tracing_core/
metadata.rs

1//! Metadata describing trace data.
2use super::{callsite, field};
3use crate::stdlib::{
4    cmp, fmt,
5    str::FromStr,
6    sync::atomic::{AtomicUsize, Ordering},
7};
8
9/// Metadata describing a [span] or [event].
10///
11/// All spans and events have the following metadata:
12/// - A [name], represented as a static string.
13/// - A [target], a string that categorizes part of the system where the span
14///   or event occurred. The `tracing` macros default to using the module
15///   path where the span or event originated as the target, but it may be
16///   overridden.
17/// - A [verbosity level]. This determines how verbose a given span or event
18///   is, and allows enabling or disabling more verbose diagnostics
19///   situationally. See the documentation for the [`Level`] type for details.
20/// - The names of the [fields] defined by the span or event.
21/// - Whether the metadata corresponds to a span or event.
22///
23/// In addition, the following optional metadata describing the source code
24/// location where the span or event originated _may_ be provided:
25/// - The [file name]
26/// - The [line number]
27/// - The [module path]
28///
29/// Metadata is used by [`Subscriber`]s when filtering spans and events, and it
30/// may also be used as part of their data payload.
31///
32/// When created by the `event!` or `span!` macro, the metadata describing a
33/// particular event or span is constructed statically and exists as a single
34/// static instance. Thus, the overhead of creating the metadata is
35/// _significantly_ lower than that of creating the actual span. Therefore,
36/// filtering is based on metadata, rather than on the constructed span.
37///
38/// ## Equality
39///
40/// In well-behaved applications, two `Metadata` with equal
41/// [callsite identifiers] will be equal in all other ways (i.e., have the same
42/// `name`, `target`, etc.). Consequently, in release builds, [`Metadata::eq`]
43/// *only* checks that its arguments have equal callsites. However, the equality
44/// of `Metadata`'s other fields is checked in debug builds.
45///
46/// [span]: super::span
47/// [event]: super::event
48/// [name]: Self::name
49/// [target]: Self::target
50/// [fields]: Self::fields
51/// [verbosity level]: Self::level
52/// [file name]: Self::file
53/// [line number]: Self::line
54/// [module path]: Self::module_path
55/// [`Subscriber`]: super::subscriber::Subscriber
56/// [callsite identifiers]: Self::callsite
57pub struct Metadata<'a> {
58    /// The name of the span described by this metadata.
59    name: &'static str,
60
61    /// The part of the system that the span that this metadata describes
62    /// occurred in.
63    target: &'a str,
64
65    /// The level of verbosity of the described span.
66    level: Level,
67
68    /// The name of the Rust module where the span occurred, or `None` if this
69    /// could not be determined.
70    module_path: Option<&'a str>,
71
72    /// The name of the source code file where the span occurred, or `None` if
73    /// this could not be determined.
74    file: Option<&'a str>,
75
76    /// The line number in the source code file where the span occurred, or
77    /// `None` if this could not be determined.
78    line: Option<u32>,
79
80    /// The names of the key-value fields attached to the described span or
81    /// event.
82    fields: field::FieldSet,
83
84    /// The kind of the callsite.
85    kind: Kind,
86}
87
88/// Indicates whether the callsite is a span or event.
89#[derive(Clone, Eq, PartialEq)]
90pub struct Kind(u8);
91
92/// Describes the level of verbosity of a span or event.
93///
94/// # Comparing Levels
95///
96/// `Level` implements the [`PartialOrd`] and [`Ord`] traits, allowing two
97/// `Level`s to be compared to determine which is considered more or less
98/// verbose. Levels which are more verbose are considered "greater than" levels
99/// which are less verbose, with [`Level::ERROR`] considered the lowest, and
100/// [`Level::TRACE`] considered the highest.
101///
102/// For example:
103/// ```
104/// use tracing_core::Level;
105///
106/// assert!(Level::TRACE > Level::DEBUG);
107/// assert!(Level::ERROR < Level::WARN);
108/// assert!(Level::INFO <= Level::DEBUG);
109/// assert_eq!(Level::TRACE, Level::TRACE);
110/// ```
111///
112/// # Filtering
113///
114/// `Level`s are typically used to implement filtering that determines which
115/// spans and events are enabled. Depending on the use case, more or less
116/// verbose diagnostics may be desired. For example, when running in
117/// development, [`DEBUG`]-level traces may be enabled by default. When running in
118/// production, only [`INFO`]-level and lower traces might be enabled. Libraries
119/// may include very verbose diagnostics at the [`DEBUG`] and/or [`TRACE`] levels.
120/// Applications using those libraries typically chose to ignore those traces. However, when
121/// debugging an issue involving said libraries, it may be useful to temporarily
122/// enable the more verbose traces.
123///
124/// The [`LevelFilter`] type is provided to enable filtering traces by
125/// verbosity. `Level`s can be compared against [`LevelFilter`]s, and
126/// [`LevelFilter`] has a variant for each `Level`, which compares analogously
127/// to that level. In addition, [`LevelFilter`] adds a [`LevelFilter::OFF`]
128/// variant, which is considered "less verbose" than every other `Level`. This is
129/// intended to allow filters to completely disable tracing in a particular context.
