Rotoscope
Rotoscope is a high-performance logger of Ruby method invocations.
Status
Rotoscope is subject to breaking changes in minor versions until 1.0
is available.
Table of Contents
Example
require 'rotoscope'
class Dog
def bark
Noisemaker.speak('woof!')
end
end
class Noisemaker
def self.speak(str)
puts(str)
end
end
log_file = File.expand_path('dog_trace.log')
puts "Writing to #{log_file}..."
Rotoscope::CallLogger.trace(log_file) do
dog1 = Dog.new
dog1.bark
end
The resulting method calls are saved in the specified dest
in the order they were received.
Sample output:
entity,method_name,method_level,filepath,lineno,caller_entity,caller_method_name,caller_method_level
Dog,new,class,example/dog.rb,19,<ROOT>,<UNKNOWN>,<UNKNOWN>
Dog,initialize,instance,example/dog.rb,19,Dog,new,class
Dog,bark,instance,example/dog.rb,20,<ROOT>,<UNKNOWN>,<UNKNOWN>
Noisemaker,speak,class,example/dog.rb,5,Dog,bark,instance
Noisemaker,puts,class,example/dog.rb,11,Noisemaker,speak,class
IO,puts,instance,example/dog.rb,11,Noisemaker,puts,class
IO,write,instance,example/dog.rb,11,IO,puts,instance
IO,write,instance,example/dog.rb,11,IO,puts,instance
API
Default Logging Interface
Rotoscope ships with a default logger, Rotoscope::CallLogger
. This provides a simple-to-use interface to the tracing engine that maintains performance as much as possible.
.trace
.new
#trace
#start_trace
#stop_trace
#mark
#close
#state
#closed?
Rotoscope::CallLogger.trace(dest, excludelist: [])
Writes all calls of methods to dest
, except for those whose filepath contains any entry in excludelist
. dest
is either a filename or an IO
. Methods invoked at the top of the trace will have a caller entity of <ROOT>
and a caller method name of <UNKNOWN>
.
Rotoscope::CallLogger.trace(dest) { |call| ... }
# or...
Rotoscope::CallLogger.trace(dest, excludelist: ["/.gem/"]) { |call| ... }
Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest, excludelist: [])
Same interface as Rotoscope::CallLogger::trace
, but returns a Rotoscope::CallLogger
instance, allowing fine-grain control via Rotoscope::CallLogger#start_trace
and Rotoscope::CallLogger#stop_trace
.
rs = Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest)
# or...
rs = Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest, excludelist: ["/.gem/"])
Rotoscope::CallLogger#trace(&block)
Similar to Rotoscope::CallLogger::trace
, but does not need to create a file handle on invocation.
rs = Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest)
rs.trace do |rotoscope|
# code to trace...
end
Rotoscope::CallLogger#start_trace
Begins writing method calls to the dest
specified in the initializer.
rs = Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest)
rs.start_trace
# code to trace...
rs.stop_trace
Rotoscope::CallLogger#stop_trace
Stops writing method invocations to the dest
. Subsequent calls to Rotoscope::CallLogger#start_trace
may be invoked to resume tracing.
rs = Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest)
rs.start_trace
# code to trace...
rs.stop_trace
Rotoscope::CallLogger#mark(str = "")
Inserts a marker '--- ' to divide output. Useful for segmenting multiple blocks of code that are being profiled. If str
is provided, the line will be prefixed by '--- ', followed by the string passed.
rs = Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest)
rs.start_trace
# code to trace...
rs.mark('Something goes wrong here') # produces `--- Something goes wrong here` in the output
# more code ...
rs.stop_trace
Rotoscope::CallLogger#close
Flushes the buffer and closes the file handle. Once this is invoked, no more writes can be performed on the Rotoscope::CallLogger
object. Sets state
to :closed
.
rs = Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest)
rs.trace { |rotoscope| ... }
rs.close
Rotoscope::CallLogger#state
Returns the current state of the Rotoscope::CallLogger object. Valid values are :open
, :tracing
and :closed
.
rs = Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest)
rs.state # :open
rs.trace do
rs.state # :tracing
end
rs.close
rs.state # :closed
Rotoscope::CallLogger#closed?
Shorthand to check if the state
is set to :closed
.
rs = Rotoscope::CallLogger.new(dest)
rs.closed? # false
rs.close
rs.closed? # true
Low-level API
For those who prefer to define their own logging logic, Rotoscope also provides a low-level API. This is the same one used by Rotoscope::CallLogger
internally. Users may specify a block that is invoked on each detected method call.
.new
#trace
#start_trace
#stop_trace
#tracing?
#receiver
#receiver_class
#receiver_class_name
#method_name
#singleton_method?
#caller_object
#caller_class
#caller_class_name
#caller_method_name
#caller_singleton_method?
#caller_path
#caller_lineno
Rotoscope.new(&blk)
Creates a new instance of the Rotoscope
class. The block argument is invoked on every call detected by Rotoscope. The block is passed the same instance returned by Rotoscope#new
allowing the low-level methods to be called.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
# We likely don't want to record calls to Rotoscope
return if self == call.receiver
...
end
Rotoscope#trace(&blk)
The equivalent of calling Rotoscope#start_trace
and then Rotoscope#stop_trace
. The call to #stop_trace
is within an ensure
block so it is always called when the block terminates.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
...
end
rs.trace do
# call some code
end
Rotoscope#start_trace
Begins detecting method calls invoked after this point.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
...
end
rs.start_trace
# Calls after this points invoke the
# block passed to `Rotoscope.new`
Rotoscope#stop_trace
Disables method call detection invoked after this point.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
...
end
rs.start_trace
...
rs.stop_trace
# Calls after this points will no longer
# invoke the block passed to `Rotoscope.new`
Rotoscope#tracing?
Identifies whether the Rotoscope object is actively tracing method calls.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
...
end
rs.tracing? # => false
rs.start_trace
rs.tracing? # => true
Rotoscope#receiver
Returns the object that the method is being called against.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.receiver # => #<Foo:0x00007fa3d2197c10>
end
Rotoscope#receiver_class
Returns the class of the object that the method is being called against.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.receiver_class # => Foo
end
Rotoscope#receiver_class_name
Returns the stringified class of the object that the method is being called against.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.receiver_class_name # => "Foo"
end
Rotoscope#method_name
Returns the name of the method being invoked.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.method_name # => "bar"
end
Rotoscope#singleton_method?
Returns true
if the method called is defined at the class level. If the call is to an instance method, this returns false
.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.singleton_method? # => false
end
Rotoscope#caller_object
Returns the object whose context we invoked the call from.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.caller_object # => #<SomeClass:0x00008aa6d2cd91b61>
end
Rotoscope#caller_class
Returns the class of the object whose context we invoked the call from.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.caller_class # => SomeClass
end
Rotoscope#caller_class_name
Returns the tringified class of the object whose context we invoked the call from.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.caller_class_name # => "SomeClass"
end
Rotoscope#caller_method_name
Returns the stringified class of the object whose context we invoked the call from.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.caller_method_name # => "call_foobar"
end
Rotoscope#caller_singleton_method?
Returns true
if the method invoking the call is defined at the class level. If the call is to an instance method, this returns false
.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.caller_singleton_method? # => true
end
Rotoscope#caller_path
Returns the path to the file where the call was invoked.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.caller_path # => "/rotoscope_test.rb"
end
Rotoscope#caller_lineno
Returns the line number corresponding to the #caller_path
where the call was invoked. If unknown, returns -1
.
rs = Rotoscope.new do |call|
call.caller_lineno # => 113
end