cri-o/vendor/k8s.io/kubernetes/cluster/lib/logging.sh

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#!/bin/bash
# Copyright 2014 The Kubernetes Authors.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
# Controls verbosity of the script output and logging.
KUBE_VERBOSE="${KUBE_VERBOSE:-5}"
# Handler for when we exit automatically on an error.
# Borrowed from https://gist.github.com/ahendrix/7030300
kube::log::errexit() {
local err="${PIPESTATUS[@]}"
# If the shell we are in doesn't have errexit set (common in subshells) then
# don't dump stacks.
set +o | grep -qe "-o errexit" || return
set +o xtrace
local code="${1:-1}"
kube::log::error_exit "'${BASH_COMMAND}' exited with status $err" "${1:-1}" 1
}
kube::log::install_errexit() {
# trap ERR to provide an error handler whenever a command exits nonzero this
# is a more verbose version of set -o errexit
trap 'kube::log::errexit' ERR
# setting errtrace allows our ERR trap handler to be propagated to functions,
# expansions and subshells
set -o errtrace
}
# Print out the stack trace
#
# Args:
# $1 The number of stack frames to skip when printing.
kube::log::stack() {
local stack_skip=${1:-0}
stack_skip=$((stack_skip + 1))
if [[ ${#FUNCNAME[@]} -gt $stack_skip ]]; then
echo "Call stack:" >&2
local i
for ((i=1 ; i <= ${#FUNCNAME[@]} - $stack_skip ; i++))
do
local frame_no=$((i - 1 + stack_skip))
local source_file=${BASH_SOURCE[$frame_no]}
local source_lineno=${BASH_LINENO[$((frame_no - 1))]}
local funcname=${FUNCNAME[$frame_no]}
echo " $i: ${source_file}:${source_lineno} ${funcname}(...)" >&2
done
fi
}
# Log an error and exit.
# Args:
# $1 Message to log with the error
# $2 The error code to return
# $3 The number of stack frames to skip when printing.
kube::log::error_exit() {
local message="${1:-}"
local code="${2:-1}"
local stack_skip="${3:-0}"
stack_skip=$((stack_skip + 1))
if [[ ${KUBE_VERBOSE} -ge 4 ]]; then
local source_file=${BASH_SOURCE[$stack_skip]}
local source_line=${BASH_LINENO[$((stack_skip - 1))]}
echo "!!! Error in ${source_file}:${source_line}" >&2
[[ -z ${1-} ]] || {
echo " ${1}" >&2
}
kube::log::stack $stack_skip
echo "Exiting with status ${code}" >&2
fi
exit "${code}"
}
# Log an error but keep going. Don't dump the stack or exit.
kube::log::error() {
timestamp=$(date +"[%m%d %H:%M:%S]")
echo "!!! $timestamp ${1-}" >&2
shift
for message; do
echo " $message" >&2
done
}
# Print an usage message to stderr. The arguments are printed directly.
kube::log::usage() {
echo >&2
local message
for message; do
echo "$message" >&2
done
echo >&2
}
kube::log::usage_from_stdin() {
local messages=()
while read -r line; do
messages+=("$line")
done
kube::log::usage "${messages[@]}"
}
# Print out some info that isn't a top level status line
kube::log::info() {
local V="${V:-0}"
if [[ $KUBE_VERBOSE < $V ]]; then
return
fi
for message; do
echo "$message"
done
}
# Just like kube::log::info, but no \n, so you can make a progress bar
kube::log::progress() {
for message; do
echo -e -n "$message"
done
}
kube::log::info_from_stdin() {
local messages=()
while read -r line; do
messages+=("$line")
done
kube::log::info "${messages[@]}"
}
# Print a status line. Formatted to show up in a stream of output.
kube::log::status() {
local V="${V:-0}"
if [[ $KUBE_VERBOSE < $V ]]; then
return
fi
timestamp=$(date +"[%m%d %H:%M:%S]")
echo "+++ $timestamp $1"
shift
for message; do
echo " $message"
done
}