The Android logging system provides a mechanism for collecting and viewing system debug
output. Logcat dumps a log of system messages, which include things such as stack traces when the
emulator throws an error and messages that you have written from your application by using the
Log
class. You can run LogCat through ADB or from DDMS, which allows you to
read the messages in real time.
Log
classLog
is a logging class that you can utilize in your code to print out
messages to the LogCat. Common logging methods include:
v(String, String)
(verbose)d(String, String)
(debug)i(String, String)
(information)w(String, String)
(warning)e(String, String)
(error)Log.i("MyActivity", "MyClass.getView() — get item number " + position);
The LogCat will then output something like:
I/MyActivity( 1557): MyClass.getView() — get item number 1
You can use LogCat from within DDMS or call it on an ADB shell. For more information on how to use LogCat within DDMS, see Using DDMS. To run LogCat, through the ADB shell, the general usage is:
[adb] logcat [<option>] ... [<filter-spec>] ...
You can use the logcat
command from your development computer or from a remote
adb shell in an emulator/device instance. To view log output in your development computer, you
use
$ adb logcat
and from a remote adb shell you use
# logcat
The following table describes the logcat
command line options:
-c |
Clears (flushes) the entire log and exits. |
-d |
Dumps the log to the screen and exits. |
-f <filename> |
Writes log message output to <filename> . The default is
stdout . |
-g |
Prints the size of the specified log buffer and exits. |
-n <count> |
Sets the maximum number of rotated logs to <count> . The default value
is 4. Requires the -r option. |
-r <kbytes> |
Rotates the log file every <kbytes> of output. The default value is
16. Requires the -f option. |
-s |
Sets the default filter spec to silent. |
-v <format> |
Sets the output format for log messages. The default is brief format. For a
list of supported formats, see Controlling Log Output
Format. |
Every Android log message has a tag and a priority associated with it.
V
— Verbose (lowest priority)D
— DebugI
— InfoW
— WarningE
— ErrorF
— FatalS
— Silent (highest priority, on which nothing is ever printed)You can obtain a list of tags used in the system, together with priorities, by running
LogCat and observing the first two columns of each message, given as
<priority>/<tag>
.
Here's an example of logcat output that shows that the message relates to priority level "I" and tag "ActivityManager":
I/ActivityManager( 585): Starting activity: Intent { action=android.intent.action...}
To reduce the log output to a manageable level, you can restrict log output using filter expressions. Filter expressions let you indicate to the system the tags-priority combinations that you are interested in — the system suppresses other messages for the specified tags.
A filter expression follows this format tag:priority ...
, where tag
indicates the tag of interest and priority
indicates the minimum level of
priority to report for that tag. Messages for that tag at or above the specified priority are
written to the log. You can supply any number of tag:priority
specifications in a
single filter expression. The series of specifications is whitespace-delimited.
Here's an example of a filter expression that suppresses all log messages except those with the tag "ActivityManager", at priority "Info" or above, and all log messages with tag "MyApp", with priority "Debug" or above:
adb logcat ActivityManager:I MyApp:D *:S
The final element in the above expression, *:S
, sets the priority level for all
tags to "silent", thus ensuring only log messages with "View" and "MyApp" are displayed. Using
*:S
is an excellent way to ensure that log output is restricted to the filters that
you have explicitly specified — it lets your filters serve as a "whitelist" for log
output.
The following filter expression displays all log messages with priority level "warning" and higher, on all tags:
adb logcat *:W
If you're running LogCat from your development computer (versus running it on a
remote adb shell), you can also set a default filter expression by exporting a value for the
environment variable ANDROID_LOG_TAGS
:
export ANDROID_LOG_TAGS="ActivityManager:I MyApp:D *:S"
Note that ANDROID_LOG_TAGS
filter is not exported to the emulator/device
instance, if you are running LogCat from a remote shell or using adb shell
logcat
.
Log messages contain a number of metadata fields, in addition to the tag and priority. You can
modify the output format for messages so that they display a specific metadata field. To do so,
you use the -v
option and specify one of the supported output formats listed
below.
brief
— Display priority/tag and PID of originating process (the default
format).process
— Display PID only.tag
— Display the priority/tag only.thread
— Display process:thread and priority/tag only.raw
— Display the raw log message, with no other metadata fields.time
— Display the date, invocation time, priority/tag, and PID of the
originating process.long
— Display all metadata fields and separate messages with blank
lines.When starting LogCat, you can specify the output format you want by using the
-v
option:
[adb] logcat [-v <format>]
Here's an example that shows how to generate messages in thread
output
format:
adb logcat -v thread
Note that you can only specify one output format with the -v
option.
The Android logging system keeps multiple circular buffers for log messages, and not all of
the log messages are sent to the default circular buffer. To see additional log messages, you can
run the logcat
command with the -b
option, to request viewing of an alternate
circular buffer. You can view any of these alternate buffers:
radio
— View the buffer that contains radio/telephony related
messages.events
— View the buffer containing events-related messages.main
— View the main log buffer (default)The usage of the -b
option is:
[adb] logcat [-b <buffer>]
Here's an example of how to view a log buffer containing radio and telephony messages:
adb logcat -b radio
By default, the Android system sends stdout
and stderr
(System.out
and System.err
) output to /dev/null
. In
processes that run the Dalvik VM, you can have the system write a copy of the output to the log
file. In this case, the system writes the messages to the log using the log tags
stdout
and stderr
, both with priority I
.
To route the output in this way, you stop a running emulator/device instance and then use the
shell command setprop
to enable the redirection of output. Here's how you do it:
$ adb shell stop $ adb shell setprop log.redirect-stdio true $ adb shell start
The system retains this setting until you terminate the emulator/device instance. To use the
setting as a default on the emulator/device instance, you can add an entry to
/data/local.prop
on the device.
If you're developing a web application for Android, you can debug your JavaScript using the console JavaScript APIs, which output messages to LogCat. For more information, see Debugging Web Apps.