forgejo/vendor/github.com/ulikunitz/xz/internal/xlog/xlog.go
PhilippHomann 684b7a999f
Dump: add output format tar and output to stdout ()
* Dump: Use mholt/archive/v3 to support tar including many compressions

Signed-off-by: Philipp Homann <homann.philipp@googlemail.com>

* Dump: Allow dump output to stdout

Signed-off-by: Philipp Homann <homann.philipp@googlemail.com>

* Dump: Fixed bug present since  where SessionConfig.Provider is never "file"

Signed-off-by: Philipp Homann <homann.philipp@googlemail.com>

* Dump: never pack RepoRootPath, LFS.ContentPath and LogRootPath when they are below AppDataPath

Signed-off-by: Philipp Homann <homann.philipp@googlemail.com>

* Dump: also dump LFS (fixes )

Signed-off-by: Philipp Homann <homann.philipp@googlemail.com>

* Dump: never dump CustomPath if CustomPath is a subdir of or equal to AppDataPath (fixes )

Signed-off-by: Philipp Homann <homann.philipp@googlemail.com>

* Use log.Info instead of fmt.Fprintf

Signed-off-by: Philipp Homann <homann.philipp@googlemail.com>

* import ordering

* make fmt

Co-authored-by: zeripath <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: techknowlogick <techknowlogick@gitea.io>
Co-authored-by: Matti R <matti@mdranta.net>
2020-06-05 16:47:39 -04:00

