dioxus/tests/test_logging.rs
Jonathan Kelley e04a6d63a5 chore: move tests out of core and into the top level crate
This commit moves the tests out of core so rust analyzer
is happier with the workspace.
2022-03-02 22:48:22 -05:00

51 lines
2.2 KiB
Rust

pub fn set_up_logging(enabled: bool) {
use fern::colors::{Color, ColoredLevelConfig};
if !enabled {
return;
}
// configure colors for the whole line
let colors_line = ColoredLevelConfig::new()
.error(Color::Red)
.warn(Color::Yellow)
// we actually don't need to specify the color for debug and info, they are white by default
.info(Color::White)
.debug(Color::White)
// depending on the terminals color scheme, this is the same as the background color
.trace(Color::BrightBlack);
// configure colors for the name of the level.
// since almost all of them are the same as the color for the whole line, we
// just clone `colors_line` and overwrite our changes
let colors_level = colors_line.info(Color::Green);
// here we set up our fern Dispatch
// when running tests in batch, the logger is re-used, so ignore the logger error
let _ = fern::Dispatch::new()
.format(move |out, message, record| {
out.finish(format_args!(
"{color_line}[{level}{color_line}] {message}\x1B[0m",
color_line = format_args!(
"\x1B[{}m",
colors_line.get_color(&record.level()).to_fg_str()
),
level = colors_level.color(record.level()),
message = message,
));
})
// set the default log level. to filter out verbose log messages from dependencies, set
// this to Warn and overwrite the log level for your crate.
.level(log::LevelFilter::Debug)
// .level(log::LevelFilter::Warn)
// change log levels for individual modules. Note: This looks for the record's target
// field which defaults to the module path but can be overwritten with the `target`
// parameter:
// `info!(target="special_target", "This log message is about special_target");`
// .level_for("dioxus", log::LevelFilter::Debug)
// .level_for("dioxus", log::LevelFilter::Info)
// .level_for("pretty_colored", log::LevelFilter::Trace)
// output to stdout
.chain(std::io::stdout())
.apply();
}