4

To get the logcat from an Android device, I use adb shell logcat (also with some grep filtering in the mix).

An example output is as follows:

E/com.samsung.app( 3739): [MSC]>>>...
I/InputDispatcher( 2882): Delivering ...
D/ProgramMonitor( 3770): START ...
D/ProgramMonitor( 3770): LAUNCHER_RESUME...
I/Debug   ( 3815): onReceive...
E/Debug   ( 3815): receive ...
D/ClientReporter( 3036): ...

My question is, how can I change the color of output, based on the initial letter of the log. So that "E" is printed in red, "D" in green and so on... Just similar to how the log is seen in Eclipse.

Thank you

3 Answers 3

7

I use a python script I found here :

Modifying the Android logcat stream for full-color debugging

It's really easy to use and to modify if you want.

Complete source code :

#!/usr/bin/python

'''
    Copyright 2009, The Android Open Source Project

    Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 
    you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 
    You may obtain a copy of the License at 

        http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 

    Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 
    distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 
    WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 
    See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 
    limitations under the License.
'''

# script to highlight adb logcat output for console
# written by jeff sharkey, http://jsharkey.org/
# piping detection and popen() added by other android team members


import os, sys, re, StringIO
import fcntl, termios, struct

# unpack the current terminal width/height
data = fcntl.ioctl(sys.stdout.fileno(), termios.TIOCGWINSZ, '1234')
HEIGHT, WIDTH = struct.unpack('hh',data)

BLACK, RED, GREEN, YELLOW, BLUE, MAGENTA, CYAN, WHITE = range(8)

def format(fg=None, bg=None, bright=False, bold=False, dim=False, reset=False):
    # manually derived from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#Codes
    codes = []
    if reset: codes.append("0")
    else:
        if not fg is None: codes.append("3%d" % (fg))
        if not bg is None:
            if not bright: codes.append("4%d" % (bg))
            else: codes.append("10%d" % (bg))
        if bold: codes.append("1")
        elif dim: codes.append("2")
        else: codes.append("22")
    return "\033[%sm" % (";".join(codes))


def indent_wrap(message, indent=0, width=80):
    wrap_area = width - indent
    messagebuf = StringIO.StringIO()
    current = 0
    while current < len(message):
        next = min(current + wrap_area, len(message))
        messagebuf.write(message[current:next])
        if next < len(message):
            messagebuf.write("\n%s" % (" " * indent))
        current = next
    return messagebuf.getvalue()


LAST_USED = [RED,GREEN,YELLOW,BLUE,MAGENTA,CYAN,WHITE]
KNOWN_TAGS = {
    "dalvikvm": BLUE,
    "Process": BLUE,
    "ActivityManager": CYAN,
    "ActivityThread": CYAN,
}

def allocate_color(tag):
    # this will allocate a unique format for the given tag
    # since we dont have very many colors, we always keep track of the LRU
    if not tag in KNOWN_TAGS:
        KNOWN_TAGS[tag] = LAST_USED[0]
    color = KNOWN_TAGS[tag]
    LAST_USED.remove(color)
    LAST_USED.append(color)
    return color


RULES = {
    #re.compile(r"([\w\.@]+)=([\w\.@]+)"): r"%s\1%s=%s\2%s" % (format(fg=BLUE), format(fg=GREEN), format(fg=BLUE), format(reset=True)),
}

TAGTYPE_WIDTH = 3
TAG_WIDTH = 20
PROCESS_WIDTH = 8 # 8 or -1
HEADER_SIZE = TAGTYPE_WIDTH + 1 + TAG_WIDTH + 1 + PROCESS_WIDTH + 1

TAGTYPES = {
    "V": "%s%s%s " % (format(fg=WHITE, bg=BLACK), "V".center(TAGTYPE_WIDTH), format(reset=True)),
    "D": "%s%s%s " % (format(fg=BLACK, bg=BLUE), "D".center(TAGTYPE_WIDTH), format(reset=True)),
    "I": "%s%s%s " % (format(fg=BLACK, bg=GREEN), "I".center(TAGTYPE_WIDTH), format(reset=True)),
    "W": "%s%s%s " % (format(fg=BLACK, bg=YELLOW), "W".center(TAGTYPE_WIDTH), format(reset=True)),
    "E": "%s%s%s " % (format(fg=BLACK, bg=RED), "E".center(TAGTYPE_WIDTH), format(reset=True)),
}

retag = re.compile("^([A-Z])/([^\(]+)\(([^\)]+)\): (.*)$")