458 lines
13 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2014-2017 Ulrich Kunitz. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// Package xlog provides a simple logging package that allows to disable
// certain message categories. It defines a type, Logger, with multiple
// methods for formatting output. The package has also a predefined
// 'standard' Logger accessible through helper function Print[f|ln],
// Fatal[f|ln], Panic[f|ln], Warn[f|ln], Print[f|ln] and Debug[f|ln]
// that are easier to use then creating a Logger manually. That logger
// writes to standard error and prints the date and time of each logged
// message, which can be configured using the function SetFlags.
//
// The Fatal functions call os.Exit(1) after the message is output
// unless not suppressed by the flags. The Panic functions call panic
// after the writing the log message unless suppressed.
package xlog
import (
"fmt"
"io"
"os"
"runtime"
"sync"
"time"
)
// The flags define what information is prefixed to each log entry
// generated by the Logger. The Lno* versions allow the suppression of
// specific output. The bits are or'ed together to control what will be
// printed. There is no control over the order of the items printed and
// the format. The full format is:
//
// 2009-01-23 01:23:23.123123 /a/b/c/d.go:23: message
//
const (
Ldate = 1 << iota // the date: 2009-01-23
Ltime // the time: 01:23:23
Lmicroseconds // microsecond resolution: 01:23:23.123123
Llongfile // full file name and line number: /a/b/c/d.go:23
Lshortfile // final file name element and line number: d.go:23
Lnopanic // suppresses output from Panic[f|ln] but not the panic call
Lnofatal // suppresses output from Fatal[f|ln] but not the exit
Lnowarn // suppresses output from Warn[f|ln]
Lnoprint // suppresses output from Print[f|ln]
Lnodebug // suppresses output from Debug[f|ln]
// initial values for the standard logger
Lstdflags = Ldate | Ltime | Lnodebug
)
// A Logger represents an active logging object that generates lines of
// output to an io.Writer. Each logging operation if not suppressed
// makes a single call to the Writer's Write method. A Logger can be
// used simultaneously from multiple goroutines; it guarantees to
// serialize access to the Writer.
type Logger struct {
mu sync.Mutex // ensures atomic writes; and protects the following
// fields
prefix string // prefix to write at beginning of each line
flag int // properties
out io.Writer // destination for output
buf []byte // for accumulating text to write
}
// New creates a new Logger. The out argument sets the destination to
// which the log output will be written. The prefix appears at the
// beginning of each log line. The flag argument defines the logging
// properties.
func New(out io.Writer, prefix string, flag int) *Logger {
return &Logger{out: out, prefix: prefix, flag: flag}
}
// std is the standard logger used by the package scope functions.
var std = New(os.Stderr, "", Lstdflags)
// itoa converts the integer to ASCII. A negative widths will avoid
// zero-padding. The function supports only non-negative integers.
func itoa(buf *[]byte, i int, wid int) {
var u = uint(i)
if u == 0 && wid <= 1 {
*buf = append(*buf, '0')
return
}
var b [32]byte
bp := len(b)
for ; u > 0 || wid > 0; u /= 10 {
bp--
wid--
b[bp] = byte(u%10) + '0'
}
*buf = append(*buf, b[bp:]...)
}
// formatHeader puts the header into the buf field of the buffer.
func (l *Logger) formatHeader(t time.Time, file string, line int) {
l.buf = append(l.buf, l.prefix...)
if l.flag&(Ldate|Ltime|Lmicroseconds) != 0 {
if l.flag&Ldate != 0 {
year, month, day := t.Date()
itoa(&l.buf, year, 4)
l.buf = append(l.buf, '-')
itoa(&l.buf, int(month), 2)
l.buf = append(l.buf, '-')
itoa(&l.buf, day, 2)
l.buf = append(l.buf, ' ')
}
if l.flag&(Ltime|Lmicroseconds) != 0 {
hour, min, sec := t.Clock()
itoa(&l.buf, hour, 2)
l.buf = append(l.buf, ':')
itoa(&l.buf, min, 2)
l.buf = append(l.buf, ':')
itoa(&l.buf, sec, 2)
if l.flag&Lmicroseconds != 0 {
l.buf = append(l.buf, '.')
itoa(&l.buf, t.Nanosecond()/1e3, 6)
}
l.buf = append(l.buf, ' ')
}
}
if l.flag&(Lshortfile|Llongfile) != 0 {
if l.flag&Lshortfile != 0 {
short := file
for i := len(file) - 1; i > 0; i-- {
if file[i] == '/' {
short = file[i+1:]
break
}
}
file = short
}
l.buf = append(l.buf, file...)
l.buf = append(l.buf, ':')
itoa(&l.buf, line, -1)
l.buf = append(l.buf, ": "...)
}
}
func (l *Logger) output(calldepth int, now time.Time, s string) error {
var file string
var line int
if l.flag&(Lshortfile|Llongfile) != 0 {
l.mu.Unlock()
var ok bool
_, file, line, ok = runtime.Caller(calldepth)
if !ok {
file = "???"
line = 0
}
l.mu.Lock()
}
l.buf = l.buf[:0]
l.formatHeader(now, file, line)
l.buf = append(l.buf, s...)
if len(s) == 0 || s[len(s)-1] != '\n' {
l.buf = append(l.buf, '\n')
}
_, err := l.out.Write(l.buf)
return err
}
// Output writes the string s with the header controlled by the flags to
// the l.out writer. A newline will be appended if s doesn't end in a
// newline. Calldepth is used to recover the PC, although all current
// calls of Output use the call depth 2. Access to the function is serialized.
func (l *Logger) Output(calldepth, noflag int, v ...interface{}) error {
now := time.Now()
l.mu.Lock()
defer l.mu.Unlock()
if l.flag&noflag != 0 {
return nil
}
s := fmt.Sprint(v...)
return l.output(calldepth+1, now, s)
}
// Outputf works like output but formats the output like Printf.
func (l *Logger) Outputf(calldepth int, noflag int, format string, v ...interface{}) error {
now := time.Now()
l.mu.Lock()
defer l.mu.Unlock()
if l.flag&noflag != 0 {
return nil
}
s := fmt.Sprintf(format, v...)
return l.output(calldepth+1, now, s)
}
// Outputln works like output but formats the output like Println.
func (l *Logger) Outputln(calldepth int, noflag int, v ...interface{}) error {
now := time.Now()
l.mu.Lock()
defer l.mu.Unlock()
if l.flag&noflag != 0 {
return nil
}
s := fmt.Sprintln(v...)
return l.output(calldepth+1, now, s)
}
// Panic prints the message like Print and calls panic. The printing
// might be suppressed by the flag Lnopanic.
func (l *Logger) Panic(v ...interface{}) {
l.Output(2, Lnopanic, v...)
s := fmt.Sprint(v...)
panic(s)
}
// Panic prints the message like Print and calls panic. The printing
// might be suppressed by the flag Lnopanic.
func Panic(v ...interface{}) {
std.Output(2, Lnopanic, v...)
s := fmt.Sprint(v...)
panic(s)
}
// Panicf prints the message like Printf and calls panic. The printing
// might be suppressed by the flag Lnopanic.
func (l *Logger) Panicf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputf(2, Lnopanic, format, v...)
s := fmt.Sprintf(format, v...)
panic(s)
}
// Panicf prints the message like Printf and calls panic. The printing
