package witlog // // version v1.2 // // I like things to be easy. // // this means all the log settings are in one place. it should allow // things to be over-ridden externally to the library // but still allow command line --args to pass debugging settings // // I also have a generic sleep() and exit() in here because it's simple // // Usage: // // log("something", foo, bar) // var DEBUG bool = true // log(DEBUG, "something else", someOtherVariable) # if DEBUG == false, return doing nothing // log(SPEW, "something else", someOtherVariable) # this get's sent to spew.Dump(). Very useful for debugging! // import ( "os" "runtime" "runtime/pprof" golog "log" "time" "reflect" "github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew" // "net" ) // various debugging flags var LogNow bool = true // useful for active development var LogError bool = true var LogWarn bool = false var LogInfo bool = false var LogVerbose bool = false var LogSleep bool = false var LOGOFF bool = false // turn this off, all logging stops var debugToolkit bool = false // does spew stuff? var Where string = "gui/log" type Spewt struct { a bool } var SPEW Spewt /* sleep() # you know what this does? sleeps for 1 second. yep. dump. easy. sleep(.1) # you know what this does? yes, it sleeps for 1/10th of a second */ func Sleep(a ...any) { if (a == nil) { time.Sleep(time.Second) return } Log(LogSleep, "sleep", a[0]) switch a[0].(type) { case int: time.Sleep(time.Duration(a[0].(int)) * time.Second) case float64: time.Sleep(time.Duration(a[0].(float64) * 1000) * time.Millisecond) default: Log("sleep a[0], type = ", a[0], reflect.TypeOf(a[0])) } } /* exit() # yep. exits. I guess everything must be fine exit(3) # I guess 3 it is then exit("dont like apples") # ok. I'll make a note of that */ func Exit(a ...any) { Log(LogError, "exit", a) //if (a) { // os.Exit(a) //} os.Exit(0) } /* I've spent, am spending, too much time thinking about 'logging'. 'log', 'logrus', 'zap', whatever. I'm not twitter. i don't give a fuck about how many nanoseconds it takes to log. Anyway, this implementation is probably faster than all of those because you just set one bool to FALSE and it all stops. Sometimes I need to capture to stdout, sometimes stdout can't work because it doesn't exist for the user. This whole thing is a PITA. Then it's spread over 8 million references in every .go file. I'm tapping out and putting it in one place. here it is. Also, this makes having debug levels really fucking easy. You can define whatever level of logging you want from anywhere (command line) etc. log() # doesn't do anything log(stuff) # sends it to whatever log you define in a single place. here is the place */ func Log(a ...any) { if (LOGOFF) { return } if (a == nil) { return } var tbool bool if (reflect.TypeOf(a[0]) == reflect.TypeOf(tbool)) { if (a[0] == false) { return } a[0] = Where } if (reflect.TypeOf(a[0]) == reflect.TypeOf(SPEW)) { // a = a[1:] a[0] = Where if (debugToolkit) { scs := spew.ConfigState{MaxDepth: 1} scs.Dump(a) // spew.Dump(a) } return } golog.Println(a...) } func loggo() { pprof.Lookup("goroutine").WriteTo(os.Stdout, 1) golog.Println("runtime.NumGoroutine() = ", runtime.NumGoroutine()) } func logindent(depth int, format string, a ...interface{}) { var tabs string for i := 0; i < depth; i++ { tabs = tabs + format } // newFormat := tabs + strconv.Itoa(depth) + " " + format newFormat := tabs + format Log(debugToolkit, newFormat, a) } func SetOutput(f *os.File) { golog.SetOutput(f) }