Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
GLOG_ prefix should just work if you are not using gflags. Please make sure you
don't
have gflags installed and you are setting correct environment variable (note
that
GLOG should be capitalized, and logtostderr should not be capitalized). Some
environment variables like GOOGLE_LOGTOSTDERR is defined by historical reason.
I
don't expect users of glog to use them.
Please post more details if you are still not able to use GLOG_ variables and
I'll
help to figure out why they aren't working as possible.
By the way, I guess I should make GLOG_* variables work even if gflags are
installed...
Original comment by shinichi...@gmail.com
on 23 Oct 2009 at 9:36
I think I had the problem that I installed gflags. Precisely, I told glog about
gflags. I guess that's why only GOOGLE_LOGTOSTDERR worked me. But I forgot to
link
against the gflags library. That's why passing arguments didn't work. Having
both
(environment and flags) to be working would be great.
Original comment by jens.k.mueller@gmail.com
on 26 Oct 2009 at 9:56
Hi, I have a similar problem.. I have compiled glog version 0.3.0 and gflags was
installed at my machine (I have informed the CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS to point to
gflags
include and library dir respectively). The 'configure' script seems to find
gflags,
but none of the --<flags> seems to work. GLOG_* flags didn't work either...
The application using glog must print the glog supported flags at --help
command line
argument? Because it does not show any glog flags... My application is a test
app
using google test, dont know if theres some issue using glog + gtest...
Any hints? Thanks!
Original comment by pablo.c...@gmail.com
on 7 Jan 2010 at 9:52
Yeah, you should see glog specific command line flags by --help like
Flags from src/logging.cc:
-alsologtoemail (log messages go to these email addresses in addition to
logfiles) type: string default: ""
...
The glog specific flags should appear in the list of --help if you link glog
(-lglog
for your compiler if you're using linux). This should happen even if your
source code
doesn't use glog at all and you just need to link your program with glog. So,
please
make sure you are linking glog properly.
If this setting is fine, I have no idea so far... Please provide more
information and
I'll investigate as possible. Thanks.
Original comment by shinichi...@gmail.com
on 12 Jan 2010 at 8:47
pablo, I think you forgot to initialize gflags in your program (jens probably
did the
same). Easiest solution would be to just #include <gflags/gflags.h>, and insert
google::ParseCommandLineFlags(&argc, &argv, true); as the first line inside
your main
function. Remember to link with -lgflags as well. I think this necessary step is
easily overlooked... perhaps there should be a small reminder in the glog
documentation page.
Original comment by jae.j...@gmail.com
on 30 Jan 2010 at 3:45
Yeah. You're right. I recently did it as you say. I just would expect that glog
is
doing this for me since it has this dependency. But I think since the
dependency is
optional glog can't do so. Right? Having the documentation updated would be
helpful.
So basically one has two options either using flags, then you have to
1. include <gflags/gflags.h>
2. call google::ParseCommandLineFlags
3. and link against gflags
or just set things via GLOG_* environment variables. For this you need no
gflags at
all. But I can't get it to work. I attach a very simple program. I run it
$ GLOG_logtostderr=1 ./glog
But it keeps writing files to /tmp instead of logging to stderr.
Original comment by jens.k.mueller@gmail.com
on 30 Jan 2010 at 1:32
Attachments:
I got an issue when compiling glog by running 'make' after running './configure'
Then I got an error:
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"testing::internal::StrStreamToString(std::__1::basic_stringstream<char, std::__1::char_traits<char>, std::__1::allocator<char> >*)", referenced from:
testing::internal::String testing::internal::StreamableToString<void const*>(void const* const&) in logging_unittest-logging_unittest.o
testing::internal::String testing::internal::StreamableToString<int>(int const&) in logging_unittest-logging_unittest.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
make: *** [logging_unittest] Error 1
I am using glog-0.3.3 on Mac OS X.
SO how can i turn of testing while compiling glog?
In another context, i installed glog and gflags by using Macport, then i run a
small program. It will generate a error :
"ERROR: unknown command line flag 'logtostderr'"
I believe that's the problem with linking to gflags. So how can i fix it.
Thanks
Original comment by phongngu...@gmail.com
on 8 May 2014 at 6:17
As for the link error in logging_unittest, I think you have gtest installed and
it is conflicting with glog for some reason. The easiest solution would be
simply uninstalling gtest or ignore this error by make -k5000 or something and
just use libglog.
As for the latter issue, I think you can use GLOG_logtostderr ./your_program or
you can do GLOG_logtostderr=true at the beginning of your main().
Original comment by shinichi...@gmail.com
on 8 May 2014 at 1:42
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
jens.k.mueller@gmail.com
on 15 Oct 2009 at 9:29