130///
131/// For example:
132/// ```
133/// use tracing_core::{Level, LevelFilter};
134///
135/// assert!(LevelFilter::OFF < Level::TRACE);
136/// assert!(LevelFilter::TRACE > Level::DEBUG);
137/// assert!(LevelFilter::ERROR < Level::WARN);
138/// assert!(LevelFilter::INFO <= Level::DEBUG);
139/// assert!(LevelFilter::INFO >= Level::INFO);
140/// ```
141///
142/// ## Examples
143///
144/// Below is a simple example of how a [`Subscriber`] could implement filtering through
145/// a [`LevelFilter`]. When a span or event is recorded, the [`Subscriber::enabled`] method
146/// compares the span or event's `Level` against the configured [`LevelFilter`].
147/// The optional [`Subscriber::max_level_hint`] method can also be implemented to allow spans
148/// and events above a maximum verbosity level to be skipped more efficiently,
149/// often improving performance in short-lived programs.
150///
151/// ```
152/// use tracing_core::{span, Event, Level, LevelFilter, Subscriber, Metadata};
153/// # use tracing_core::span::{Id, Record, Current};
154///
155/// #[derive(Debug)]
156/// pub struct MySubscriber {
157///     /// The most verbose level that this subscriber will enable.
158///     max_level: LevelFilter,
159///
160///     // ...
161/// }
162///
163/// impl MySubscriber {
164///     /// Returns a new `MySubscriber` which will record spans and events up to
165///     /// `max_level`.
166///     pub fn with_max_level(max_level: LevelFilter) -> Self {
167///         Self {
168///             max_level,
169///             // ...
170///         }
171///     }
172/// }
173/// impl Subscriber for MySubscriber {
174///     fn enabled(&self, meta: &Metadata<'_>) -> bool {
175///         // A span or event is enabled if it is at or below the configured
176///         // maximum level.
177///         meta.level() <= &self.max_level
178///     }
179///
180///     // This optional method returns the most verbose level that this
181///     // subscriber will enable. Although implementing this method is not
182///     // *required*, it permits additional optimizations when it is provided,
183///     // allowing spans and events above the max level to be skipped
184///     // more efficiently.
185///     fn max_level_hint(&self) -> Option<LevelFilter> {
186///         Some(self.max_level)
187///     }
188///
189///     // Implement the rest of the subscriber...
190///     fn new_span(&self, span: &span::Attributes<'_>) -> span::Id {
191///         // ...
192///         # drop(span); Id::from_u64(1)
193///     }
194
195///     fn event(&self, event: &Event<'_>) {
196///         // ...
197///         # drop(event);
198///     }
199///
200///     // ...
201///     # fn enter(&self, _: &Id) {}
202///     # fn exit(&self, _: &Id) {}
203///     # fn record(&self, _: &Id, _: &Record<'_>) {}
204///     # fn record_follows_from(&self, _: &Id, _: &Id) {}
205/// }
206/// ```
207///
208/// It is worth noting that the `tracing-subscriber` crate provides [additional
209/// APIs][envfilter] for performing more sophisticated filtering, such as
210/// enabling different levels based on which module or crate a span or event is
211/// recorded in.
212///
213/// [`DEBUG`]: Level::DEBUG
214/// [`INFO`]: Level::INFO
215/// [`TRACE`]: Level::TRACE
216/// [`Subscriber::enabled`]: crate::subscriber::Subscriber::enabled
217/// [`Subscriber::max_level_hint`]: crate::subscriber::Subscriber::max_level_hint
218/// [`Subscriber`]: crate::subscriber::Subscriber
219/// [envfilter]: https://docs.rs/tracing-subscriber/latest/tracing_subscriber/filter/struct.EnvFilter.html
220#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
221pub struct Level(LevelInner);
222
223/// A filter comparable to a verbosity [`Level`].
224///
225/// If a [`Level`] is considered less than or equal to a `LevelFilter`, it
226/// should be considered enabled; if greater than the `LevelFilter`, that level
227/// is disabled. See [`LevelFilter::current`] for more details.
228///
229/// Note that this is essentially identical to the `Level` type, but with the
230/// addition of an [`OFF`] level that completely disables all trace
231/// instrumentation.
232///
233/// See the documentation for the [`Level`] type to see how `Level`s
234/// and `LevelFilter`s interact.
235///
236/// [`OFF`]: LevelFilter::OFF
237#[repr(transparent)]
238#[derive(Copy, Clone, Eq, PartialEq, Hash)]
239pub struct LevelFilter(Option<Level>);
240
241/// Indicates that a string could not be parsed to a valid level.
242#[derive(Clone, Debug)]
243pub struct ParseLevelFilterError(());
244
245static MAX_LEVEL: AtomicUsize = AtomicUsize::new(LevelFilter::OFF_USIZE);
246
247// ===== impl Metadata =====
248
249impl<'a> Metadata<'a> {
250    /// Construct new metadata for a span or event, with a name, target, level, field
251    /// names, and optional source code location.