# to pick up -d or -e
adb_args = ' '.join(sys.argv[1:])

# if someone is piping in to us, use stdin as input.  if not, invoke adb logcat
if os.isatty(sys.stdin.fileno()):
    input = os.popen("adb %s logcat" % adb_args)
else:
    input = sys.stdin

while True:
    try:
        line = input.readline()
    except KeyboardInterrupt:
        break

    match = retag.match(line)
    if not match is None:
        tagtype, tag, owner, message = match.groups()
        linebuf = StringIO.StringIO()

        # center process info
        if PROCESS_WIDTH > 0:
            owner = owner.strip().center(PROCESS_WIDTH)
            linebuf.write("%s%s%s " % (format(fg=BLACK, bg=BLACK, bright=True), owner, format(reset=True)))

        # right-align tag title and allocate color if needed
        tag = tag.strip()
        color = allocate_color(tag)
        tag = tag[-TAG_WIDTH:].rjust(TAG_WIDTH)
        linebuf.write("%s%s %s" % (format(fg=color, dim=False), tag, format(reset=True)))

        # write out tagtype colored edge
        if not tagtype in TAGTYPES: break
        linebuf.write(TAGTYPES[tagtype])

        # insert line wrapping as needed
        message = indent_wrap(message, HEADER_SIZE, WIDTH)

        # format tag message using rules
        for matcher in RULES:
            replace = RULES[matcher]
            message = matcher.sub(replace, message)

        linebuf.write(message)
        line = linebuf.getvalue()

    print line
    if len(line) == 0: break
2
  • I like this utility but I really miss color coding on the lines themselves. I use the colors to track important flows :-) I should add that my Python is null Commented Jan 7, 2014 at 9:00
  • Do you have to configure the terminal or font? I still see the green text with spaced added. Commented Oct 23, 2016 at 7:36
2

If you have NPM, you could install module:

$ npm install -g logcat

that will provide you to start monitoring colored logcat in console and //127.0.0.1/.

$ logcat

Here is description

1
  • While your intention is probably good this does not work on a recent Ubuntu, as the "build" fails fetching some dependencies (there are a lot of dependencies). I like the python script better, as it only requires python which is already installed on most distributions.
    – wojciii
    Commented Jun 3, 2014 at 13:51
0

I wanted something dead simple and didn't want to import some gigantic script that parses and reformats the output, so I came up with this. This literally just prints exactly the input line, adding color codes accordingly.

#!/usr/bin/env python

import sys
import subprocess
import csv

DEFAULT = "0;37;49"
ERROR = "0;91;49"
WARNING = "0;93;49"
INFO = "0;92;49"
DEBUG = "0;94;49"
VERBOSE = "0;97;49"

try:
    proc = subprocess.Popen(['adb','logcat', '-v', 'time'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
    for line in iter(proc.stdout.readline, ''):
        l = line.split(None, 3)
        try:
            level_and_tag = l[2]

            if level_and_tag.startswith('E/'): color = ERROR
            elif level_and_tag.startswith('W/'): color = WARNING
            elif level_and_tag.startswith('I/'): color = INFO
            elif level_and_tag.startswith('D/'): color = DEBUG
            elif level_and_tag.startswith('V/'): color = VERBOSE
            else: color = DEFAULT
        except IndexError as e:
            color = DEFAULT

        print '\x1b[%sm %s \x1b[0m' % (color, line.strip())
        #sys.stdout.write('\x1b[%sm %s \x1b[0m' % (color, line))
except KeyboardInterrupt:
    # Make sure color gets set back to terminal default
    print '\x1b[%sm %s \x1b[0m' % (DEFAULT, ">>> Exit")

Note that this works on the standard -v time format, but of course can be modified to fit whatever format you like.

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