A debugging tool that lets you log method usage.
In the default setting, a method is logged before call with arguments and after the call with result and time call took (in seconds). A message is also logged on execution error.
class Calculator
include CallLogger
log def times(a, b)
a*b
end
log def div(a, b)
a/b
end
log def slow_square(a)
sleep a
a * a
end
log_class def self.info(msg)
"Showing: #{msg}"
end
end
Calculator.new.times(3,4)
# Calculator#times(3, 4)
# Calculator#times => 6, [Took: 0.000011s]
# => 6
Calculator.new.div(3,0)
# Calculator#div(3, 0)
# Calculator#div !! divided by 0
# ZeroDivisionError: divided by 0
Calculator.info("hello!")
# Calculator.info(hello)
# Calculator.info => "Showing: hello", [Took: 0.000011s]
Calculator.new.slow_square(2)
# Calculator#slow_square(2)
# Calculator#slow_square => 4, [Took: 2.000117s]
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'call_logger'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install call_logger
Include it to a class being debugged and the prepend a method definition with log
:
class Calculator
include CallLogger
log def times(a, b)
a*b
end
end
.log
accepts method name, so you can pass it explicitly:
class Calculator
include CallLogger
def times(a, b)
a*b
end
log :times
end
If you want to log class method calls, prepend them with .log_class
:
class Calculator
include CallLogger
log_class def self.times(a, b)
a*b
end
end
You can also pass multiple method names to .log
and .log_class
to wrap them all:
class Calculator
include CallLogger
log :times, :div
def times(a, b)
a*b
end
def div(a, b)
a/b
end
end
class Calculator
include CallLogger
log_class :times, :div
def self.times(a, b)
a*b
end
def self.div(a, b)
a/b
end
end
You can wrap a block of code using #log_block
(in instance methods) or .log_block
(in class methods). Block parameters will not be logged though:
class Calculator
include CallLogger
def times(a, b)
log_block('multiply')
a*b
end
end
end
Calculator.new.times(3,4)
# multiply
# multiply => 6, [Took: 0.000011s]
# => 6
Block calls may be also logged without including CallLogger
module with CallLogger.log_block
:
log_block('multiply')
a*b
end
Calculator.new.times(3,4)
# multiply
# multiply => 6, [Took: 0.000011s]
# => 6
There are two pluggable components: Logger
and Formatter
. Formatter
preperes messages to be printed and Logger
sents them to the
output stream (whatever it is). This documentation uses default ones, but they can be easily configured:
::CallLogger.configure do |config|
config.logger = CustomLogger.new
config.formatter = CustomFormatter.new
end
Logger
should provide a#call
method accepting a single paramter.Formatter
should provide following methods:#before(method, args)
- accepting method name and it's arguments; called before method execution#after(method, result, seconds: nil)
- accepting method name, it's result and seconds took execution as a KV param; called after method execution#error(method, exception)
- accepting method name and an exception; called when error is raised
- [+] class methods
- [+] multiple method names
- [+] handle blocks
- [] logging all methods defined in the class
- [] doc: Rails integration
- [] doc: API docs
- [+] infra: travis
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/[USERNAME]/call_logger.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.