* refactor(ProviderSetting): add a backtop to provider setting * refactor: decouple ModelList from ProviderSetting * refactor: move modellist to a single dir * refactor: allow more props for CollapsibleSearchBar * refactor: split ModelList into ModelList, ModelListGroup and ModelListItem * refactor: simplify health check types, improve file structure * refactor: split HealthStatusIndicator from list items * refactor: better indicator tooltip * refactor: improve model search, simplify some expressions * refactor: further simplify ModelList by extracting onHealthCheck * refactor: remove double scroller from EditModelsPopup * revert: remove backtop * fix: i18n order * refactor: sort buttons
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How to use the LoggerService
This is a developer document on how to use the logger.
CherryStudio uses a unified logging service to print and record logs. Unless there is a special reason, do not use console.xxx to print logs
The following are detailed instructions.
Usage in the main process
Importing
import { loggerService } from '@logger'
Setting module information (Required by convention)
After the import statements, set it up as follows:
const logger = loggerService.withContext('moduleName')
moduleNameis the name of the current file's module. It can be named after the filename, main class name, main function name, etc. The principle is to be clear and understandable.moduleNamewill be printed in the terminal and will also be present in the file log, making it easier to filter.
Setting CONTEXT information (Optional)
In withContext, you can also set other CONTEXT information:
const logger = loggerService.withContext('moduleName', CONTEXT)
CONTEXTis an object of the form{ key: value, ... }.CONTEXTinformation will not be printed in the terminal, but it will be recorded in the file log, making it easier to filter.
Logging
In your code, you can call logger at any time to record logs. The supported methods are: error, warn, info, verbose, debug, silly.
For the meaning of each level, please refer to the section below.
The following examples show how to use logger.info and logger.error. Other levels are used in the same way:
logger.info('message', CONTEXT)
logger.info('message %s %d', 'hello', 123, CONTEXT)
logger.error('message', new Error('error message'), CONTEXT)
messageis a required string. All other options are optional.CONTEXTas{ key: value, ... }is optional and will be recorded in the log file.- If an
Errortype is passed, the error stack will be automatically recorded.
Log Levels
- In the development environment, all log levels are printed to the terminal and recorded in the file log.
- In the production environment, the default log level is
info. Logs are only recorded to the file and are not printed to the terminal.
Changing the log level:
- You can change the log level with
logger.setLevel('newLevel'). logger.resetLevel()resets it to the default level.logger.getLevel()gets the current log level.
Note: Changing the log level has a global effect. Please do not change it arbitrarily in your code unless you are very clear about what you are doing.
Usage in the renderer process
Usage in the renderer process for importing, setting module information, and setting context information is exactly the same as in the main process.
The following section focuses on the differences.
initWindowSource
In the renderer process, there are different windows. Before starting to use the logger, we must set the window information:
loggerService.initWindowSource('windowName')
As a rule, we will set this in the window's entryPoint.tsx. This ensures that windowName is set before it's used.
- An error will be thrown if
windowNameis not set, and theloggerwill not work. windowNamecan only be set once; subsequent attempts to set it will have no effect.windowNamewill not be printed in thedevTool'sconsole, but it will be recorded in themainprocess terminal and the file log.initWindowSourcereturns the LoggerService instance, allowing for method chaining
Log Levels
- In the development environment, all log levels are printed to the
devTool'sconsoleby default. - In the production environment, the default log level is
info, and logs are printed to thedevTool'sconsole. - In both development and production environments,
warnanderrorlevel logs are, by default, transmitted to themainprocess and recorded in the file log.- In the development environment, the
mainprocess terminal will also print the logs transmitted from the renderer.
- In the development environment, the
Changing the Log Level
Same as in the main process, you can manage the log level using setLevel('level'), resetLevel(), and getLevel().
Similarly, changing the log level is a global adjustment.
Changing the Level Transmitted to main
Logs from the renderer are sent to main to be managed and recorded to a file centrally (according to main's file logging level). By default, only warn and error level logs are transmitted to main.
