
Last chance! 50% off unlimited learning
Sale ends in
Functions for handling logging levels. With each log entry, a logging level is associated that indicate its severity -- debugging output, informational output, warning message, error message or fatal error. Each logger only prints log entries where the log level is equal or above its threshold.
loglevel(i)is.loglevel(x, ...)
as.loglevel(i)
# S3 method for loglevel
print(x, ...)
# S3 method for loglevel
as.numeric(x, ...)
# S3 method for loglevel
as.character(x, ...)
available.loglevels()
verbosity(v)
An integer from the set 1..5. Otherwise it will be modified sensibly to fit in that range. Alternatively, a named logging level (one of "DEBUG", "INFO", "WARN", "ERROR", or "FATAL").
An object of class "loglevel"
Unused
A verbosity level from the set 5..1. For historical reasons, they do not match the log levels; a verbosity level of 1 corresponds to a logging level of 5, 2 corresponds to 4, etc.
An object of class "loglevel"
To specify a logging level, use a character value, e.g. "WARN"
,
or an integer between 1 and 5. The function available.levels
lists all
possible logging levels.
# NOT RUN {
loglevel(2) == loglevel("INFO")
loglevel("WARN") < loglevel("ERROR")
loglevel(-1)
try(loglevel("UNDEFINED"))
is.loglevel("DEBUG")
is.loglevel(loglevel("DEBUG"))
as.numeric(loglevel("FATAL"))
available.loglevels()
# }
# NOT RUN {
library(optparse)
library(log4r)
optlist <- list(make_option(c('-v', '--verbosity-level'),
type = "integer",
dest = "verbosity",
default = 1,
help = "Verbosity threshold (5=DEBUG, 4=INFO 3=WARN, 2=ERROR, 1=FATAL)"))
optparser <- OptionParser(option_list=optlist)
opt <- parse_args(optparser)
my.logger <- create.logger(logfile = "", level = verbosity(opt$verbosity))
fatal(my.logger, "Fatal message")
error(my.logger, "Error message")
warn(my.logger, "Warning message")
info(my.logger, "Informational message")
debug(my.logger, "Debugging message")
# }
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab