| 1 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?> | 
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| 2 | <!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//Samba-Team//DTD DocBook V4.2-Based Variant V1.0//EN" "http://www.samba.org/samba/DTD/samba-doc"> | 
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| 3 | <chapter id="debug"> | 
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| 4 | <chapterinfo> | 
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| 5 | <author> | 
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| 6 | <firstname>Chris</firstname><surname>Hertel</surname> | 
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| 7 | </author> | 
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| 8 | <pubdate>July 1998</pubdate> | 
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| 9 | </chapterinfo> | 
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| 10 |  | 
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| 11 | <title>The samba DEBUG system</title> | 
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| 12 |  | 
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| 13 | <sect1> | 
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| 14 | <title>New Output Syntax</title> | 
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| 15 |  | 
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| 16 | <para> | 
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| 17 | The syntax of a debugging log file is represented as: | 
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| 18 | </para> | 
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| 19 |  | 
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| 20 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 21 | >debugfile< :== { >debugmsg< } | 
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| 22 |  | 
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| 23 | >debugmsg<  :== >debughdr< '\n' >debugtext< | 
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| 24 |  | 
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| 25 | >debughdr<  :== '[' TIME ',' LEVEL ']' FILE ':' [FUNCTION] '(' LINE ')' | 
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| 26 |  | 
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| 27 | >debugtext< :== { >debugline< } | 
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| 28 |  | 
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| 29 | >debugline< :== TEXT '\n' | 
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| 30 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 31 |  | 
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| 32 | <para> | 
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| 33 | TEXT is a string of characters excluding the newline character. | 
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| 34 | </para> | 
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| 35 |  | 
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| 36 | <para> | 
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| 37 | LEVEL is the DEBUG level of the message (an integer in the range | 
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| 38 | 0..10). | 
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| 39 | </para> | 
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| 40 |  | 
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| 41 | <para> | 
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| 42 | TIME is a timestamp. | 
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| 43 | </para> | 
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| 44 |  | 
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| 45 | <para> | 
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| 46 | FILE is the name of the file from which the debug message was | 
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| 47 | generated. | 
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| 48 | </para> | 
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| 49 |  | 
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| 50 | <para> | 
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| 51 | FUNCTION is the function from which the debug message was generated. | 
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| 52 | </para> | 
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| 53 |  | 
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| 54 | <para> | 
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| 55 | LINE is the line number of the debug statement that generated the | 
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| 56 | message. | 
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| 57 | </para> | 
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| 58 |  | 
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| 59 | <para>Basically, what that all means is:</para> | 
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| 60 | <orderedlist> | 
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| 61 | <listitem><para> | 
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| 62 | A debugging log file is made up of debug messages. | 
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| 63 | </para></listitem> | 
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| 64 | <listitem><para> | 
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| 65 | Each debug message is made up of a header and text. The header is | 
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| 66 | separated from the text by a newline. | 
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| 67 | </para></listitem> | 
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| 68 | <listitem><para> | 
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| 69 | The header begins with the timestamp and debug level of the | 
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| 70 | message enclosed in brackets. The filename, function, and line | 
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| 71 | number at which the message was generated follow. The filename is | 
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| 72 | terminated by a colon, and the function name is terminated by the | 
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| 73 | parenthesis which contain the line number. Depending upon the | 
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| 74 | compiler, the function name may be missing (it is generated by the | 
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| 75 | __FUNCTION__ macro, which is not universally implemented, dangit). | 
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| 76 | </para></listitem> | 
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| 77 | <listitem><para> | 
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| 78 | The message text is made up of zero or more lines, each terminated | 
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| 79 | by a newline. | 
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| 80 | </para></listitem> | 
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| 81 | </orderedlist> | 
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| 82 |  | 
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| 83 | <para>Here's some example output:</para> | 
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| 84 |  | 
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| 85 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 86 | [1998/08/03 12:55:25, 1] nmbd.c:(659) | 
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| 87 | Netbios nameserver version 1.9.19-prealpha started. | 
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| 88 | Copyright Andrew Tridgell 1994-1997 | 
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| 89 | [1998/08/03 12:55:25, 3] loadparm.c:(763) | 
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| 90 | Initializing global parameters | 
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| 91 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 92 |  | 
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| 93 | <para> | 
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| 94 | Note that in the above example the function names are not listed on | 
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| 95 | the header line. That's because the example above was generated on an | 
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| 96 | SGI Indy, and the SGI compiler doesn't support the __FUNCTION__ macro. | 
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| 97 | </para> | 
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| 98 |  | 
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| 99 | </sect1> | 
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| 100 |  | 
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| 101 | <sect1> | 
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| 102 | <title>The DEBUG() Macro</title> | 
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| 103 |  | 
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| 104 | <para> | 
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| 105 | Use of the DEBUG() macro is unchanged. DEBUG() takes two parameters. | 
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| 106 | The first is the message level, the second is the body of a function | 
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| 107 | call to the Debug1() function. | 
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| 108 | </para> | 
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| 109 |  | 
