Yii provides a flexible and extensible logging feature. Messages logged can be classified according to log levels and message categories. Using level and category filters, selected messages can be further routed to different destinations, such as files, emails, browser windows, etc.
Messages can be logged by calling either Yii::log or Yii::trace. The difference between these two methods is that the latter logs a message only when the application is in debug mode.
Yii::log($message, $level, $category);
Yii::trace($message, $category);
When logging a message, we need to specify its category and level.
Category is a string in the format of xxx.yyy.zzz
which resembles to the
path alias. For example, if a message is
logged in CController, we may use the category system.web.CController
.
Message level should be one of the following values:
trace
: this is the level used by Yii::trace. It is for tracing
the execution flow of the application during development.
info
: this is for logging general information.
profile
: this is for performance profile which is to be described
shortly.
warning
: this is for warning messages.
error
: this is for fatal error messages.
Messages logged using Yii::log or Yii::trace are kept in memory. We usually need to display them in browser windows, or save them in some persistent storage such as files, emails. This is called message routing, i.e., sending messages to different destinations.
In Yii, message routing is managed by a CLogRouter application component. It manages a set of the so-called log routes. Each log route represents a single log destination. Messages sent along a log route can be filtered according to their levels and categories.
To use message routing, we need to install and preload a CLogRouter application component. We also need to configure its routes property with the log routes that we want. The following shows an example of the needed application configuration:
array(
......
'preload'=>array('log'),
'components'=>array(
......
'log'=>array(
'class'=>'CLogRouter',
'routes'=>array(
array(
'class'=>'CFileLogRoute',
'levels'=>'trace, info',
'categories'=>'system.*',
),
array(
'class'=>'CEmailLogRoute',
'levels'=>'error, warning',
'emails'=>'admin@example.com',
),
),
),
),
)
In the above example, we have two log routes. The first route is
CFileLogRoute which saves messages in a file under the application
runtime directory. Only messages whose level is trace
or info
and whose
category starts with system.
are saved. The second route is
CEmailLogRoute which sends messages to the specified email addresses.
Only messages whose level is error
or warning
are sent.
In a more advanced example (using an exclude feature available in Yii 1.1.13+), we can prevent certain categories from appearing in our logs:
'routes'=>array(
array(
'class'=>'CEmailLogRoute',
'levels'=>'error, warning',
'except'=>'system.CModule.*', // Will email everything except any CModule logs
'emails'=>'admin@example.com',
),
array(
'class'=>'CWebLogRoute',
'categories'=>'system.db.*',
'except'=>'system.db.ar.*', // shows all db level logs but nothing in the ar category
),
The following log routes are available in Yii:
Info: Message routing occurs at the end of the current request cycle when the onEndRequest event is raised. To explicitly terminate the processing of the current request, call CApplication::end() instead of
die()
orexit()
, because CApplication::end() will raise the onEndRequest event so that the messages can be properly logged.
As we mentioned, messages can be filtered according to their levels and categories before they are sent long a log route. This is done by setting the levels and categories properties of the corresponding log route. Multiple levels or categories should be concatenated by commas.
Because message categories are in the format of xxx.yyy.zzz
, we may
treat them as a category hierarchy. In particular, we say xxx
is the
parent of xxx.yyy
which is the parent of xxx.yyy.zzz
. We can then use
xxx.*
to represent category xxx
and all its child and grandchild
categories.
We can log additional context information, such as PHP predefined variables (e.g. $_GET
, $_SERVER
), session ID, user name, etc.
This is accomplished by specifying the CLogRoute::filter property of a log route to be
a suitable log filter.
The framework comes with the convenient CLogFilter that may be used as the needed log
filter in most cases. By default, CLogFilter will log a message with variables like
$_GET
, $_SERVER
which often contains valuable system context information.
CLogFilter can also be configured to prefix each logged message with session ID, username, etc.,
which may greatly simplifying the global search when we are checking the numerous logged messages.
The following configuration shows how to enable logging context information. Note that each log route may have its own log filter. And by default, a log route does not have a log filter.
array(
......
'preload'=>array('log'),
'components'=>array(
......
'log'=>array(
'class'=>'CLogRouter',
'routes'=>array(
array(
'class'=>'CFileLogRoute',
'levels'=>'error',
'filter'=>'CLogFilter',
),
...other log routes...
),
),
),
)
Yii supports logging call stack information in the messages that are
logged by calling Yii::trace
. This feature is disabled by default because it lowers performance.
To use this feature, simply define a constant named YII_TRACE_LEVEL
at the beginning of the entry
script (before including yii.php
) to be an integer greater than 0. Yii will then append to
every trace message with the file name and line number of the call stacks belonging to application
code. The number YII_TRACE_LEVEL
determines how many layers of each call stack should be recorded.
This information is particularly useful during development stage as it can help us identify the
places that trigger the trace messages.
Performance profiling is a special type of message logging. Performance profiling can be used to measure the time needed for the specified code blocks and find out what the performance bottleneck is.
To use performance profiling, we need to identify which code blocks need to be profiled. We mark the beginning and the end of each code block by inserting the following methods:
Yii::beginProfile('blockID');
...code block being profiled...
Yii::endProfile('blockID');
where blockID
is an ID that uniquely identifies the code block.
Note, code blocks need to be nested properly. That is, a code block cannot intersect with another. It must be either at a parallel level or be completely enclosed by the other code block.
To show profiling result, we need to install a CLogRouter application component with a CProfileLogRoute log route. This is the same as we do with normal message routing. The CProfileLogRoute route will display the performance results at the end of the current page.
array(
......
'preload'=>array('log'),
'components'=>array(
......
'log'=>array(
'class'=>'CLogRouter',
'routes'=>array(
array(
'class'=>'CProfileLogRoute',
'report'=>'summary',
// lists execution time of every marked code block
// report can also be set to callstack
),
...other log routes...
),
),
),
)
Profiling is especially useful when working with database since SQL executions
are often the main performance bottleneck of an application. While we can manually
insert beginProfile
and endProfile
statements at appropriate places to measure
the time spent in each SQL execution, Yii provides
a more systematic approach to solve this problem.
By setting CDbConnection::enableProfiling to be true in the application configuration, every SQL statement being executed will be profiled. The results can be readily displayed using the aforementioned CProfileLogRoute, which can show us how much time is spent in executing what SQL statement. We can also call CDbConnection::getStats() to retrieve the total number SQL statements executed and their total execution time.
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