As Jeff Atwood asked: "What’s your logging philosophy? Should all code be littered with .logthis() and .logthat() calls? Or do you inject logging after the fact somehow?"
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My logging philosophy is pretty easily summarized in four parts: Auditing, or business logic logging
Program logging
Performance logging
Security logging
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I work with safety critical real-time systems and logging is often the only way to catch rare bugs that only turn up every 53rd tuesday when it's a full moon, if you catch my drift. This kind of makes you obsessive about the subject, so I'll apologise now if I start to froth at the mouth. I design systems which are capable of logging pretty much everything, but I don't turn everything on by default. The debug information is sent to a hidden debug dialog which timestamps it and outputs it to a listbox (limited to around 500 lines before deletion), and the dialog allows me to stop it, save it to a log file automatically, or divert it to an attached debugger such as DBWin32. That diversion allows me to see the debug output from multiple applications all neatly serialized, which can be a life saver sometimes. The log files are automatically purged every N days. I used to use numeric logging levels (the higher you set the level, the more you capture):
but this is too inflexible - as you work your way towards a bug it's much more efficient to be able to focus logging in on exactly what you need without having to wade through tons of detritus, and it may be one particular kind of transaction or operation that causes the error. If that requires you to turn everything on, you're just making your own job harder. You need something finer-grained. So now I'm in the process of switching to logging based on a flag system. Everything that gets logged has a flag detailing what kind of operation it is, and there's a set of checkboxes allowing me to define what gets logged. Typically that list looks like this:
This logging system ships with the release build, turned on and saving to file by default. It's too late to find out you should have been logging AFTER the bug has occurred, if that bug only occurs once every six months on average and you have no way of reproducing it. The software typically ships with ERROR, BASIC, STATE_CHANGE and EXCEPTION turned on, but this can be changed in the field via the debug dialog (or a registry/ini/cfg setting, where these things get saved). Oh and one thing - my debug system generates one file per day. Your requirements may be different. But make sure your debug code starts every file with the date, version of the code you're running, and if possible some marker for the customer ID, location of the system or whatever. You can get a mish-mash of log files coming in from the field, and you need some record of what came from where and what version of the system they were running that's actually in the data itself, and you can't trust the customer/field engineer to tell you what version they've got - they may just tell you what version they THINK they've got. Worse, they may report the exe version that's on the disk, but the old version is still running because they forgot to reboot after replacing. Have your code tell you itself. That's my brain dumped... |
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I think always, always, always add logging when there is an exception, including the message and full stack trace. Beyond that, I think it's pretty subjective to whether or not you use the logs often or not... I often try to only add logging in critical places where what I am logging should very rarely hit, otherwise you get the problem like he mentioned of logs that grow way too big... this is why logging error cases is the ideal thing to always log (and it's great to be able to see when these error cases are actually being hit so you can inspect the problem further). Other good things to log are if you have assertions, and your assertions fail, then log it... such as, this query should be under 10 results, if it is bigger there may be a problem, so log it. Of course, if a log statement ends up filling the logs, it is probably a hint to either put it to some sort of "debug" level, or to adjust or remove the log statement. If the logs grow too big, you will often end up ignoring them. |
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I take what I consider a traditional approach; some logging, surrounded by conditional defines. For production builds, I turn off the defines. |
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I choose to log deliberately as I go, as this means the log data is meaningful:
Using some form of code injection, profiling or tracing tool to generate logs would most likely generate verbose, less useful logs that would be harder to dive into. They may be useful as a debugging aid, however. |
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I start by asserting a lot of conditions in my code (in C#, using Otherwise, I prefer using Visual Studio's capability to put traces in the code as special breakpoints (i.e. you insert a breakpoint and right-click it, then select "When hit..." and tell it what to display in that case). There is no need to recompile and it is easy to enable/disable the traces on the fly. |
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If you're writing a program that will be used by many people, it's best to have some kind of mechanism to choose what will be logged and what won't. One argument in favor of .logthis() functions is that they can be an excellent replacement for inline comments in some instances (if done properly). Plus, it helps you narrow down EXACTLY where an error is occurring. |
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I agree with Adam, but I also would consider logging things of interest or things that you can demonstrate as achievements as a kind of proof of them happening. |
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I define a variety of levels and pass in a setting with the config / invocation. |
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If you really need logging in your system then your tests are crap or at the very least incomplete and not very thorough. Everything in your system should be a black box as much as possible. Notice how core classes like String dont need logging - the primary reason being they are very well tested and perform as detailed. No surprises. |
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