Provides the header files for a stripped-down version of the plog header-only C++ logging library, and a method to log to R’s standard error stream.
You can install plogr from GitHub with:
# install.packages("devtools")
devtools::install_github("krlmlr/plogr")Add LinkingTo: plogr to your DESCRIPTION,
and add #include <plogr.h> to all modules where you
want to access the logging. If your package has a universal header file
which you include from all modules, it’s probably a good idea to insert
the #include directive there, so that all of your code has
access to logging. The following system header files will be
included:
sstreamiostreamvectorcassertcstringtime.h (on Linux/OS X)sys/time.h (on Windows)R.hThe code shows a small usage example and a demo which we’ll call from
R below. (Rcpp is not necessary to use
plogr, it is only needed to run the C++ code chunk.) The
init_r() function is the only new function added by the R
package, and initializes a logger that logs to R’s standard error
stream. For further details consult the plog
documentation; for compatibility reasons you won’t find the file
appenders in this package.
// If we omit this, logging is disabled altogether.
// In a package, you would probably add -DPLOGR_ENABLE to PKG_CPPFLAGS.
#define PLOGR_ENABLE
// [[Rcpp::depends(plogr)]]
#include <plogr.h>
// [[Rcpp::export]]
void plogr_demo() {
LOG_INFO << "test 1";
plog::init_r(plog::info);
LOG_INFO << "test 2";
LOG_DEBUG << "test 3";
plog::init_r("DEBUG"); // You can also pass a string
LOG_INFO << "test 4";
LOG_DEBUG << "test 5";
}
#include <Rcpp.h> // not necessary to use plogrThe R code below calls the plogr_demo() C++ function
defined above. Currently, the messages are printed straight to the
standard error stream, so the message capturing mechanisms employed by
knitr don’t work. We use a sink with a text connection to
capture the messages, and print the contents of the variable to which
the text connection assigns.
output <- character()
con <- textConnection("output", "a")
withr::with_message_sink(con, plogr_demo())
close(con)
cat(output, sep = "\n")
#> void plogr_demo@12: test 2
#> void plogr_demo@15: test 4
#> void plogr_demo@16: test 5Nothing is printed before we actually initialize the logger. Because
it is initialized to the info level, the debug log message
is not shown, and only “test 2” comes through. After changing the log
level, the debug message is also shown.