252    pub const fn new(
253        name: &'static str,
254        target: &'a str,
255        level: Level,
256        file: Option<&'a str>,
257        line: Option<u32>,
258        module_path: Option<&'a str>,
259        fields: field::FieldSet,
260        kind: Kind,
261    ) -> Self {
262        Metadata {
263            name,
264            target,
265            level,
266            module_path,
267            file,
268            line,
269            fields,
270            kind,
271        }
272    }
273
274    /// Returns the names of the fields on the described span or event.
275    #[inline]
276    pub fn fields(&self) -> &field::FieldSet {
277        &self.fields
278    }
279
280    /// Returns the level of verbosity of the described span or event.
281    pub fn level(&self) -> &Level {
282        &self.level
283    }
284
285    /// Returns the name of the span.
286    pub fn name(&self) -> &'static str {
287        self.name
288    }
289
290    /// Returns a string describing the part of the system where the span or
291    /// event that this metadata describes occurred.
292    ///
293    /// Typically, this is the module path, but alternate targets may be set
294    /// when spans or events are constructed.
295    pub fn target(&self) -> &'a str {
296        self.target
297    }
298
299    /// Returns the path to the Rust module where the span occurred, or
300    /// `None` if the module path is unknown.
301    pub fn module_path(&self) -> Option<&'a str> {
302        self.module_path
303    }
304
305    /// Returns the name of the source code file where the span
306    /// occurred, or `None` if the file is unknown
307    pub fn file(&self) -> Option<&'a str> {
308        self.file
309    }
310
311    /// Returns the line number in the source code file where the span
312    /// occurred, or `None` if the line number is unknown.
313    pub fn line(&self) -> Option<u32> {
314        self.line
315    }
316
317    /// Returns an opaque `Identifier` that uniquely identifies the callsite
318    /// this `Metadata` originated from.
319    #[inline]
320    pub fn callsite(&self) -> callsite::Identifier {
321        self.fields.callsite()
322    }
323
324    /// Returns true if the callsite kind is `Event`.
325    pub fn is_event(&self) -> bool {
326        self.kind.is_event()
327    }
328
329    /// Return true if the callsite kind is `Span`.
330    pub fn is_span(&self) -> bool {
331        self.kind.is_span()
332    }
333}
334
335impl<'a> fmt::Debug for Metadata<'a> {
336    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
337        let mut meta = f.debug_struct("Metadata");
338        meta.field("name", &self.name)
339            .field("target", &self.target)
340            .field("level", &self.level);
341
342        if let Some(path) = self.module_path() {
343            meta.field("module_path", &path);
344        }
345
346        match (self.file(), self.line()) {
347            (Some(file), Some(line)) => {
348                meta.field("location", &format_args!("{}:{}", file, line));
349            }
350            (Some(file), None) => {
351                meta.field("file", &format_args!("{}", file));
352            }
353
354            // Note: a line num with no file is a kind of weird case that _probably_ never occurs...
355            (None, Some(line)) => {
356                meta.field("line", &line);
357            }
358            (None, None) => {}
359        };
360
361        meta.field("fields", &format_args!("{}", self.fields))
362            .field("callsite", &self.callsite())
363            .field("kind", &self.kind)
364            .finish()
365    }
366}
367
368impl Kind {
369    const EVENT_BIT: u8 = 1 << 0;
370    const SPAN_BIT: u8 = 1 << 1;
371    const HINT_BIT: u8 = 1 << 2;
372
373    /// `Event` callsite
374    pub const EVENT: Kind = Kind(Self::EVENT_BIT);
375
376    /// `Span` callsite
377    pub const SPAN: Kind = Kind(Self::SPAN_BIT);
378
379    /// `enabled!` callsite. [`Subscriber`][`crate::subscriber::Subscriber`]s can assume
380    /// this `Kind` means they will never receive a
381    /// full event with this [`Metadata`].
382    pub const HINT: Kind = Kind(Self::HINT_BIT);
383
384    /// Return true if the callsite kind is `Span`
385    pub fn is_span(&self) -> bool {
386        self.0 & Self::SPAN_BIT == Self::SPAN_BIT
387    }
388
389    /// Return true if the callsite kind is `Event`
390    pub fn is_event(&self) -> bool {
391        self.0 & Self::EVENT_BIT == Self::EVENT_BIT
392    }
393
394    /// Return true if the callsite kind is `Hint`
395    pub fn is_hint(&self) -> bool {
396        self.0 & Self::HINT_BIT == Self::HINT_BIT
397    }
398
399    /// Sets that this `Kind` is a [hint](Self::HINT).
400    ///
401    /// This can be called on [`SPAN`](Self::SPAN) and [`EVENT`](Self::EVENT)
402    /// kinds to construct a hint callsite that also counts as a span or event.