// might be suppressed by the flag Lnopanic.
func Panicf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputf(2, Lnopanic, format, v...)
s := fmt.Sprintf(format, v...)
panic(s)
}
// Panicln prints the message like Println and calls panic. The printing
// might be suppressed by the flag Lnopanic.
func (l *Logger) Panicln(v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputln(2, Lnopanic, v...)
s := fmt.Sprintln(v...)
panic(s)
}
// Panicln prints the message like Println and calls panic. The printing
// might be suppressed by the flag Lnopanic.
func Panicln(v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputln(2, Lnopanic, v...)
s := fmt.Sprintln(v...)
panic(s)
}
// Fatal prints the message like Print and calls os.Exit(1). The
// printing might be suppressed by the flag Lnofatal.
func (l *Logger) Fatal(v ...interface{}) {
l.Output(2, Lnofatal, v...)
os.Exit(1)
}
// Fatal prints the message like Print and calls os.Exit(1). The
// printing might be suppressed by the flag Lnofatal.
func Fatal(v ...interface{}) {
std.Output(2, Lnofatal, v...)
os.Exit(1)
}
// Fatalf prints the message like Printf and calls os.Exit(1). The
// printing might be suppressed by the flag Lnofatal.
func (l *Logger) Fatalf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputf(2, Lnofatal, format, v...)
os.Exit(1)
}
// Fatalf prints the message like Printf and calls os.Exit(1). The
// printing might be suppressed by the flag Lnofatal.
func Fatalf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputf(2, Lnofatal, format, v...)
os.Exit(1)
}
// Fatalln prints the message like Println and calls os.Exit(1). The
// printing might be suppressed by the flag Lnofatal.
func (l *Logger) Fatalln(format string, v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputln(2, Lnofatal, v...)
os.Exit(1)
}
// Fatalln prints the message like Println and calls os.Exit(1). The
// printing might be suppressed by the flag Lnofatal.
func Fatalln(format string, v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputln(2, Lnofatal, v...)
os.Exit(1)
}
// Warn prints the message like Print. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnowarn.
func (l *Logger) Warn(v ...interface{}) {
l.Output(2, Lnowarn, v...)
}
// Warn prints the message like Print. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnowarn.
func Warn(v ...interface{}) {
std.Output(2, Lnowarn, v...)
}
// Warnf prints the message like Printf. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnowarn.
func (l *Logger) Warnf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputf(2, Lnowarn, format, v...)
}
// Warnf prints the message like Printf. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnowarn.
func Warnf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputf(2, Lnowarn, format, v...)
}
// Warnln prints the message like Println. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnowarn.
func (l *Logger) Warnln(v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputln(2, Lnowarn, v...)
}
// Warnln prints the message like Println. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnowarn.
func Warnln(v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputln(2, Lnowarn, v...)
}
// Print prints the message like fmt.Print. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnoprint.
func (l *Logger) Print(v ...interface{}) {
l.Output(2, Lnoprint, v...)
}
// Print prints the message like fmt.Print. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnoprint.
func Print(v ...interface{}) {
std.Output(2, Lnoprint, v...)
}
// Printf prints the message like fmt.Printf. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnoprint.
func (l *Logger) Printf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputf(2, Lnoprint, format, v...)
}
// Printf prints the message like fmt.Printf. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnoprint.
func Printf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputf(2, Lnoprint, format, v...)
}
// Println prints the message like fmt.Println. The printing might be
// suppressed by the flag Lnoprint.
func (l *Logger) Println(v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputln(2, Lnoprint, v...)
}
// Println prints the message like fmt.Println. The printing might be
// suppressed by the flag Lnoprint.
func Println(v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputln(2, Lnoprint, v...)
}
// Debug prints the message like Print. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnodebug.
func (l *Logger) Debug(v ...interface{}) {
l.Output(2, Lnodebug, v...)
}
// Debug prints the message like Print. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnodebug.
func Debug(v ...interface{}) {
std.Output(2, Lnodebug, v...)
}
// Debugf prints the message like Printf. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnodebug.
func (l *Logger) Debugf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputf(2, Lnodebug, format, v...)
}
// Debugf prints the message like Printf. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnodebug.
func Debugf(format string, v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputf(2, Lnodebug, format, v...)
}
// Debugln prints the message like Println. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnodebug.
func (l *Logger) Debugln(v ...interface{}) {
l.Outputln(2, Lnodebug, v...)
}
// Debugln prints the message like Println. The printing might be suppressed
// by the flag Lnodebug.
func Debugln(v ...interface{}) {
std.Outputln(2, Lnodebug, v...)
}
// Flags returns the current flags used by the logger.
func (l *Logger) Flags() int {
l.mu.Lock()
defer l.mu.Unlock()
return l.flag
}
// Flags returns the current flags used by the standard logger.
func Flags() int {
return std.Flags()
}
// SetFlags sets the flags of the logger.
func (l *Logger) SetFlags(flag int) {
l.mu.Lock()
defer l.mu.Unlock()
l.flag = flag
}
// SetFlags sets the flags for the standard logger.
func SetFlags(flag int) {
std.SetFlags(flag)
}
// Prefix returns the prefix used by the logger.
func (l *Logger) Prefix() string {
l.mu.Lock()
defer l.mu.Unlock()
return l.prefix
}
// Prefix returns the prefix used by the standard logger of the package.
func Prefix() string {
return std.Prefix()
}
// SetPrefix sets the prefix for the logger.
func (l *Logger) SetPrefix(prefix string) {
l.mu.Lock()
defer l.mu.Unlock()
l.prefix = prefix
}
// SetPrefix sets the prefix of the standard logger of the package.
func SetPrefix(prefix string) {
std.SetPrefix(prefix)
}
// SetOutput sets the output of the logger.
func (l *Logger) SetOutput(w io.Writer) {
l.mu.Lock()
defer l.mu.Unlock()
l.out = w
}
// SetOutput sets the output for the standard logger of the package.
func SetOutput(w io.Writer) {
std.SetOutput(w)
}