7

I have run react-native start in one terminal, and then react-native ios-run in another. My initial console.log rarely show, sometimes they do.

Lot's of times, randomly I do see:

LOG MESSAGE QUOTA EXCEEDED - SOME MESSAGES FROM THIS PROCESS HAVE BEEN DISCARDED

Are my console.log's being discarded? I tried clearing the console to see it more clearly but I can't find a way to clear console either.

On Android, I wouldn't have issue with missing console.log.

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  • Try using react-native-log-ios npm pkg, same command than react-native los-ios, but working!
    – anni
    Oct 18, 2018 at 9:24

2 Answers 2

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react-native logs information using syslog daemon. This daemon attempts to prevent spamming to the log (DoS attack). These limits are set on per process basis.

The simple solution is to stop/start simulator and you will be obtain new process that is not limited by the previous behaviour.

The other solution is to disable syslogd limits what will be heavilly depends on your operation system.

4
  • Thank you very much Marek for this, this is has been bugging for a long time. May you please add some steps on how to accomplish those solutions (especially the second one).
    – Noitidart
    Jun 22, 2017 at 8:06
  • @Noitidart Which operation system are you interested in? On MacOSX it should be syslogd ... [-mps_limit quota] Jul 3, 2017 at 14:11
  • thanks - I am on Windows 10 for Android dev. And then for mac i am on 1012.1 Sierra. I am very new to mac, just started in the last 2 months. I'm not sure what syslogd is :(
    – Noitidart
    Jul 3, 2017 at 20:04
  • 1
    syslogd is a name of the application/daemon that brings together log information from various sources. Take a look at wikipedia or questions here. -- I can't help with Windows as I'm not using them for years. Jul 7, 2017 at 8:21
1

i found that the JavascriptCore engine won't automatically redirect the console.log to either XCode output panel or the system builtin Console.App, not to mention the self-broken log-ios command.

the only way to see console.log without remote debugging in browser is redirect(bind) it ourselves:

//Add this headers
#import <JavaScriptCore/JavaScriptCore.h>
#import <jschelpers/JavaScriptCore. h>
#import <React/RCTBridge+Private.h>
...
...

- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions
{

  NSURL *jsCodeLocation;
  ...
  ...
  [self.window makeKeyAndVisible];


  ::sleep(2); //<---!!!!!see below

  JSGlobalContextRef globalContext = rootView.bridge.jsContextRef;
  JSContext *context = [JSC_JSContext(globalContext) contextWithJSGlobalContextRef:globalContext];
  context[@"console"][@"log"] = ^(NSString *message) {
    NSLog(@"Javascript log: %@",message);
  };
  return YES;
}

Caution: the JSContext within reactInstance is created in another thread, I don't know how to get the loaded event(in only my project, since i don't like to modify the react-native engine), just wait sometime here for testing purpose.

1
  • Wow this is some deep thought. Thanks for sharing it!
    – Noitidart
    Jun 16, 2018 at 10:00

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