403    pub const fn hint(self) -> Self {
404        Self(self.0 | Self::HINT_BIT)
405    }
406}
407
408impl fmt::Debug for Kind {
409    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
410        f.write_str("Kind(")?;
411        let mut has_bits = false;
412        let mut write_bit = |name: &str| {
413            if has_bits {
414                f.write_str(" | ")?;
415            }
416            f.write_str(name)?;
417            has_bits = true;
418            Ok(())
419        };
420
421        if self.is_event() {
422            write_bit("EVENT")?;
423        }
424
425        if self.is_span() {
426            write_bit("SPAN")?;
427        }
428
429        if self.is_hint() {
430            write_bit("HINT")?;
431        }
432
433        // if none of the expected bits were set, something is messed up, so
434        // just print the bits for debugging purposes
435        if !has_bits {
436            write!(f, "{:#b}", self.0)?;
437        }
438
439        f.write_str(")")
440    }
441}
442
443impl<'a> Eq for Metadata<'a> {}
444
445impl<'a> PartialEq for Metadata<'a> {
446    #[inline]
447    fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool {
448        if core::ptr::eq(&self, &other) {
449            true
450        } else if cfg!(not(debug_assertions)) {
451            // In a well-behaving application, two `Metadata` can be assumed to
452            // be totally equal so long as they share the same callsite.
453            self.callsite() == other.callsite()
454        } else {
455            // However, when debug-assertions are enabled, do not assume that
456            // the application is well-behaving; check every field of `Metadata`
457            // for equality.
458
459            // `Metadata` is destructured here to ensure a compile-error if the
460            // fields of `Metadata` change.
461            let Metadata {
462                name: lhs_name,
463                target: lhs_target,
464                level: lhs_level,
465                module_path: lhs_module_path,
466                file: lhs_file,
467                line: lhs_line,
468                fields: lhs_fields,
469                kind: lhs_kind,
470            } = self;
471
472            let Metadata {
473                name: rhs_name,
474                target: rhs_target,
475                level: rhs_level,
476                module_path: rhs_module_path,
477                file: rhs_file,
478                line: rhs_line,
479                fields: rhs_fields,
480                kind: rhs_kind,
481            } = &other;
482
483            // The initial comparison of callsites is purely an optimization;
484            // it can be removed without affecting the overall semantics of the
485            // expression.
486            self.callsite() == other.callsite()
487                && lhs_name == rhs_name
488                && lhs_target == rhs_target
489                && lhs_level == rhs_level
490                && lhs_module_path == rhs_module_path
491                && lhs_file == rhs_file
492                && lhs_line == rhs_line
493                && lhs_fields == rhs_fields
494                && lhs_kind == rhs_kind
495        }
496    }
497}
498
499// ===== impl Level =====
500
501impl Level {
502    /// The "error" level.
503    ///
504    /// Designates very serious errors.
505    pub const ERROR: Level = Level(LevelInner::Error);
506    /// The "warn" level.
507    ///
508    /// Designates hazardous situations.
509    pub const WARN: Level = Level(LevelInner::Warn);
510    /// The "info" level.
511    ///
512    /// Designates useful information.
513    pub const INFO: Level = Level(LevelInner::Info);
514    /// The "debug" level.
515    ///
516    /// Designates lower priority information.
517    pub const DEBUG: Level = Level(LevelInner::Debug);
518    /// The "trace" level.
519    ///
520    /// Designates very low priority, often extremely verbose, information.
521    pub const TRACE: Level = Level(LevelInner::Trace);
522
523    /// Returns the string representation of the `Level`.
524    ///
525    /// This returns the same string as the `fmt::Display` implementation.
526    pub fn as_str(&self) -> &'static str {
527        match *self {
528            Level::TRACE => "TRACE",
529            Level::DEBUG => "DEBUG",
530            Level::INFO => "INFO",
531            Level::WARN => "WARN",
532            Level::ERROR => "ERROR",
533        }
534    }
535}
536
537impl fmt::Display for Level {
538    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
539        match *self {
540            Level::TRACE => f.pad("TRACE"),
541            Level::DEBUG => f.pad("DEBUG"),
542            Level::INFO => f.pad("INFO"),
543            Level::WARN => f.pad("WARN"),
544            Level::ERROR => f.pad("ERROR"),
545        }
546    }
547}
548
549#[cfg(feature = "std")]
550#[cfg_attr(docsrs, doc(cfg(feature = "std")))]
551impl crate::stdlib::error::Error for ParseLevelError {}
552
553impl FromStr for Level {
554    type Err = ParseLevelError;
555    fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<Self, ParseLevelError> {
556        s.parse::<usize>()
557            .map_err(|_| ParseLevelError { _p: () })
558            .and_then(|num| match num {
559                1 => Ok(Level::ERROR),
560                2 => Ok(Level::WARN),
561                3 => Ok(Level::INFO),
562                4 => Ok(Level::DEBUG),
563                5 => Ok(Level::TRACE),
564                _ => Err(ParseLevelError { _p: () }),
565            })
566            .or_else(|_| match s {
567                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("error") => Ok(Level::ERROR),
568                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("warn") => Ok(Level::WARN),
569                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("info") => Ok(Level::INFO),
570                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("debug") => Ok(Level::DEBUG),
571                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("trace") => Ok(Level::TRACE),
572                _ => Err(ParseLevelError { _p: () }),
573            })
574    }
575}
576
577#[repr(usize)]
578#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, Hash, Eq, PartialEq)]
579enum LevelInner {
580    /// The "trace" level.
581    ///
582    /// Designates very low priority, often extremely verbose, information.
583    Trace = 0,
584    /// The "debug" level.
585    ///
586    /// Designates lower priority information.
587    Debug = 1,
588    /// The "info" level.
