I want to write a log file in C++. I am processing certain things and thus I need to maintain a log of the properties of the things that I process so that I could revert back to this log file to see the properties of anything that interests me in particular... Could someone help me in achieving this?
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1Are you referring to some kind of undo/redo system?– cyco130Sep 13, 2011 at 10:35
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1Have a look at this– StevieGSep 13, 2011 at 10:37
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@cyco130 I think the OP means "refer back to" rather than "revert back to", rather than some sort of undo/redo system. (The word "revert" possibly took over from spending too much time with git!)– RoGFeb 22, 2017 at 9:21
5 Answers
The standard method of logging (in my experience) is to use either the stdout or stderr streams. In C++ to use these you would need to include iostream, and use as below:
#include <iostream>
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
using std::cout;
using std::cerr;
using std::endl;
cout << "Output message" << endl;
cerr << "Error message" << endl;
}
This, however, only achieves printing to those outputs, which usually end up at a terminal. If you want to use these standard stream methods (which are quite readable) to output to a file, then you have to redirect your output somehow. One way of doing this is by using the freopen
function, provided by cstdio. What this does is open a file, and moves a given stream to that file. See here for documentation. An example would be:
#include <iostream>
#include <cstdio>
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
using namespace std;
freopen( "output.txt", "w", stdout );
freopen( "error.txt", "w", stderr );
cout << "Output message" << endl;
cerr << "Error message" << endl;
}
(I've changed to using namespace std;
there just for conciseness.)
You're moving the standard output stream stdout
(which is used by cout
) to output.txt (in write mode), and you're moving stderr
(which is used by cerr
) to error.txt also in write mode.
Hopefully this does the trick.
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2
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2I'd actually never heard of clog before you mentioned it. I can see why a buffered version of stderr might be useful - but why use it in place of cout? What's wrong with both?– V.S.Sep 14, 2011 at 18:49
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1Technically? Nothing. But that's the standard way to do normal logging. Just like cerr should be used for error logging, and cout for console output. And honestly? I only heard about it a week ago. Sep 14, 2011 at 18:56
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3Is there an option to redirect
std::clog
andstd::cerr
into separate files , because both seem to write to the sample location. Something likefreopen( "log.txt", "w", stdlog );
?– ShanApr 18, 2016 at 15:21 -
2Is it possible to keep both? Redirect to log file and output to console?– quimnussSep 16, 2016 at 11:00
This is quite handy, just plug into e.g. some common header file to be called from anywhere in the program (better approach would be to form a class with these functions)
inline string getCurrentDateTime( string s ){
time_t now = time(0);
struct tm tstruct;
char buf[80];
tstruct = *localtime(&now);
if(s=="now")
strftime(buf, sizeof(buf), "%Y-%m-%d %X", &tstruct);
else if(s=="date")
strftime(buf, sizeof(buf), "%Y-%m-%d", &tstruct);
return string(buf);
};
inline void Logger( string logMsg ){
string filePath = "/somedir/log_"+getCurrentDateTime("date")+".txt";
string now = getCurrentDateTime("now");
ofstream ofs(filePath.c_str(), std::ios_base::out | std::ios_base::app );
ofs << now << '\t' << logMsg << '\n';
ofs.close();
}
Usage: Logger("This is log message"); Writes a file (or appends existing file)
/somedir/log_2017-10-20.txt
with content:
2017-10-20 09:50:59 This is log message
The sort of thing you're trying to do is too in-depth to provide a complete solution on stack overflow. What you can do is check out the documentation for the logging library of your choice. In my case, that's Boost.Log
, a logging library for the Boost C++ libraries the documentation for which can be found here.
It's pointed out at the bottom of the page I've just linked to that
This library is not an official part of Boost libraries collection although it has passed the review and is provisionally accepted. The review result is available here.
so make of that what you will.
Why not use one of the many logging frameworks available, like Apache log4cxx? I would suggest this rather than attempting to roll your own - why re-invent the wheel?
You also might want to consider https://github.com/johnwbyrd/logog . It's a performance-oriented C++ logging system. However, if that's a little too intense for your project, good old cerr and cout work fine for this.