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| 110 | <para>That's confusing.</para> | 
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| 111 |  | 
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| 112 | <para>Here's an example which may help a bit. If you would write</para> | 
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| 113 |  | 
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| 114 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 115 | printf( "This is a %s message.\n", "debug" ); | 
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| 116 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 117 |  | 
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| 118 | <para> | 
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| 119 | to send the output to stdout, then you would write | 
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| 120 | </para> | 
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| 121 |  | 
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| 122 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 123 | DEBUG( 0, ( "This is a %s message.\n", "debug" ) ); | 
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| 124 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 125 |  | 
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| 126 | <para> | 
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| 127 | to send the output to the debug file.  All of the normal printf() | 
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| 128 | formatting escapes work. | 
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| 129 | </para> | 
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| 130 |  | 
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| 131 | <para> | 
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| 132 | Note that in the above example the DEBUG message level is set to 0. | 
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| 133 | Messages at level 0 always print.  Basically, if the message level is | 
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| 134 | less than or equal to the global value DEBUGLEVEL, then the DEBUG | 
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| 135 | statement is processed. | 
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| 136 | </para> | 
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| 137 |  | 
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| 138 | <para> | 
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| 139 | The output of the above example would be something like: | 
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| 140 | </para> | 
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| 141 |  | 
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| 142 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 143 | [1998/07/30 16:00:51, 0] file.c:function(128) | 
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| 144 | This is a debug message. | 
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| 145 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 146 |  | 
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| 147 | <para> | 
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| 148 | Each call to DEBUG() creates a new header *unless* the output produced | 
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| 149 | by the previous call to DEBUG() did not end with a '\n'. Output to the | 
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| 150 | debug file is passed through a formatting buffer which is flushed | 
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| 151 | every time a newline is encountered. If the buffer is not empty when | 
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| 152 | DEBUG() is called, the new input is simply appended. | 
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| 153 | </para> | 
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| 154 |  | 
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| 155 | <para> | 
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| 156 | ...but that's really just a Kludge. It was put in place because | 
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| 157 | DEBUG() has been used to write partial lines. Here's a simple (dumb) | 
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| 158 | example of the kind of thing I'm talking about: | 
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| 159 | </para> | 
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| 160 |  | 
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| 161 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 162 | DEBUG( 0, ("The test returned " ) ); | 
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| 163 | if( test() ) | 
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| 164 | DEBUG(0, ("True") ); | 
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| 165 | else | 
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| 166 | DEBUG(0, ("False") ); | 
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| 167 | DEBUG(0, (".\n") ); | 
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| 168 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 169 |  | 
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| 170 | <para> | 
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| 171 | Without the format buffer, the output (assuming test() returned true) | 
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| 172 | would look like this: | 
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| 173 | </para> | 
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| 174 |  | 
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| 175 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 176 | [1998/07/30 16:00:51, 0] file.c:function(256) | 
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| 177 | The test returned | 
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| 178 | [1998/07/30 16:00:51, 0] file.c:function(258) | 
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| 179 | True | 
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| 180 | [1998/07/30 16:00:51, 0] file.c:function(261) | 
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| 181 | . | 
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| 182 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 183 |  | 
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| 184 | <para>Which isn't much use. The format buffer kludge fixes this problem. | 
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| 185 | </para> | 
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| 186 |  | 
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| 187 | </sect1> | 
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| 188 |  | 
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| 189 | <sect1> | 
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| 190 | <title>The DEBUGADD() Macro</title> | 
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| 191 |  | 
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| 192 | <para> | 
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| 193 | In addition to the kludgey solution to the broken line problem | 
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| 194 | described above, there is a clean solution. The DEBUGADD() macro never | 
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| 195 | generates a header. It will append new text to the current debug | 
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| 196 | message even if the format buffer is empty. The syntax of the | 
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| 197 | DEBUGADD() macro is the same as that of the DEBUG() macro. | 
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| 198 | </para> | 
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| 199 |  | 
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| 200 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 201 | DEBUG( 0, ("This is the first line.\n" ) ); | 
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| 202 | DEBUGADD( 0, ("This is the second line.\nThis is the third line.\n" ) ); | 
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| 203 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 204 |  | 
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| 205 | <para>Produces</para> | 
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| 206 |  | 
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| 207 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 208 | [1998/07/30 16:00:51, 0] file.c:function(512) | 
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| 209 | This is the first line. | 
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| 210 | This is the second line. | 
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| 211 | This is the third line. | 
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| 212 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 213 |  | 
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| 214 | </sect1> | 
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| 215 |  | 
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| 216 | <sect1> | 
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| 217 | <title>The DEBUGLVL() Macro</title> | 
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| 218 |  | 
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| 219 | <para> | 
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| 220 | One of the problems with the DEBUG() macro was that DEBUG() lines | 