589    ///
590    /// Designates useful information.
591    Info = 2,
592    /// The "warn" level.
593    ///
594    /// Designates hazardous situations.
595    Warn = 3,
596    /// The "error" level.
597    ///
598    /// Designates very serious errors.
599    Error = 4,
600}
601
602// === impl LevelFilter ===
603
604impl From<Level> for LevelFilter {
605    #[inline]
606    fn from(level: Level) -> Self {
607        Self::from_level(level)
608    }
609}
610
611impl From<Option<Level>> for LevelFilter {
612    #[inline]
613    fn from(level: Option<Level>) -> Self {
614        Self(level)
615    }
616}
617
618impl From<LevelFilter> for Option<Level> {
619    #[inline]
620    fn from(filter: LevelFilter) -> Self {
621        filter.into_level()
622    }
623}
624
625impl LevelFilter {
626    /// The "off" level.
627    ///
628    /// Designates that trace instrumentation should be completely disabled.
629    pub const OFF: LevelFilter = LevelFilter(None);
630    /// The "error" level.
631    ///
632    /// Designates very serious errors.
633    pub const ERROR: LevelFilter = LevelFilter::from_level(Level::ERROR);
634    /// The "warn" level.
635    ///
636    /// Designates hazardous situations.
637    pub const WARN: LevelFilter = LevelFilter::from_level(Level::WARN);
638    /// The "info" level.
639    ///
640    /// Designates useful information.
641    pub const INFO: LevelFilter = LevelFilter::from_level(Level::INFO);
642    /// The "debug" level.
643    ///
644    /// Designates lower priority information.
645    pub const DEBUG: LevelFilter = LevelFilter::from_level(Level::DEBUG);
646    /// The "trace" level.
647    ///
648    /// Designates very low priority, often extremely verbose, information.
649    pub const TRACE: LevelFilter = LevelFilter(Some(Level::TRACE));
650
651    /// Returns a `LevelFilter` that enables spans and events with verbosity up
652    /// to and including `level`.
653    pub const fn from_level(level: Level) -> Self {
654        Self(Some(level))
655    }
656
657    /// Returns the most verbose [`Level`] that this filter accepts, or `None`
658    /// if it is [`OFF`].
659    ///
660    /// [`OFF`]: LevelFilter::OFF
661    pub const fn into_level(self) -> Option<Level> {
662        self.0
663    }
664
665    // These consts are necessary because `as` casts are not allowed as
666    // match patterns.
667    const ERROR_USIZE: usize = LevelInner::Error as usize;
668    const WARN_USIZE: usize = LevelInner::Warn as usize;
669    const INFO_USIZE: usize = LevelInner::Info as usize;
670    const DEBUG_USIZE: usize = LevelInner::Debug as usize;
671    const TRACE_USIZE: usize = LevelInner::Trace as usize;
672    // Using the value of the last variant + 1 ensures that we match the value
673    // for `Option::None` as selected by the niche optimization for
674    // `LevelFilter`. If this is the case, converting a `usize` value into a
675    // `LevelFilter` (in `LevelFilter::current`) will be an identity conversion,
676    // rather than generating a lookup table.
677    const OFF_USIZE: usize = LevelInner::Error as usize + 1;
678
679    /// Returns a `LevelFilter` that matches the most verbose [`Level`] that any
680    /// currently active [`Subscriber`] will enable.
681    ///
682    /// User code should treat this as a *hint*. If a given span or event has a
683    /// level *higher* than the returned `LevelFilter`, it will not be enabled.
684    /// However, if the level is less than or equal to this value, the span or
685    /// event is *not* guaranteed to be enabled; the subscriber will still
686    /// filter each callsite individually.
687    ///
688    /// Therefore, comparing a given span or event's level to the returned
689    /// `LevelFilter` **can** be used for determining if something is
690    /// *disabled*, but **should not** be used for determining if something is
691    /// *enabled*.
692    ///
693    /// [`Level`]: super::Level
694    /// [`Subscriber`]: super::Subscriber
695    #[inline(always)]
696    pub fn current() -> Self {
697        match MAX_LEVEL.load(Ordering::Relaxed) {
698            Self::ERROR_USIZE => Self::ERROR,
699            Self::WARN_USIZE => Self::WARN,
700            Self::INFO_USIZE => Self::INFO,
701            Self::DEBUG_USIZE => Self::DEBUG,
702            Self::TRACE_USIZE => Self::TRACE,
703            Self::OFF_USIZE => Self::OFF,
704            #[cfg(debug_assertions)]
705            unknown => unreachable!(
706                "/!\\ `LevelFilter` representation seems to have changed! /!\\ \n\
707                This is a bug (and it's pretty bad). Please contact the `tracing` \
708                maintainers. Thank you and I'm sorry.\n \
709                The offending repr was: {:?}",
710                unknown,
711            ),
712            #[cfg(not(debug_assertions))]
713            _ => unsafe {
714                // Using `unreachable_unchecked` here (rather than
715                // `unreachable!()`) is necessary to ensure that rustc generates
716                // an identity conversion from integer -> discriminant, rather
717                // than generating a lookup table. We want to ensure this
718                // function is a single `mov` instruction (on x86) if at all
719                // possible, because it is called *every* time a span/event
720                // callsite is hit; and it is (potentially) the only code in the
721                // hottest path for skipping a majority of callsites when level
722                // filtering is in use.
