A syntax extension for tracing the execution of functions. Adding #[trace]
to the top of any function will insert println!
statements at the beginning and end of that function, notifying you of when that function was entered and exited and printing the argument and return values. This is useful for quickly debugging whether functions that are supposed to be called are actually called without manually inserting print statements.
See the limitations section below for what this extension currently can't do.
Note that this extension requires all arguments to the function and the return value to have types that implement Debug
.
Add trace = "*"
to your Cargo.toml
.
Here is an example you can find in the examples folder. If you've cloned the project, you can run this with cargo run --example example
.
```
static mut depth: u32 = 0;
fn main() { foo(1, 2); }
fn foo(a: i32, b: i32) { println!("I'm in foo!"); bar((a, b)); }
fn bar((a, b): (i32, i32)) -> i32 { println!("I'm in bar!"); if a == 1 { 2 } else { b } } ```
Output:
[+] Entering foo(a: 1, b: 2)
I'm in foo!
[ENTER] Entering bar(a: 1, b: 2)
I'm in bar!
[EXIT] Exiting bar = 2
[-] Exiting foo = ()
Note that you can customize the prefix of the println!
statement with prefix_enter
and prefix_exit
. The depth
variable must be a global static mut
variable, it's used for indenting the output.
You can use #[trace]
on mod
s as well. To apply #[trace]
to all functions in the current mod
, put #![trace]
(note the !
) at the top of the file. When using #[trace]
on mod
s, the depth
variable doesn't need to be defined (it's defined for you automatically). Note that the depth
variable isn't shared between mod
s, so indentation won't be perfect when tracing functions in multiple mod
s.
You can also use #[trace]
on impl
s. See the examples
folder for more details.
#[trace]
is not supported on impl
methods. This limitation will be lifted very soon.impl
or mod
instead of the removing/adding the attribute to individual functions. This should be added soon.Debug
. This should be added soon.