//! This example illustrates how to use logs in bevy. use bevy::log::once; use bevy::prelude::*; fn main() { App::new() .add_plugins(DefaultPlugins.set(bevy::log::LogPlugin { // Uncomment this to override the default log settings: // level: bevy::log::Level::TRACE, // filter: "wgpu=warn,bevy_ecs=info".to_string(), ..default() })) .add_systems(Startup, setup) .add_systems(Update, log_system) .add_systems(Update, log_once_system) .add_systems(Update, panic_on_p) .run(); } fn setup(mut commands: Commands) { commands.spawn(Camera2dBundle::default()); commands.spawn(TextBundle { text: Text::from_section( "Press P to panic", TextStyle { font_size: 60.0, ..default() }, ), ..default() }); } fn panic_on_p(keys: Res>) { if keys.just_pressed(KeyCode::KeyP) { panic!("P pressed, panicking"); } } fn log_system() { // here is how you write new logs at each "log level" (in "least important" to "most important" // order) trace!("very noisy"); debug!("helpful for debugging"); info!("helpful information that is worth printing by default"); warn!("something bad happened that isn't a failure, but thats worth calling out"); error!("something failed"); // by default, trace and debug logs are ignored because they are "noisy" // you can control what level is logged by setting up the LogPlugin // alternatively you can set the log level via the RUST_LOG=LEVEL environment variable // ex: RUST_LOG=trace, RUST_LOG=info,bevy_ecs=warn // the format used here is super flexible. check out this documentation for more info: // https://docs.rs/tracing-subscriber/*/tracing_subscriber/filter/struct.EnvFilter.html } fn log_once_system() { // The 'once' variants of each log level are useful when a system is called every frame, // but we still wish to inform the user only once. In other words, use these to prevent spam :) trace_once!("one time noisy message"); debug_once!("one time debug message"); info_once!("some info which is printed only once"); warn_once!("some warning we wish to call out only once"); error_once!("some error we wish to report only once"); for i in 0..10 { info_once!("logs once per call site, so this works just fine: {}", i); } // you can also use the 'once!' macro directly, in situations you want do do // something expensive only once within the context of a continuous system. once!({ info!("doing expensive things"); let mut a: u64 = 0; for i in 0..100000000 { a += i; } info!("result of some expensive one time calculation: {}", a); }); }