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VMS Help DCE, DCE_INTRO, dce_svc_macros, DCE_SVC_LOG *Conan The Librarian |
NAME
DCE_SVC_LOG - Macro to output a binary form of a serviceability
debug message
SYNOPSIS
#include <dce/dce.h>
DCE_SVC_LOG( ( dce_svc_handle_t handle,
const unsigned32 table_index,
unsigned32 debug_level,
const unsigned32 messageid,
char * format,
. . .) );
PARAMETERS
Input
handle The caller's serviceability handle.
table_index
The message's sub-component name (defined in the sams file).
debug_level
Serviceability debug level for the message.
messageid
A message ID, defined in the message's code field in
the sams file.
format A message format specifier string (used if messageid
cannot be found).
. . . Any format arguments for the message string.
DESCRIPTION
The DCE_SVC_LOG macro is used to generate debugging output based on
a message defined in an application's sams file (in this respect it
is unlike DCE_SVC_DEBUG, in which the message is specified as a
literal string parameter). Because it is a macro that takes a
variable number of arguments, the entire parameter list must be
enclosed in two sets of parentheses. The handle and table_index
parameters are as described for dce_svc_printf().
The message can be specified in either one of two ways: by messageid,
identifying a message defined in the normal way in the application's
sams file; or as a string literal paramater (format). The format
string is used only if the specified messageid cannot be found.
DCE_SVC_LOG generates a record in the serviceability binary format,
not a conventional serviceability message as such. The complete
message text is not normally written; instead, only the message ID
(the messageid specified in the macro parameter), and its format
arguments (if any) are written. When the binary log is read (see
svcdumplog), the text of the message is reconstructed from the
application's installed message catalog. However, if the original
message was generated from the format argument, then the entire
message text is written to the binary record.
The debug_level argument indicates the level of detail associated
with the message and must be in the range svc_c_debug1 to
svc_c_debug9.
Thus the value of debug_level associates the message with one of nine
"levels", and whether or not the message is actually generated at run
time will depend on what debugging level has been set for the
application. The level can be set by the application itself (by a
call to dce_svc_debug_set_levels() or dce_svc_debug_routing()) or by
the value of an environment variable or a serviceability routing file;
see svcroute for further information.
The significance of the various levels is application-defined, but
in general the higher levels (numbers) imply more detail in debugging
output.
RELATED INFORMATION
Functions: DCE_SVC_DEBUG
DCE_SVC_DEBUG_ATLEAST
DCE_SVC_DEBUG_IS
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