723                //
724                // safety: This branch is only truly unreachable if we guarantee
725                // that no values other than the possible enum discriminants
726                // will *ever* be present. The `AtomicUsize` is initialized to
727                // the `OFF` value. It is only set by the `set_max` function,
728                // which takes a `LevelFilter` as a parameter. This restricts
729                // the inputs to `set_max` to the set of valid discriminants.
730                // Therefore, **as long as `MAX_VALUE` is only ever set by
731                // `set_max`**, this is safe.
732                crate::stdlib::hint::unreachable_unchecked()
733            },
734        }
735    }
736
737    pub(crate) fn set_max(LevelFilter(level): LevelFilter) {
738        let val = match level {
739            Some(Level(level)) => level as usize,
740            None => Self::OFF_USIZE,
741        };
742
743        // using an AcqRel swap ensures an ordered relationship of writes to the
744        // max level.
745        MAX_LEVEL.swap(val, Ordering::AcqRel);
746    }
747}
748
749impl fmt::Display for LevelFilter {
750    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
751        match *self {
752            LevelFilter::OFF => f.pad("off"),
753            LevelFilter::ERROR => f.pad("error"),
754            LevelFilter::WARN => f.pad("warn"),
755            LevelFilter::INFO => f.pad("info"),
756            LevelFilter::DEBUG => f.pad("debug"),
757            LevelFilter::TRACE => f.pad("trace"),
758        }
759    }
760}
761
762impl fmt::Debug for LevelFilter {
763    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
764        match *self {
765            LevelFilter::OFF => f.pad("LevelFilter::OFF"),
766            LevelFilter::ERROR => f.pad("LevelFilter::ERROR"),
767            LevelFilter::WARN => f.pad("LevelFilter::WARN"),
768            LevelFilter::INFO => f.pad("LevelFilter::INFO"),
769            LevelFilter::DEBUG => f.pad("LevelFilter::DEBUG"),
770            LevelFilter::TRACE => f.pad("LevelFilter::TRACE"),
771        }
772    }
773}
774
775impl FromStr for LevelFilter {
776    type Err = ParseLevelFilterError;
777    fn from_str(from: &str) -> Result<Self, Self::Err> {
778        from.parse::<usize>()
779            .ok()
780            .and_then(|num| match num {
781                0 => Some(LevelFilter::OFF),
782                1 => Some(LevelFilter::ERROR),
783                2 => Some(LevelFilter::WARN),
784                3 => Some(LevelFilter::INFO),
785                4 => Some(LevelFilter::DEBUG),
786                5 => Some(LevelFilter::TRACE),
787                _ => None,
788            })
789            .or_else(|| match from {
790                "" => Some(LevelFilter::ERROR),
791                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("error") => Some(LevelFilter::ERROR),
792                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("warn") => Some(LevelFilter::WARN),
793                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("info") => Some(LevelFilter::INFO),
794                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("debug") => Some(LevelFilter::DEBUG),
795                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("trace") => Some(LevelFilter::TRACE),
796                s if s.eq_ignore_ascii_case("off") => Some(LevelFilter::OFF),
797                _ => None,
798            })
799            .ok_or(ParseLevelFilterError(()))
800    }
801}
802
803/// Returned if parsing a `Level` fails.
804#[derive(Debug)]
805pub struct ParseLevelError {
806    _p: (),
807}
808
809impl fmt::Display for ParseLevelError {
810    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
811        f.pad(
812            "error parsing level: expected one of \"error\", \"warn\", \
813             \"info\", \"debug\", \"trace\", or a number 1-5",
814        )
815    }
816}
817
818impl fmt::Display for ParseLevelFilterError {
819    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
820        f.pad(
821            "error parsing level filter: expected one of \"off\", \"error\", \
822            \"warn\", \"info\", \"debug\", \"trace\", or a number 0-5",
823        )
824    }
825}
826
827#[cfg(feature = "std")]
828impl std::error::Error for ParseLevelFilterError {}
829
830// ==== Level and LevelFilter comparisons ====
831
832// /!\ BIG, IMPORTANT WARNING /!\
833// Do NOT mess with these implementations! They are hand-written for a reason!
834//
835// Since comparing `Level`s and `LevelFilter`s happens in a *very* hot path
836// (potentially, every time a span or event macro is hit, regardless of whether
837// or not is enabled), we *need* to ensure that these comparisons are as fast as
838// possible. Therefore, we have some requirements:
839//
840// 1. We want to do our best to ensure that rustc will generate integer-integer
841//    comparisons wherever possible.
842//
843//    The derived `Ord`/`PartialOrd` impls for `LevelFilter` will not do this,
844//    because `LevelFilter`s are represented by `Option<Level>`, rather than as
845//    a separate `#[repr(usize)]` enum. This was (unfortunately) necessary for
846//    backwards-compatibility reasons, as the  `tracing` crate's original
847//    version of `LevelFilter` defined `const fn` conversions between `Level`s
848//    and `LevelFilter`, so we're stuck with the `Option<Level>` repr.
