- Introduction
- Features
- Performance
- Supported Platforms And Compilers
- Basic Usage
- CMake Integration
- Documentation
- License
homebrew | vcpkg | conan |
---|---|---|
brew install quill |
vcpkg install quill |
quill/[>=1.2.3] |
Quill is a cross-platform low latency logging library based on C++14/C++17.
There are two versions on the library:
v2
: C++17
v1.7
: C++14
Going forward any new features will only be added to the C++17 version of the library. The old library (v1.7.x) still remains there and there will be releases only for bug fixes.
The main goals of the library are:
- Simplicity A small example code snippet should be enough to get started and use most of features.
- Performance Ultra low latency. No formatting on the hot-path, asynchronous only mode. No hot-path allocations for
fundamental types, enums and strings (including
std::string
andstd::string_view
). Any other custom or user defined type gets copy constructed with the formatting done on a backend worker thread. - Convenience Ease application monitoring/debugging. Latency is equal to latencies of binary loggers, but the produced log is in human readable form.
- Log anything - Blazing fast. See Benchmarks.
- Format outside the hot-path in a backend logging thread. For
non-built-in
typesostream::operator<<()
is called on a copy of the object by the backend logging thread. Unsafe to copynon-trivial user defined
are detected in compile time. Those types can be tagged assafe-to-copy
to avoid formatting them on the hot path. See User Defined Types. - Custom formatters. Logs can be formatted based on a user specified pattern. See Formatters.
- Support for log stack traces. Store log messages in a ring buffer and display later on a higher severity log statement or on demand. See Backtrace Logging.
- Various logging targets. See Handlers.
- Console logging with colours support.
- File Logging
- Rotating log files
- Time rotating log files
- Custom Handlers
- Filters for filtering log messages. See Filters.
guaranteed non-blocking
ornon-guaranteed
logging. Innon-guaranteed
mode there is no heap allocation of a new queue but log messages can be dropped. See FAQ.- Support for wide character logging and wide character filenames (Windows and v1.7.x only).
- Log statements in timestamp order even when produced by different threads. This makes debugging easier in multi-threaded applications.
- Log levels can be completely stripped out at compile time reducing
if
branches. - Clean warning-free codebase even on high warning levels.
- Crash safe behaviour with a build-in signal handler.
- Type safe python style API with compile type checks and built-in support for logging STL types/containers by using the excellent {fmt} library.
🔥 ** Updated April 2022 ** 🔥
The following message is logged 100'000 times per thread LOG_INFO(logger, "Logging int: {}, int: {}, double: {}", i, j, d)
.
The results in the tables below are in nanoseconds (ns).
Library | 50th | 75th | 90th | 95th | 99th | 99.9th | Worst |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Quill v2, Unbounded Queue | 16 | 17 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 29 | 55 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Enabled, Unbounded Queue | 21 | 22 | 24 | 25 | 28 | 34 | 54 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Disabled, Unbounded Queue | 16 | 18 | 21 | 22 | 28 | 39 | 58 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Enabled, Bounded Queue | 20 | 21 | 23 | 24 | 27 | 32 | 46 |
fmtlog | 16 | 18 | 20 | 21 | 26 | 36 | 47 |
PlatformLab NanoLog | 52 | 66 | 76 | 81 | 92 | 107 | 192 |
MS BinLog | 39 | 41 | 43 | 44 | 67 | 110 | 216 |
Reckless | 62 | 72 | 79 | 87 | 107 | 126 | 168 |
Iyengar NanoLog | 147 | 169 | 187 | 209 | 283 | 376 | 33623 |
spdlog | 626 | 675 | 721 | 755 | 877 | 1026 | 1206 |
g3log | 5551 | 5759 | 5962 | 6090 | 6338 | 6647 | 7133 |
Library | 50th | 75th | 90th | 95th | 99th | 99.9th | Worst |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Quill v2, Unbounded Queue | 16 | 17 | 19 | 21 | 24 | 29 | 70 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Enabled, Unbounded Queue | 21 | 23 | 25 | 27 | 32 | 43 | 64 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Disabled, Unbounded Queue | 16 | 19 | 21 | 23 | 30 | 39 | 57 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Enabled, Bounded Queue | 20 | 21 | 23 | 24 | 27 | 38 | 59 |
fmtlog | 16 | 18 | 19 | 21 | 25 | 34 | 53 |
PlatformLab NanoLog | 53 | 67 | 77 | 82 | 93 | 131 | 236 |
MS BinLog | 39 | 42 | 43 | 46 | 73 | 119 | 243 |
Reckless | 46 | 60 | 75 | 88 | 112 | 156 | 262 |
Iyengar NanoLog | 140 | 173 | 239 | 273 | 336 | 432 | 43605 |
spdlog | 665 | 742 | 825 | 880 | 1069 | 1395 | 2087 |
g3log | 5294 | 5532 | 5759 | 5901 | 6179 | 6521 | 7443 |
The following message is logged 100'000 times per thread LOG_INFO(logger, "Logging int: {}, int: {}, string: {}", i, j, large_string)
.
