I am using spdlog to do some simple logging on a c program on a beaglebone, debian 10. I set up a rotating logger:
auto logger = spdlog::rotating_logger_mt("runtime_log", "~/logs/log.txt", max_size, max_files);
and this returns the error
terminate called after throwing an instance of spdlog::spdlog_ex'
what(): Failed opening file ~/logs/log.txt for writing: No such file or directory
Aborted
I have already ensured that the directory exists and have tried chmod -R 776 ~/logs/
so:
drwxrwxrw- 2 user group 4096 Oct 28 09:03 logs
-rwxrwxrw- 1 user group 0 Oct 28 09:03 runtime.log
When given the path logs/log.txt
, it works. This puts the logfile in ~/project/build/logs
I have also tried giving the full path /home/user/logs/log.txt
. And that works fine.
Why would my program and spdlog not be able to access the directory at the path ~/logs/log.txt
?
CodePudding user response:
~
is special character in Bash shell, shorthand for home directory. The C program doesn't know about the ~
. Usual way to get home directory would be to use std::getenv
function like:
const char* home_dir = std::getenv("HOME");
auto log_path = std::string{home_dir} "/logs/log.txt";
I suggest you also to make use of <filesystem>
header as it has functions to check the existence of files and directories.