849//    Therefore, we need hand-written `PartialOrd` impls that cast both sides of
850//    the comparison to `usize`s, to force the compiler to generate integer
851//    compares.
852//
853// 2. The hottest `Level`/`LevelFilter` comparison, the one that happens every
854//    time a callsite is hit, occurs *within the `tracing` crate's macros*.
855//    This means that the comparison is happening *inside* a crate that
856//    *depends* on `tracing-core`, not in `tracing-core` itself. The compiler
857//    will only inline function calls across crate boundaries if the called
858//    function is annotated with an `#[inline]` attribute, and we *definitely*
859//    want the comparison functions to be inlined: as previously mentioned, they
860//    should compile down to a single integer comparison on release builds, and
861//    it seems really sad to push an entire stack frame to call a function
862//    consisting of one `cmp` instruction!
863//
864//    Therefore, we need to ensure that all the comparison methods have
865//    `#[inline]` or `#[inline(always)]` attributes. It's not sufficient to just
866//    add the attribute to `partial_cmp` in a manual implementation of the
867//    trait, since it's the comparison operators (`lt`, `le`, `gt`, and `ge`)
868//    that will actually be *used*, and the default implementation of *those*
869//    methods, which calls `partial_cmp`, does not have an inline annotation.
870//
871// 3. We need the comparisons to be inverted. The discriminants for the
872//    `LevelInner` enum are assigned in "backwards" order, with `TRACE` having
873//    the *lowest* value. However, we want `TRACE` to compare greater-than all
874//    other levels.
875//
876//    Why are the numeric values inverted? In order to ensure that `LevelFilter`
877//    (which, as previously mentioned, *has* to be internally represented by an
878//    `Option<Level>`) compiles down to a single integer value. This is
879//    necessary for storing the global max in an `AtomicUsize`, and for ensuring
880//    that we use fast integer-integer comparisons, as mentioned previously. In
881//    order to ensure this, we exploit the niche optimization. The niche
882//    optimization for `Option<{enum with a numeric repr}>` will choose
883//    `(HIGHEST_DISCRIMINANT_VALUE + 1)` as the representation for `None`.
884//    Therefore, the integer representation of `LevelFilter::OFF` (which is
885//    `None`) will be the number 5. `OFF` must compare higher than every other
886//    level in order for it to filter as expected. Since we want to use a single
887//    `cmp` instruction, we can't special-case the integer value of `OFF` to
888//    compare higher, as that will generate more code. Instead, we need it to be
889//    on one end of the enum, with `ERROR` on the opposite end, so we assign the
890//    value 0 to `ERROR`.
891//
892//    This *does* mean that when parsing `LevelFilter`s or `Level`s from
893//    `String`s, the integer values are inverted, but that doesn't happen in a
894//    hot path.
895//
896//    Note that we manually invert the comparisons by swapping the left-hand and
897//    right-hand side. Using `Ordering::reverse` generates significantly worse
898//    code (per Matt Godbolt's Compiler Explorer).
899//
900// Anyway, that's a brief history of why this code is the way it is. Don't
901// change it unless you know what you're doing.
902
903impl PartialEq<LevelFilter> for Level {
904    #[inline(always)]
905    fn eq(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> bool {
906        self.0 as usize == filter_as_usize(&other.0)
907    }
908}
909
910impl PartialOrd for Level {
911    #[inline(always)]
912    fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Level) -> Option<cmp::Ordering> {
913        Some(self.cmp(other))
914    }
915
916    #[inline(always)]
917    fn lt(&self, other: &Level) -> bool {
918        (other.0 as usize) < (self.0 as usize)
919    }
920
921    #[inline(always)]
922    fn le(&self, other: &Level) -> bool {
923        (other.0 as usize) <= (self.0 as usize)
924    }
925
926    #[inline(always)]
927    fn gt(&self, other: &Level) -> bool {
928        (other.0 as usize) > (self.0 as usize)
929    }
930
931    #[inline(always)]
932    fn ge(&self, other: &Level) -> bool {
933        (other.0 as usize) >= (self.0 as usize)
934    }
935}
936
937impl Ord for Level {
938    #[inline(always)]
939    fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> cmp::Ordering {
940        (other.0 as usize).cmp(&(self.0 as usize))
941    }
942}
943
944impl PartialOrd<LevelFilter> for Level {
945    #[inline(always)]
946    fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> Option<cmp::Ordering> {
947        Some(filter_as_usize(&other.0).cmp(&(self.0 as usize)))
948    }
949
950    #[inline(always)]
951    fn lt(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> bool {
952        filter_as_usize(&other.0) < (self.0 as usize)
953    }
954
955    #[inline(always)]
956    fn le(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> bool {
957        filter_as_usize(&other.0) <= (self.0 as usize)
958    }
959
960    #[inline(always)]
961    fn gt(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> bool {