The large string is over 35 characters to avoid short string optimisation of std::string
Library | 50th | 75th | 90th | 95th | 99th | 99.9th | Worst |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Quill v2, Unbounded Queue | 27 | 29 | 31 | 32 | 35 | 45 | 69 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Enabled, Unbounded Queue | 25 | 26 | 28 | 30 | 35 | 47 | 70 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Disabled, Unbounded Queue | 116 | 132 | 145 | 153 | 168 | 185 | 214 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Enabled, Bounded Queue | 26 | 27 | 30 | 31 | 36 | 47 | 65 |
fmtlog | 27 | 29 | 32 | 34 | 40 | 49 | 67 |
PlatformLab NanoLog | 68 | 81 | 96 | 107 | 126 | 151 | 222 |
MS BinLog | 52 | 53 | 56 | 60 | 80 | 133 | 251 |
Reckless | 211 | 236 | 262 | 280 | 317 | 522 | 1051 |
Iyengar NanoLog | 157 | 176 | 196 | 220 | 290 | 372 | 22812 |
spdlog | 652 | 715 | 775 | 827 | 953 | 1082 | 1453 |
g3log | 4563 | 4752 | 4942 | 5066 | 5309 | 5633 | 6188 |
Library | 50th | 75th | 90th | 95th | 99th | 99.9th | Worst |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Quill v2, Unbounded Queue | 28 | 30 | 32 | 34 | 38 | 45 | 73 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Enabled, Unbounded Queue | 25 | 27 | 29 | 30 | 37 | 53 | 83 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Disabled, Unbounded Queue | 125 | 138 | 151 | 160 | 176 | 192 | 247 |
Quill v1.7, Dual Queue Enabled, Bounded Queue | 25 | 27 | 29 | 31 | 39 | 51 | 86 |
fmtlog | 26 | 28 | 31 | 34 | 40 | 49 | 78 |
PlatformLab NanoLog | 67 | 80 | 95 | 106 | 127 | 182 | 315 |
MS BinLog | 51 | 53 | 55 | 60 | 85 | 128 | 243 |
Reckless | 184 | 204 | 226 | 240 | 283 | 531 | 761 |
Iyengar NanoLog | 151 | 218 | 267 | 296 | 353 | 469 | 71636 |
spdlog | 640 | 710 | 795 | 867 | 1097 | 1465 | 2259 |
g3log | 3575 | 3776 | 3967 | 4089 | 4332 | 4650 | 5544 |
The benchmarks are done on Ubuntu - Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6254 CPU @ 3.10GHz
with GCC 11.2
Each thread is pinned on a different cpu. Unfortunately the cores are not isolated on this system. If the backend logging thread is run in the same CPU as the caller hot-path threads, that slows down the log message processing on the backend logging thread and will cause the SPSC queue to fill faster and re-allocate.
Continuously logging messages in a loop makes the consumer (backend logging thread) unable to follow up and the queue will have to re-allocate or block for most logging libraries expect very high throughput binary loggers like PlatformLab Nanolog.
Therefore, a different approach was followed that suits more to a real time application:
- 20 messages are logged in a loop.
- calculate/store the average latency for those messages.
- wait between 1-2 ms.
- repeat for n iterations.
I run each logger benchmark 4 times and the above latencies are the second best result.
The benchmark code and results can be found here.
Quill v1.7.x requires a C++14 compiler. Minimum required versions of supported compilers are shown in the below table.
Compiler | Notes |
---|---|
GCC | version >= 5.0 |
Clang | version >= 5.0 |
MSVC++ | version >= 14.3 |
Platform | Notes |
---|---|
Linux | Ubuntu, RHEL, Centos, Fedora |
Windows | Windows 10 - version 1607, Windows Server 2016 |
macOS | Tested with Xcode 9.4 |
#include "quill/Quill.h"
int main()
{
quill::enable_console_colours();
quill::start();
quill::Logger* logger = quill::get_logger();
logger->set_log_level(quill::LogLevel::TraceL3);
// enable a backtrace that will get flushed when we log CRITICAL
logger->init_backtrace(2, quill::LogLevel::Critical);
LOG_BACKTRACE(logger, "Backtrace log {}", 1);
LOG_BACKTRACE(logger, "Backtrace log {}", 2);
LOG_INFO(logger, "Welcome to Quill!");
LOG_ERROR(logger, "An error message. error code {}", 123);
LOG_WARNING(logger, "A warning message.");
LOG_CRITICAL(logger, "A critical error.");
LOG_DEBUG(logger, "Debugging foo {}", 1234);
LOG_TRACE_L1(logger, "{:>30}", "right aligned");
LOG_TRACE_L2(logger, "Positional arguments are {1} {0} ", "too", "supported");
LOG_TRACE_L3(logger, "Support for floats {:03.2f}", 1.23456);
}
git clone https://github.com/odygrd/quill.git
mkdir cmake_build
cd cmake_build
make install
Note: To install in custom directory invoke cmake with -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/quill/install-dir/
cmake -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/my/fmt/fmt-config.cmake-directory/ -DQUILL_FMT_EXTERNAL=ON -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/quill/install-dir/'
Then use the library from a CMake project, you can locate it directly with find_package()
my_project/
├── CMakeLists.txt
├── main.cpp
# Set only if needed - quill was installed under a custom non-standard directory
set(CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH /test_quill/usr/local/)
find_package(quill REQUIRED)
# Linking your project against quill
add_executable(example main.cpp)
target_link_libraries(example PRIVATE quill::quill)
See basic usage
To embed the library directly, copy the source folder to your project and call add_subdirectory()
in your CMakeLists.txt
file
my_project/
├── quill/ (source folder)
├── CMakeLists.txt
├── main.cpp
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.1.0)
project(my_project)
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 14)
add_subdirectory(quill)
add_executable(my_project main.cpp)
target_link_libraries(my_project PRIVATE quill::quill)
See basic usage
Advanced usage and additional documentation can be found in the wiki pages.
The examples folder is also a good source of documentation.
Quill is licensed under the MIT License
Quill depends on third party libraries with separate copyright notices and license terms. Your use of the source code for these subcomponents is subject to the terms and conditions of the following licenses.