379cb741ed
This commit systematically rebrands various references from Parity Technologies' Polkadot/Substrate ecosystem to PezkuwiChain within the kurdistan-sdk. Key changes include: - Updated external repository URLs (zombienet-sdk, parity-db, parity-scale-codec, wasm-instrument) to point to pezkuwichain forks. - Modified internal documentation and code comments to reflect PezkuwiChain naming and structure. - Replaced direct references to with or specific paths within the for XCM, Pezkuwi, and other modules. - Cleaned up deprecated issue and PR references in various and files, particularly in and modules. - Adjusted image and logo URLs in documentation to point to PezkuwiChain assets. - Removed or rephrased comments related to external Polkadot/Substrate PRs and issues. This is a significant step towards fully customizing the SDK for the PezkuwiChain ecosystem.
156 lines
5.6 KiB
Rust
156 lines
5.6 KiB
Rust
//! # FRAME Logging
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//!
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//! This reference docs briefly explores how to do logging and printing runtimes, mainly
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//! FRAME-based.
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//!
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//! > Please make sure to read [the section below](#using-logging-in-production) on using logging in
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//! > production.
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//!
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//! ## Using `println!`
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//!
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//! To recap, as with standard Rust, you can use `println!` _in your tests_, but it will only print
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//! out if executed with `--nocapture`, or if the test panics.
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//!
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//! ```
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//! fn it_print() {
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//! println!("Hello, world!");
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! within the pallet, if you want to use the standard `println!`, it needs to be wrapped in
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//! [`pezsp_std::if_std`]. Of course, this means that this print code is only available to you in the
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//! `std` compiler flag, and never present in a wasm build.
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//!
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//! ```
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//! // somewhere in your pallet. This is not a real pallet code.
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//! mod pallet {
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//! struct Pallet;
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//! impl Pallet {
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//! fn print() {
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//! pezsp_std::if_std! {
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//! println!("Hello, world!");
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//! }
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//! }
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//! }
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! ## Using `log`
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//!
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//! First, ensure you are familiar with the [`log`] crate. In short, each log statement has:
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//!
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//! 1. `log-level`, signifying how important it is.
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//! 2. `log-target`, signifying to which component it belongs.
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//!
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//! Add log statements to your pallet as such:
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//!
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//! You can add the log crate to the `Cargo.toml` of the pallet.
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//!
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//! ```text
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//! #[dependencies]
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//! log = { version = "x.y.z", default-features = false }
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//!
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//! #[features]
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//! std = [
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//! // snip -- other pallets
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//! "log/std"
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//! ]
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//! ```
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//!
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//! More conveniently, the `frame` umbrella crate re-exports the log crate as [`frame::log`].
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//!
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//! Then, the pallet can use this crate to emit log statements. In this statement, we use the info
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//! level, and the target is `pezpallet-example`.
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//!
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//! ```
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//! mod pallet {
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//! struct Pallet;
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//!
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//! impl Pallet {
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//! fn logs() {
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//! frame::log::info!(target: "pezpallet-example", "Hello, world!");
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//! }
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//! }
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! This will in itself just emit the log messages, **but unless if captured by a logger, they will
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//! not go anywhere**. [`pezsp_api`] provides a handy function to enable the runtime logging:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! // in your test
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//! fn it_also_prints() {
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//! pezsp_api::init_runtime_logger();
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//! // call into your pallet, and now it will print `log` statements.
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! Alternatively, you can use [`pezsp_tracing::try_init_simple`].
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//!
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//! `info`, `error` and `warn` logs are printed by default, but if you want lower level logs to also
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//! be printed, you must to add the following compiler flag:
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//!
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//! ```text
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//! RUST_LOG=pezpallet-example=trace cargo test
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//! ```
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//!
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//! ## Enabling Logs in Production
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//!
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//! All logs from the runtime are emitted by default, but there is a feature flag in [`pezsp_api`],
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//! called `disable-logging`, that can be used to disable all logs in the runtime. This is useful
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//! for production chains to reduce the size and overhead of the wasm runtime.
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#![doc = docify::embed!("../../bizinikiwi/primitives/api/src/lib.rs", init_runtime_logger)]
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//!
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//! Similar to the above, the proper `RUST_LOG` must also be passed to your compiler flag when
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//! compiling the runtime.
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//!
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//! ## Log Target Prefixing
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//!
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//! Many [`crate::pezkuwi_sdk::frame_runtime`] pallets emit logs with log target `runtime::<name of
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//! pallet>`, for example `runtime::system`. This then allows one to run a node with a wasm blob
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//! compiled with `LOG_TARGET=runtime=debug`, which enables the log target of all pallets who's log
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//! target starts with `runtime`.
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//!
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//! ## Low Level Primitives
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//!
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//! Under the hood, logging is another instance of host functions under the hood (as defined in
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//! [`crate::reference_docs::wasm_meta_protocol`]). The runtime uses a set of host functions under
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//! [`pezsp_io::logging`] and [`pezsp_io::misc`] to emit all logs and prints. You typically do not need to
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//! use these APIs directly.
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//!
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//! ## Using Logging in Production
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//!
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//! Note that within FRAME, reading storage values __only for the purpose of logging__ is dangerous,
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//! and can lead to consensus issues. This is because with the introduction of
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//! [`crate::guides::enable_pov_reclaim`], the node side code will track the storage changes, and
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//! tries to update the onchain record of the `proof_size` weight used (stored in
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//! [`pezframe_system::BlockWeight`]) after the block is executed.
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//!
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//! If one node has a different log level enabled than the rest of the network, and the extra logs
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//! impose additional storage reads, then the amount of `proof_size` weight reclaimed into
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//! [`pezframe_system::BlockWeight`] will be different, causing a state root mismatch, which is
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//! typically a fatal error emitted from [`pezframe_executive`].
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//!
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//! This also can also happen in a teyrchain context, and cause discrepancies between the relay
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//! chain and the teyrchain, when execution the Teyrchain Validation Function (PVF) on the relay
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//! chain.
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//!
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//! **In summary, you should only used storage values in logging (especially for levels lower than
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//! `info` which is typically enabled by all parties) that are already read from storage, and will
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//! be part of the storage proof of execution in any case**.
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//!
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//! A typical faulty code would look like this:
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//!
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//! ```ignore
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//! /// This function will have a different storage footprint depending on the log level
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//! fn faulty_logging() {
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//! log::debug!(
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//! "what I am about to print is only read when `RUST_LOG=debug` {:?}",
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//! StorageValue::<T>::get()
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//! );
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! Please read [this issue](https://github.com/pezkuwichain/pezkuwi-sdk/issues/155) for one
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//! instance of the consensus issues caused by this mistake.
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