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A simple logging facility for R

This package takes a different approach compared to other R packages like the log4r, futile.logger and logging packages. Whereas these are inspired by Java's log4j or Python's logging module, rlogging masks R's message(), warning() and stop() functions to provide the option to write uniform log messages to the console and/or a text file.

Benefits

This simple approach provides a number of benefits:

  • it's simple
  • no changes to existing code required
  • no dependencies on other R packages except R's base package

Functionality

In essence, logging is the act of displaying diagnostic and informative messages during the execution of a software program. Log messages can be used to debug software, to inform the user of the progress of long calculations, to document scripts, or to support the auditing of software and the results of complicated calculations.

R has a number of functions which can be used for logging purposes. Most people will be familiar with the cat() command, which concatenates its arguments and prints the result to the console or to a text file. In practice, you will want a little more control over the level of detail of logging messages. Also, you will need to put a cat() statement before each warning() and stop() command to ensure that these events will show up in the logs. Because these two commands and the message() command write to stderr, the messages may get lost when running R scripts in batch mode.

To provide a slightly more advanced logging facility compared to using only the cat() command, I have created the rlogging package. The idea is to use three existing commands in R's base package, namely message(), warning(), and stop() to provide three logging levels: 'INFO', 'WARN', and 'STOP' respectively. The package provides a wrapper around these commands (i.e. it 'masks' them) to output time-stamped log messages to the console and a text file. For example, the message() command prints a log message if the logging level is set to 'INFO':

> message("Hello world!")
[2013-09-20 07:56:07] [INFO] Hello world!
>

Each message starts with the timestamp and the logging level so it's easy to find (e.g. using grep) different types of log messages in the log file.

Warnings and errors

So you can use the message() command to output informative or debugging messages. The warning() command also (immediately) writes a time-stamped message to the console and log file, but it also retains its original behaviour. This means that, by default, warning messages are collected and shown only after the program is finished. These can be recalled with the warnings() function and suppressed by setting options(warn=-1). Note that the latter does not suppress the log messages. See the next section on logging levels which allow you to control this behaviour. Here's a session which demonstrates the use of warning():

> GetLogLevel()
[1] "INFO"
> warning("Be careful!")
[2013-09-20 08:56:32] [WARN] Be careful!
Warning message:
In warning("Be careful!") : Be careful!
> warnings()
Warning message:
In warning("Be careful!") : Be careful!
> options(warn=-1)
> warning("Be careful!")
[2013-09-20 08:56:56] [WARN] Be careful!
> 

As you can see, the first warning() prints the same message twice: the first one is the time-stamped log message (which is also written to the log file) and the second one is the message written to stderr by the warning() command in R's base package. The second warning() only prints the time-stamped log message because the printing of warnings has been suppressed.

Like the warning() function, the stop() function also retains its original behaviour, i.e. it prints the error message and stops the execution of the program. The difference is that a log message is also created so there is no need to add an extra cat() statement right before the call to stop(). This is especially useful when running R scripts in batch mode and messages to stderr may be lost. Here again, the same message is printed to the console twice, but this can not be suppressed. Note that the behaviour of the stopifnot() command is not changed by the package, therefore this command does not write a log message.

Logging levels

Each of the three functions is linked to one of three logging levels: 'INFO', 'WARN', and 'STOP'. The following table summarizes when messages are printed:

Level   message()   warning()   stop()
INFO    yes         yes         yes
WARN    no          yes         yes
STOP    no          no          yes

Error messages are always printed, but information messages and warnings can be suppressed.

Log file

By default, log messages are appended to a file rlogging.log in the current working directory. You can change the name and location of this file with the SetLogFile(file, folder) command provided by the package:

SetLogFile("mylogfile.txt") # use 'mylogfile.txt' in the current working directory
SetLogFile(folder="~") # save 'mylogfile.txt' in my home directory
SetLogFile(file="mylogfile.txt", folder="~") # same as both commands above

If you do not want to write to a file, then you set the file to NULL as in the following example:

SetLogFile(NULL)

Installation

  1. Use the install_github() command from the devtools package.

  2. Download and install manually:

    git clone https://github.com/mjkallen/rlogging.git R CMD INSTALL rlogging

License

MIT license. See the LICENSE file for details.

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An R package for simple logging

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