74[level-enum]: https://docs.rs/log/latest/log/enum.Level.html "log::Level (docs.rs)" 75 76There is also a pseudo logging level, `off`, which may be specified to disable 77all logging for a given module or for the entire application. As with the 78logging levels, the letter case is not significant. 79 80`env_logger` can be configured in other ways besides an environment variable. See [the examples](https://github.com/env-logger-rs/env_logger/tree/master/examples) for more approaches. 81 82### In tests 83 84Tests can use the `env_logger` crate to see log messages generated during that test: 85 86```toml 87[dependencies] 88log = "0.4.0" 89 90[dev-dependencies] 91env_logger = "0.8.3" 92``` 93 94```rust 95#[macro_use] 96extern crate log; 97 98fn add_one(num: i32) -> i32 { 99 info!("add_one called with {}", num); 100 num + 1 101} 102 103#[cfg(test)] 104mod tests { 105 use super::*; 106 107 fn init() { 108 let _ = env_logger::builder().is_test(true).try_init(); 109 } 110 111 #[test] 112 fn it_adds_one() { 113 init(); 114 115 info!("can log from the test too"); 116 assert_eq!(3, add_one(2)); 117 } 118 119 #[test] 120 fn it_handles_negative_numbers() { 121 init(); 122 123 info!("logging from another test"); 124 assert_eq!(-7, add_one(-8)); 125 } 126} 127``` 128 129Assuming the module under test is called `my_lib`, running the tests with the 130`RUST_LOG` filtering to info messages from this module looks like: 131 132```bash 133$ RUST_LOG=my_lib=info cargo test 134 Running target/debug/my_lib-... 135 136running 2 tests 137[INFO my_lib::tests] logging from another test 138[INFO my_lib] add_one called with -8 139test tests::it_handles_negative_numbers ... ok 140[INFO my_lib::tests] can log from the test too 141[INFO my_lib] add_one called with 2 142test tests::it_adds_one ... ok 143 144test result: ok. 2 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured 145``` 146 147Note that `env_logger::try_init()` needs to be called in each test in which you 148want to enable logging. Additionally, the default behavior of tests to 149run in parallel means that logging output may be interleaved with test output. 150Either run tests in a single thread by specifying `RUST_TEST_THREADS=1` or by 151running one test by specifying its name as an argument to the test binaries as 152directed by the `cargo test` help docs: 153 154```bash 155$ RUST_LOG=my_lib=info cargo test it_adds_one 156 Running target/debug/my_lib-... 157 158running 1 test 159[INFO my_lib::tests] can log from the test too 160[INFO my_lib] add_one called with 2 161test tests::it_adds_one ... ok 162 163test result: ok. 1 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured 164``` 165 166## Configuring log target 167 168By default, `env_logger` logs to stderr. If you want to log to stdout instead, 169you can use the `Builder` to change the log target: 170 171```rust 172use std::env; 173use env_logger::{Builder, Target}; 174 175let mut builder = Builder::from_default_env(); 176builder.target(Target::Stdout); 177 178builder.init(); 179``` 180 181## Stability of the default format 182 183The default format won't optimise for long-term stability, and explicitly makes no guarantees about the stability of its output across major, minor or patch version bumps during `0.x`. 184 185If you want to capture or interpret the output of `env_logger` programmatically then you should use a custom format. 186