tracing/tracing-attributes
Jonas Platte 40ae82f539 macros: allow field path segments to be keywords (#2925)
Currently, a keyword like `type` fails compilation as (a path segment of) a field name, for no clear reason. Trying to use `r#type` instead leads to the `r#` being part of the field name, which is unhelpful¹.

Don't require the field path to match a `macro_rules!` `expr`, use repeated `tt` instead. I can't tell why this was ever required: The internal stringify macro was introduced in 55091c92ed (diff-315c02cd05738da173861537577d159833f70f79cfda8cd7cf1a0d7a28ace31b) with an `expr` matcher without any explanation, and no tests are failing from making it match upstream's `stringify!` input format.

Special thanks to whoever implemented the unstable `macro-backtrace` feature in rustc, otherwise this would have been nigh impossible to track down!

¹ this can likely be fixed too by some sort of "unraw" macro that turns `r#foo` into `foo`, but that's a separate change not made in this PR
2024-11-22 15:42:14 +01:00
..
2023-11-07 13:37:19 -08:00

Tracing — Structured, application-level diagnostics

tracing-attributes

Macro attributes for application-level tracing.

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Overview

tracing is a framework for instrumenting Rust programs to collect structured, event-based diagnostic information. This crate provides the #[instrument] attribute for automatically instrumenting functions using tracing.

Note that this macro is also re-exported by the main tracing crate.

Compiler support: requires rustc 1.63+

Usage

First, add this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
tracing-attributes = "0.1.26"

This crate provides the #[instrument] attribute for instrumenting a function with a tracing span. For example:

use tracing_attributes::instrument;

#[instrument]
pub fn my_function(my_arg: usize) {
    // ...
}

Supported Rust Versions

Tracing is built against the latest stable release. The minimum supported version is 1.63. The current Tracing version is not guaranteed to build on Rust versions earlier than the minimum supported version.

Tracing follows the same compiler support policies as the rest of the Tokio project. The current stable Rust compiler and the three most recent minor versions before it will always be supported. For example, if the current stable compiler version is 1.69, the minimum supported version will not be increased past 1.66, three minor versions prior. Increasing the minimum supported compiler version is not considered a semver breaking change as long as doing so complies with this policy.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT license.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in Tokio by you, shall be licensed as MIT, without any additional terms or conditions.