6

I'm trying to implement a simple logger by implementing the log crate.

The logger should behave like this:

[1] First log message
[2] Second log message
[3] Third log message

To implement this, I have my logger struct

struct SeqLogger {
    seq: i64,
}

and implement the Log trait's

fn enabled(&self, metadata: &Metadata) -> bool
fn log(&self, record: &Record)
fn flush(&self)

In log(&self, record: &Record) implementation, I would do

fn log(&self, record: &Record) {
    println!("[{}] {}", self.seq, record.args());
    self.seq = self.seq + 1;
}

However, the compiler complains that self is not mutable. Am I working in a right way to implement this? How can I update the state of the logger without &mut self?

1 Answer 1

8

It seems that the logger crate doesn't intend for loggers to have any internal state, so it forces them to be shared as immutable. This easies things a lot, in fact, since a logger should usually be shared between threads and used simultaneously, and that's not possible with & mut self.

However, there's a usual workaround: interior mutability. There's a type std::cell::Cell designed exactly for that use case: to have a immutable reference to something that should be mutable. Your internal state is simply an integer, so it's Copy, and we can just try to use Cell as-is:

extern crate log; // 0.4.5
use log::*;
use std::cell::Cell;

struct SeqLogger {
    seq: Cell<i64>,
}

impl Log for SeqLogger {

    fn log(&self, record: &Record) {
        println!("[{}] {}", self.seq.get(), record.args());
        self.seq.set(self.seq.get() + 1);
    }

    fn enabled(&self, metadata: &Metadata) -> bool { if false {true} else {unimplemented!()} }

    fn flush(&self) { unimplemented!(); }

}

However, the compiler immediately becomes angry again:

error[E0277]: `std::cell::Cell<i64>` cannot be shared between threads safely
 --> src/lib.rs:9:6
  |
9 | impl Log for SeqLogger {
  |      ^^^ `std::cell::Cell<i64>` cannot be shared between threads safely
  |
  = help: within `SeqLogger`, the trait `std::marker::Sync` is not implemented for `std::cell::Cell<i64>`
  = note: required because it appears within the type `SeqLogger`

This makes sence, since, as I said before, the logger itself must be Sync, so we must guarantee that it's safe to share its contents too. At the same time, Cell is not Sync - exactly because of the interior mutability we're using here. Again, there's a usual way to fix it - Mutex:

extern crate log; // 0.4.5
use log::*;
use std::cell::Cell;
use std::sync::Mutex;

struct SeqLogger {
    seq: Mutex<Cell<i64>>,
}

impl Log for SeqLogger {

    fn log(&self, record: &Record) {
        let seq = self.seq.lock().unwrap(); // perhaps replace this with match in production
        println!("[{}] {}", seq.get(), record.args());
        seq.set(seq.get() + 1);
    }

    fn enabled(&self, metadata: &Metadata) -> bool { if false {true} else {unimplemented!()} }

    fn flush(&self) { unimplemented!(); }

}

Now it compiles just fine.

Playground with the last variant


EDIT: According to comments, we can strip one layer of indirection, since Mutex grants us both the internal mutability (sort of) and the Syncability. So we can remove the Cell and dreference the MutexGuard directly:

// --snip--
fn log(&self, record: &Record) {
    let mut seq = self.seq.lock().unwrap(); // perhaps replace this with match in production
    println!("[{}] {}", *seq, record.args());
    *seq = *seq + 1;
}
// --snip--

And furthermore, since our state is just an integer, we can use a standard atomic type instead of Mutex. Note that AtomicI64 is unstable, so you might want to use AtomicIsize or AtomicUsize instead:

use std::sync::atomic::{AtomicIsize, Ordering};

struct SeqLogger {
    seq: AtomicIsize,
}

impl Log for SeqLogger {

    fn log(&self, record: &Record) {
        let id = self.seq.fetch_add(1, Ordering::SeqCst);
        println!("[{}] {}", id, record.args());
    }
    // --snip--
}

Playground

7
  • I think that give an exemple with flush that do nothing and enabled who just return true is better that show some strange if else condition with unimplement!()
    – Stargateur
    Oct 31, 2018 at 7:08
  • Perhaps you're right, I just wanted to explicitly mark the places we're not using for now. It's just a question of habit, I think.
    – Cerberus
    Oct 31, 2018 at 7:13
  • Thanks! And I am impressed by the threads safe compilation error :D
    – kkpoon
    Oct 31, 2018 at 7:24
  • 1
    Mutex<Cell<i64>> ← There's no need to wrap a Cell inside the Mutex, Mutex<i64> is sufficient. You update the counter using *seq += 1.
    – kennytm
    Oct 31, 2018 at 8:37
  • 1
    Your addition will result in multiple logs having the same sequence if there is any concurrency (A reads 1, B reads 1, A set to 1+1, B set to 1+1); use fetch_add instead. Nov 1, 2018 at 15:14

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