[−][src]Crate file_rotate_record_boundary
Write output to a file and rotate the files when limits have been exceeded.
Defines a simple std::io::Write object that you can plug into your writers as middleware.
Rotating by Lines
We can rotate log files by using the amount of lines as a limit.
use file_rotate::{FileRotate, RotationMode}; use std::{fs, io::Write}; // Create a directory to store our logs, this is not strictly needed but shows how we can // arbitrary paths. fs::create_dir("target/my-log-directory-lines"); // Create a new log writer. The first argument is anything resembling a path. The // basename is used for naming the log files. // // Here we choose to limit logs by 10 lines, and have at most 2 rotated log files. This // makes the total amount of log files 4, since the original file is present as well as // file 0. let mut log = FileRotate::new("target/my-log-directory-lines/my-log-file", RotationMode::Lines(3), 2); // Write a bunch of lines writeln!(log, "Line 1: Hello World!"); for idx in 2..11 { writeln!(log, "Line {}", idx); } assert_eq!("Line 10\n", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-lines/my-log-file").unwrap()); assert_eq!("Line 1: Hello World!\nLine 2\nLine 3\n", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-lines/my-log-file.0").unwrap()); assert_eq!("Line 4\nLine 5\nLine 6\n", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-lines/my-log-file.1").unwrap()); assert_eq!("Line 7\nLine 8\nLine 9\n", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-lines/my-log-file.2").unwrap()); fs::remove_dir_all("target/my-log-directory-lines");
Rotating by Bytes
Another method of rotation is by bytes instead of lines.
use file_rotate::{FileRotate, RotationMode}; use std::{fs, io::Write}; fs::create_dir("target/my-log-directory-bytes"); let mut log = FileRotate::new("target/my-log-directory-bytes/my-log-file", RotationMode::Bytes(5), 2); writeln!(log, "Test file"); assert_eq!("Test ", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-bytes/my-log-file.0").unwrap()); assert_eq!("file\n", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-bytes/my-log-file").unwrap()); fs::remove_dir_all("target/my-log-directory-bytes");
Rotation Method
The rotation method used is to always write to the base path, and then move the file to a new location when the limit is exceeded. The moving occurs in the sequence 0, 1, 2, n, 0, 1, 2...
Here's an example with 1 byte limits:
use file_rotate::{FileRotate, RotationMode}; use std::{fs, io::Write}; fs::create_dir("target/my-log-directory-small"); let mut log = FileRotate::new("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file", RotationMode::Bytes(1), 3); write!(log, "A"); assert_eq!("A", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file").unwrap()); write!(log, "B"); assert_eq!("A", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.0").unwrap()); assert_eq!("B", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file").unwrap()); write!(log, "C"); assert_eq!("A", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.0").unwrap()); assert_eq!("B", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.1").unwrap()); assert_eq!("C", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file").unwrap()); write!(log, "D"); assert_eq!("A", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.0").unwrap()); assert_eq!("B", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.1").unwrap()); assert_eq!("C", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.2").unwrap()); assert_eq!("D", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file").unwrap()); write!(log, "E"); assert_eq!("A", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.0").unwrap()); assert_eq!("B", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.1").unwrap()); assert_eq!("C", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.2").unwrap()); assert_eq!("D", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.3").unwrap()); assert_eq!("E", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file").unwrap()); // Here we overwrite the 0 file since we're out of log files, restarting the sequencing write!(log, "F"); assert_eq!("E", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.0").unwrap()); assert_eq!("B", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.1").unwrap()); assert_eq!("C", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.2").unwrap()); assert_eq!("D", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file.3").unwrap()); assert_eq!("F", fs::read_to_string("target/my-log-directory-small/my-log-file").unwrap()); fs::remove_dir_all("target/my-log-directory-small");
Filesystem Errors
If the directory containing the logs is deleted or somehow made inaccessible then the rotator will simply continue operating without fault. When a rotation occurs, it attempts to open a file in the directory. If it can, it will just continue logging. If it can't then the written date is sent to the void.
This logger never panics.
Structs
FileRotate | The main writer used for rotating logs. |
Enums
RotationMode | Condition on which a file is rotated. |