There are two ways to change the log level for transmission to main:
Global Change
The following methods can be used to set, reset, and get the log level for transmission to main, respectively.
logger.setLogToMainLevel('newLevel')
logger.resetLogToMainLevel()
logger.getLogToMainLevel()
Note: This method has a global effect. Please do not change it arbitrarily in your code unless you are very clear about what you are doing.
Per-log Change
By adding { logToMain: true } at the end of the log call, you can force a single log entry to be transmitted to main (bypassing the global log level restriction), for example:
logger.info('message', { logToMain: true })
About worker Threads
- Currently, logging is not supported for workers in the
mainprocess. - Logging is supported for workers started in the
rendererprocess, but currently these logs are not sent tomainfor recording.
How to Use Logging in renderer Workers
Since worker threads are independent, using LoggerService in them is equivalent to using it in a new renderer window. Therefore, you must first call initWindowSource.
If the worker is relatively simple (just one file), you can also use method chaining directly:
const logger = loggerService.initWindowSource('Worker').withContext('LetsWork')
Filtering Logs with Environment Variables
In a development environment, you can define environment variables to filter displayed logs by level and module. This helps developers focus on their specific logs and improves development efficiency.
Environment variables can be set in the terminal or defined in the .env file in the project's root directory. The available variables are as follows:
| Variable Name | Description |
|---|---|
| CSLOGGER_MAIN_LEVEL | Log level for the main process. Logs below this level will not be displayed. |
| CSLOGGER_MAIN_SHOW_MODULES | Filters log modules for the main process. Use a comma (,) to separate modules. The filter is case-sensitive. Only logs from modules in this list will be displayed. |
| CSLOGGER_RENDERER_LEVEL | Log level for the renderer process. Logs below this level will not be displayed. |
| CSLOGGER_RENDERER_SHOW_MODULES | Filters log modules for the renderer process. Use a comma (,) to separate modules. The filter is case-sensitive. Only logs from modules in this list will be displayed. |
Example:
CSLOGGER_MAIN_LEVEL=verbose
CSLOGGER_MAIN_SHOW_MODULES=MCPService,SelectionService
Note:
- Environment variables are only effective in the development environment.
- These variables only affect the logs displayed in the terminal or DevTools. They do not affect file logging or the
logToMainrecording logic.
Log Level Usage Guidelines
There are many log levels. The following are the guidelines that should be followed in CherryStudio for when to use each level: (Arranged from highest to lowest log level)
| Log Level | Core Definition & Use case | Example |
|---|---|---|
error |
Critical error causing the program to crash or core functionality to become unusable. This is the highest-priority log, usually requiring immediate reporting or user notification. |
- Main or renderer process crash. - Failure to read/write critical user data files (e.g., database, configuration files), preventing the application from running. - All unhandled exceptions. |
warn |
Potential issue or unexpected situation that does not affect the program's core functionality. The program can recover or use a fallback. |
- Configuration file settings.json is missing; started with default settings. - Auto-update check failed, but does not affect the use of the current version. - A non-essential plugin failed to load. |
info |
Records application lifecycle events and key user actions. This is the default level that should be recorded in a production release to trace the user's main operational path. |
- Application start, exit. - User successfully opens/saves a file. - Main window created/closed. - Starting an important task (e.g., "Start video export"). |
verbose |
More detailed flow information than info, used for tracing specific features. Enabled when diagnosing issues with a specific feature to help understand the internal execution flow. |
- Loading Toolbar module. - IPC message open-file-dialog sent from the renderer process. - Applying filter 'Sepia' to the image. |
debug |
Detailed diagnostic information used during development and debugging. Must not be enabled by default in production releases, as it may contain sensitive data and impact performance. |
- Parameters for function renderImage: { width: 800, ... }. - Specific data content received by IPC message save-file. - Details of Redux/Vuex state changes in the renderer process. |
silly |
The most detailed, low-level information, used only for extreme debugging. Rarely used in regular development; only for solving very difficult problems. |
- Real-time mouse coordinates (x: 150, y: 320). - Size of each data chunk when reading a file. - Time taken for each rendered frame. |