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| 221 | tended to get a bit long. Consider this example from | 
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| 222 | nmbd_sendannounce.c: | 
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| 223 | </para> | 
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| 224 |  | 
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| 225 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 226 | DEBUG(3,("send_local_master_announcement: type %x for name %s on subnet %s for workgroup %s\n", | 
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| 227 | type, global_myname, subrec->subnet_name, work->work_group)); | 
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| 228 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 229 |  | 
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| 230 | <para> | 
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| 231 | One solution to this is to break it down using DEBUG() and DEBUGADD(), | 
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| 232 | as follows: | 
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| 233 | </para> | 
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| 234 |  | 
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| 235 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 236 | DEBUG( 3, ( "send_local_master_announcement: " ) ); | 
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| 237 | DEBUGADD( 3, ( "type %x for name %s ", type, global_myname ) ); | 
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| 238 | DEBUGADD( 3, ( "on subnet %s ", subrec->subnet_name ) ); | 
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| 239 | DEBUGADD( 3, ( "for workgroup %s\n", work->work_group ) ); | 
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| 240 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 241 |  | 
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| 242 | <para> | 
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| 243 | A similar, but arguably nicer approach is to use the DEBUGLVL() macro. | 
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| 244 | This macro returns True if the message level is less than or equal to | 
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| 245 | the global DEBUGLEVEL value, so: | 
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| 246 | </para> | 
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| 247 |  | 
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| 248 | <para><programlisting> | 
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| 249 | if( DEBUGLVL( 3 ) ) | 
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| 250 | { | 
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| 251 | dbgtext( "send_local_master_announcement: " ); | 
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| 252 | dbgtext( "type %x for name %s ", type, global_myname ); | 
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| 253 | dbgtext( "on subnet %s ", subrec->subnet_name ); | 
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| 254 | dbgtext( "for workgroup %s\n", work->work_group ); | 
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| 255 | } | 
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| 256 | </programlisting></para> | 
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| 257 |  | 
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| 258 | <para>(The dbgtext() function is explained below.)</para> | 
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| 259 |  | 
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| 260 | <para>There are a few advantages to this scheme:</para> | 
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| 261 | <orderedlist> | 
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| 262 | <listitem><para> | 
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| 263 | The test is performed only once. | 
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| 264 | </para></listitem> | 
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| 265 | <listitem><para> | 
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| 266 | You can allocate variables off of the stack that will only be used | 
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| 267 | within the DEBUGLVL() block. | 
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| 268 | </para></listitem> | 
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| 269 | <listitem><para> | 
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| 270 | Processing that is only relevant to debug output can be contained | 
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| 271 | within the DEBUGLVL() block. | 
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| 272 | </para></listitem> | 
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| 273 | </orderedlist> | 
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| 274 |  | 
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| 275 | </sect1> | 
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| 276 |  | 
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| 277 | <sect1> | 
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| 278 | <title>New Functions</title> | 
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| 279 |  | 
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| 280 | <sect2> | 
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| 281 | <title>dbgtext()</title> | 
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| 282 | <para> | 
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| 283 | This function prints debug message text to the debug file (and | 
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| 284 | possibly to syslog) via the format buffer. The function uses a | 
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| 285 | variable argument list just like printf() or Debug1(). The | 
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| 286 | input is printed into a buffer using the vslprintf() function, | 
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| 287 | and then passed to format_debug_text(). | 
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| 288 |  | 
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| 289 | If you use DEBUGLVL() you will probably print the body of the | 
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| 290 | message using dbgtext(). | 
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| 291 | </para> | 
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| 292 | </sect2> | 
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| 293 |  | 
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| 294 | <sect2> | 
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| 295 | <title>dbghdr()</title> | 
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| 296 | <para> | 
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| 297 | This is the function that writes a debug message header. | 
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| 298 | Headers are not processed via the format buffer. Also note that | 
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| 299 | if the format buffer is not empty, a call to dbghdr() will not | 
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| 300 | produce any output. See the comments in dbghdr() for more info. | 
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| 301 | </para> | 
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| 302 |  | 
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| 303 | <para> | 
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| 304 | It is not likely that this function will be called directly. It | 
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| 305 | is used by DEBUG() and DEBUGADD(). | 
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| 306 | </para> | 
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| 307 | </sect2> | 
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| 308 |  | 
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| 309 | <sect2> | 
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| 310 | <title>format_debug_text()</title> | 
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| 311 | <para> | 
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| 312 | This is a static function in debug.c. It stores the output text | 
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| 313 | for the body of the message in a buffer until it encounters a | 
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| 314 | newline. When the newline character is found, the buffer is | 
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| 315 | written to the debug file via the Debug1() function, and the | 
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| 316 | buffer is reset. This allows us to add the indentation at the | 
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| 317 | beginning of each line of the message body, and also ensures | 
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| 318 | that the output is written a line at a time (which cleans up | 
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| 319 | syslog output). | 
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| 320 | </para> | 
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| 321 | </sect2> | 
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| 322 | </sect1> | 
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| 323 | </chapter> | 
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