962        filter_as_usize(&other.0) > (self.0 as usize)
963    }
964
965    #[inline(always)]
966    fn ge(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> bool {
967        filter_as_usize(&other.0) >= (self.0 as usize)
968    }
969}
970
971#[inline(always)]
972fn filter_as_usize(x: &Option<Level>) -> usize {
973    match x {
974        Some(Level(f)) => *f as usize,
975        None => LevelFilter::OFF_USIZE,
976    }
977}
978
979impl PartialEq<Level> for LevelFilter {
980    #[inline(always)]
981    fn eq(&self, other: &Level) -> bool {
982        filter_as_usize(&self.0) == other.0 as usize
983    }
984}
985
986impl PartialOrd for LevelFilter {
987    #[inline(always)]
988    fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> Option<cmp::Ordering> {
989        Some(self.cmp(other))
990    }
991
992    #[inline(always)]
993    fn lt(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> bool {
994        filter_as_usize(&other.0) < filter_as_usize(&self.0)
995    }
996
997    #[inline(always)]
998    fn le(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> bool {
999        filter_as_usize(&other.0) <= filter_as_usize(&self.0)
1000    }
1001
1002    #[inline(always)]
1003    fn gt(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> bool {
1004        filter_as_usize(&other.0) > filter_as_usize(&self.0)
1005    }
1006
1007    #[inline(always)]
1008    fn ge(&self, other: &LevelFilter) -> bool {
1009        filter_as_usize(&other.0) >= filter_as_usize(&self.0)
1010    }
1011}
1012
1013impl Ord for LevelFilter {
1014    #[inline(always)]
1015    fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> cmp::Ordering {
1016        filter_as_usize(&other.0).cmp(&filter_as_usize(&self.0))
1017    }
1018}
1019
1020impl PartialOrd<Level> for LevelFilter {
1021    #[inline(always)]
1022    fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Level) -> Option<cmp::Ordering> {
1023        Some((other.0 as usize).cmp(&filter_as_usize(&self.0)))
1024    }
1025
1026    #[inline(always)]
1027    fn lt(&self, other: &Level) -> bool {
1028        (other.0 as usize) < filter_as_usize(&self.0)
1029    }
1030
1031    #[inline(always)]
1032    fn le(&self, other: &Level) -> bool {
1033        (other.0 as usize) <= filter_as_usize(&self.0)
1034    }
1035
1036    #[inline(always)]
1037    fn gt(&self, other: &Level) -> bool {
1038        (other.0 as usize) > filter_as_usize(&self.0)
1039    }
1040
1041    #[inline(always)]
1042    fn ge(&self, other: &Level) -> bool {
1043        (other.0 as usize) >= filter_as_usize(&self.0)
1044    }
1045}
1046
1047#[cfg(test)]
1048mod tests {
1049    use super::*;
1050    use crate::stdlib::mem;
1051
1052    #[test]
1053    fn level_from_str() {
1054        assert_eq!("error".parse::<Level>().unwrap(), Level::ERROR);
1055        assert_eq!("4".parse::<Level>().unwrap(), Level::DEBUG);
1056        assert!("0".parse::<Level>().is_err())
1057    }
1058
1059    #[test]
1060    fn filter_level_conversion() {
1061        let mapping = [
1062            (LevelFilter::OFF, None),
1063            (LevelFilter::ERROR, Some(Level::ERROR)),
1064            (LevelFilter::WARN, Some(Level::WARN)),
1065            (LevelFilter::INFO, Some(Level::INFO)),
1066            (LevelFilter::DEBUG, Some(Level::DEBUG)),
1067            (LevelFilter::TRACE, Some(Level::TRACE)),
1068        ];
1069        for (filter, level) in mapping.iter() {
1070            assert_eq!(filter.into_level(), *level);
1071            match level {
1072                Some(level) => {
1073                    let actual: LevelFilter = (*level).into();
1074                    assert_eq!(actual, *filter);
1075                }
1076                None => {
1077                    let actual: LevelFilter = None.into();
1078                    assert_eq!(actual, *filter);
1079                }
1080            }
1081        }
1082    }
1083
1084    #[test]
1085    fn level_filter_is_usize_sized() {
1086        assert_eq!(
1087            mem::size_of::<LevelFilter>(),
1088            mem::size_of::<usize>(),
1089            "`LevelFilter` is no longer `usize`-sized! global MAX_LEVEL may now be invalid!"
1090        )
1091    }
1092
1093    #[test]
1094    fn level_filter_reprs() {
1095        let mapping = [
1096            (LevelFilter::OFF, LevelInner::Error as usize + 1),
1097            (LevelFilter::ERROR, LevelInner::Error as usize),
1098            (LevelFilter::WARN, LevelInner::Warn as usize),
1099            (LevelFilter::INFO, LevelInner::Info as usize),
1100            (LevelFilter::DEBUG, LevelInner::Debug as usize),
1101            (LevelFilter::TRACE, LevelInner::Trace as usize),
1102        ];
1103        for &(filter, expected) in &mapping {
1104            let repr = unsafe {
1105                // safety: The entire purpose of this test is to assert that the
1106                // actual repr matches what we expect it to be --- we're testing
1107                // that *other* unsafe code is sound using the transmuted value.
1108                // We're not going to do anything with it that might be unsound.
1109                mem::transmute::<LevelFilter, usize>(filter)
1110            };
1111            assert_eq!(expected, repr, "repr changed for {:?}", filter)
1112        }
1113    }
1114}