Book Image

Mastering Rust - Second Edition

By : Rahul Sharma, Vesa Kaihlavirta
Book Image

Mastering Rust - Second Edition

By: Rahul Sharma, Vesa Kaihlavirta

Overview of this book

Rust is an empowering language that provides a rare combination of safety, speed, and zero-cost abstractions. Mastering Rust – Second Edition is filled with clear and simple explanations of the language features along with real-world examples, showing you how you can build robust, scalable, and reliable programs. This second edition of the book improves upon the previous one and touches on all aspects that make Rust a great language. We have included the features from latest Rust 2018 edition such as the new module system, the smarter compiler, helpful error messages, and the stable procedural macros. You’ll learn how Rust can be used for systems programming, network programming, and even on the web. You’ll also learn techniques such as writing memory-safe code, building idiomatic Rust libraries, writing efficient asynchronous networking code, and advanced macros. The book contains a mix of theory and hands-on tasks so you acquire the skills as well as the knowledge, and it also provides exercises to hammer the concepts in. After reading this book, you will be able to implement Rust for your enterprise projects, write better tests and documentation, design for performance, and write idiomatic Rust code.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)

Logging in Rust

Rust has quite a few flexible and extensive logging solutions. Like popular logging frameworks in other languages, the logging ecosystem here is split into two parts:

  • Logging facade: This part is implemented by the log crate and provides an implementation agnostic logging API. While other frameworks implement logging APIs as functions or methods on some object, the log crate provides us with macro-based logging APIs, which are categorized by log levels to log events to a configured log output.
  • Logging implementations: These are community developed crates that provide actual logging implementation in terms of where the output goes and how it happens. There are many such crates, such as env_logger, simple_logger, log4rs, and fern. We'll visit a couple of them in a moment. Crates that come under this category are meant to be used only by binary crates, that...