Macro tracing::event

source ·
macro_rules! event {
    (target: $target:expr, parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, { $($fields:tt)* } ) => { ... };
    (target: $target:expr, parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, { $($fields:tt)* }, $($arg:tt)+ ) => { ... };
    (target: $target:expr, parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, $($k:ident).+ = $($fields:tt)* ) => { ... };
    (target: $target:expr, parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, $($arg:tt)+) => { ... };
    (target: $target:expr, $lvl:expr, { $($fields:tt)* } ) => { ... };
    (target: $target:expr, $lvl:expr, { $($fields:tt)* }, $($arg:tt)+ ) => { ... };
    (target: $target:expr, $lvl:expr, $($k:ident).+ = $($fields:tt)* ) => { ... };
    (target: $target:expr, $lvl:expr, $($arg:tt)+ ) => { ... };
    (parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, { $($fields:tt)* }, $($arg:tt)+ ) => { ... };
    (parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, $($k:ident).+ = $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    (parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, ?$($k:ident).+ = $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    (parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, %$($k:ident).+ = $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    (parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, $($k:ident).+, $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    (parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, %$($k:ident).+, $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    (parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, ?$($k:ident).+, $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    (parent: $parent:expr, $lvl:expr, $($arg:tt)+ ) => { ... };
    ( $lvl:expr, { $($fields:tt)* }, $($arg:tt)+ ) => { ... };
    ( $lvl:expr, { $($fields:tt)* }, $($arg:tt)+ ) => { ... };
    ($lvl:expr, $($k:ident).+ = $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    ($lvl:expr, $($k:ident).+, $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    ($lvl:expr, ?$($k:ident).+, $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    ($lvl:expr, %$($k:ident).+, $($field:tt)*) => { ... };
    ($lvl:expr, ?$($k:ident).+) => { ... };
    ($lvl:expr, %$($k:ident).+) => { ... };
    ($lvl:expr, $($k:ident).+) => { ... };
    ( $lvl:expr, $($arg:tt)+ ) => { ... };
}
Expand description

Constructs a new Event.

The event macro is invoked with a Level and up to 32 key-value fields. Optionally, a format string and arguments may follow the fields; this will be used to construct an implicit field named “message”.

See the top-level documentation for details on the syntax accepted by this macro.

Examples

use tracing::{event, Level};

let data = (42, "forty-two");
let private_data = "private";
let error = "a bad error";

event!(Level::ERROR, %error, "Received error");
event!(
    target: "app_events",
    Level::WARN,
    private_data,
    ?data,
    "App warning: {}",
    error
);
event!(Level::INFO, the_answer = data.0);