I downloaded and followed the example 1.
Moved to example 2 (Create stdout/stderr logger object
) and got stuck. Actually I can run it as it is but if I change
spdlog::get("console")
to spdlog::get("err_logger")
it crashes.
Am I supposed to change it like that?
#include "spdlog/spdlog.h"
#include "spdlog/sinks/stdout_color_sinks.h"
void stdout_example()
{
// create color multi threaded logger
auto console = spdlog::stdout_color_mt("console");
auto err_logger = spdlog::stderr_color_mt("stderr");
spdlog::get("err_logger")->info("loggers can be retrieved from a global registry using the spdlog::get(logger_name)");
}
int main()
{
stdout_example();
return 0;
}
I also tried Basic file logger
example:
#include <iostream>
#include "spdlog/sinks/basic_file_sink.h"
void basic_logfile_example()
{
try
{
auto logger = spdlog::basic_logger_mt("basic_logger", "logs/basic-log.txt");
}
catch (const spdlog::spdlog_ex &ex)
{
std::cout << "Log init failed: " << ex.what() << std::endl;
}
}
int main()
{
basic_logfile_example();
return 0;
}
And I see it creates basic-log.txt
file but there is nothing on it.
CodePudding user response:
Because you need to register err_logger
logger first. There is no default err_logger
as far as I know. spdlog::get()
returns logger based on its registered name, not variable.
You need a code like this. Code is complex and you may not need all of it though:
#include "spdlog/sinks/stdout_color_sinks.h"
#include "spdlog/sinks/rotating_file_sink.h"
void multi_sink_example2()
{
spdlog::init_thread_pool(8192, 1);
auto stdout_sink = std::make_shared<spdlog::sinks::stdout_color_sink_mt >();
auto rotating_sink = std::make_shared<spdlog::sinks::rotating_file_sink_mt>("mylog.txt", 1024*1024*10, 3);
std::vector<spdlog::sink_ptr> sinks {stdout_sink, rotating_sink};
auto logger = std::make_shared<spdlog::async_logger>("err_logger", sinks.begin(), sinks.end(), spdlog::thread_pool(), spdlog::async_overflow_policy::block);
spdlog::register_logger(logger); //<-- this line registers logger for spdlog::get
}
and after this code, you can use spdlog::get("err_logger")
.
You can read about creating and registering loggers here.
I think spdlog::stderr_color_mt("stderr");
registers logger with name stderr
so spdlog::get("stderr")
may work, but have not tested myself.