Failed to save the file to the "xx" directory.

Failed to save the file to the "ll" directory.

Failed to save the file to the "mm" directory.

Failed to save the file to the "wp" directory.

403WebShell
403Webshell
Server IP : 66.29.132.124  /  Your IP : 18.219.247.59
Web Server : LiteSpeed
System : Linux business141.web-hosting.com 4.18.0-553.lve.el8.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon May 27 15:27:34 UTC 2024 x86_64
User : wavevlvu ( 1524)
PHP Version : 7.4.33
Disable Function : NONE
MySQL : OFF  |  cURL : ON  |  WGET : ON  |  Perl : ON  |  Python : ON  |  Sudo : OFF  |  Pkexec : OFF
Directory :  /proc/thread-self/root/proc/thread-self/root/opt/alt/ruby33/share/ruby/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Command :


[ Back ]     

Current File : /proc/thread-self/root/proc/thread-self/root/opt/alt/ruby33/share/ruby/logger.rb
# frozen_string_literal: true
# logger.rb - simple logging utility
# Copyright (C) 2000-2003, 2005, 2008, 2011  NAKAMURA, Hiroshi <nahi@ruby-lang.org>.
#
# Documentation:: NAKAMURA, Hiroshi and Gavin Sinclair
# License::
#   You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms of Ruby's
#   license; either the dual license version in 2003, or any later version.
# Revision:: $Id$
#
# A simple system for logging messages.  See Logger for more documentation.

require 'fiber'
require 'monitor'
require 'rbconfig'

require_relative 'logger/version'
require_relative 'logger/formatter'
require_relative 'logger/log_device'
require_relative 'logger/severity'
require_relative 'logger/errors'

# \Class \Logger provides a simple but sophisticated logging utility that
# you can use to create one or more
# {event logs}[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logging_(software)#Event_logs]
# for your program.
# Each such log contains a chronological sequence of entries
# that provides a record of the program's activities.
#
# == About the Examples
#
# All examples on this page assume that \Logger has been required:
#
#   require 'logger'
#
# == Synopsis
#
# Create a log with Logger.new:
#
#   # Single log file.
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log')
#   # Size-based rotated logging: 3 10-megabyte files.
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', 3, 10485760)
#   # Period-based rotated logging: daily (also allowed: 'weekly', 'monthly').
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', 'daily')
#   # Log to an IO stream.
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout)
#
# Add entries (level, message) with Logger#add:
#
#   logger.add(Logger::DEBUG, 'Maximal debugging info')
#   logger.add(Logger::INFO, 'Non-error information')
#   logger.add(Logger::WARN, 'Non-error warning')
#   logger.add(Logger::ERROR, 'Non-fatal error')
#   logger.add(Logger::FATAL, 'Fatal error')
#   logger.add(Logger::UNKNOWN, 'Most severe')
#
# Close the log with Logger#close:
#
#   logger.close
#
# == Entries
#
# You can add entries with method Logger#add:
#
#   logger.add(Logger::DEBUG, 'Maximal debugging info')
#   logger.add(Logger::INFO, 'Non-error information')
#   logger.add(Logger::WARN, 'Non-error warning')
#   logger.add(Logger::ERROR, 'Non-fatal error')
#   logger.add(Logger::FATAL, 'Fatal error')
#   logger.add(Logger::UNKNOWN, 'Most severe')
#
# These shorthand methods also add entries:
#
#   logger.debug('Maximal debugging info')
#   logger.info('Non-error information')
#   logger.warn('Non-error warning')
#   logger.error('Non-fatal error')
#   logger.fatal('Fatal error')
#   logger.unknown('Most severe')
#
# When you call any of these methods,
# the entry may or may not be written to the log,
# depending on the entry's severity and on the log level;
# see {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level]
#
# An entry always has:
#
# - A severity (the required argument to #add).
# - An automatically created timestamp.
#
# And may also have:
#
# - A message.
# - A program name.
#
# Example:
#
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout)
#   logger.add(Logger::INFO, 'My message.', 'mung')
#   # => I, [2022-05-07T17:21:46.536234 #20536]  INFO -- mung: My message.
#
# The default format for an entry is:
#
#   "%s, [%s #%d] %5s -- %s: %s\n"
#
# where the values to be formatted are:
#
# - \Severity (one letter).
# - Timestamp.
# - Process id.
# - \Severity (word).
# - Program name.
# - Message.
#
# You can use a different entry format by:
#
# - Setting a custom format proc (affects following entries);
#   see {formatter=}[Logger.html#attribute-i-formatter].
# - Calling any of the methods above with a block
#   (affects only the one entry).
#   Doing so can have two benefits:
#
#   - Context: the block can evaluate the entire program context
#     and create a context-dependent message.
#   - Performance: the block is not evaluated unless the log level
#     permits the entry actually to be written:
#
#       logger.error { my_slow_message_generator }
#
#     Contrast this with the string form, where the string is
#     always evaluated, regardless of the log level:
#
#       logger.error("#{my_slow_message_generator}")
#
# === \Severity
#
# The severity of a log entry has two effects:
#
# - Determines whether the entry is selected for inclusion in the log;
#   see {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
# - Indicates to any log reader (whether a person or a program)
#   the relative importance of the entry.
#
# === Timestamp
#
# The timestamp for a log entry is generated automatically
# when the entry is created.
#
# The logged timestamp is formatted by method
# {Time#strftime}[rdoc-ref:Time#strftime]
# using this format string:
#
#   '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%6N'
#
# Example:
#
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout)
#   logger.add(Logger::INFO)
#   # => I, [2022-05-07T17:04:32.318331 #20536]  INFO -- : nil
#
# You can set a different format using method #datetime_format=.
#
# === Message
#
# The message is an optional argument to an entry method:
#
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout)
#   logger.add(Logger::INFO, 'My message')
#   # => I, [2022-05-07T18:15:37.647581 #20536]  INFO -- : My message
#
# For the default entry formatter, <tt>Logger::Formatter</tt>,
# the message object may be:
#
# - A string: used as-is.
# - An Exception: <tt>message.message</tt> is used.
# - Anything else: <tt>message.inspect</tt> is used.
#
# *Note*: Logger::Formatter does not escape or sanitize
# the message passed to it.
# Developers should be aware that malicious data (user input)
# may be in the message, and should explicitly escape untrusted data.
#
# You can use a custom formatter to escape message data;
# see the example at {formatter=}[Logger.html#attribute-i-formatter].
#
# === Program Name
#
# The program name is an optional argument to an entry method:
#
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout)
#   logger.add(Logger::INFO, 'My message', 'mung')
#   # => I, [2022-05-07T18:17:38.084716 #20536]  INFO -- mung: My message
#
# The default program name for a new logger may be set in the call to
# Logger.new via optional keyword argument +progname+:
#
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', progname: 'mung')
#
# The default program name for an existing logger may be set
# by a call to method #progname=:
#
#   logger.progname = 'mung'
#
# The current program name may be retrieved with method
# {progname}[Logger.html#attribute-i-progname]:
#
#   logger.progname # => "mung"
#
# == Log Level
#
# The log level setting determines whether an entry is actually
# written to the log, based on the entry's severity.
#
# These are the defined severities (least severe to most severe):
#
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout)
#   logger.add(Logger::DEBUG, 'Maximal debugging info')
#   # => D, [2022-05-07T17:57:41.776220 #20536] DEBUG -- : Maximal debugging info
#   logger.add(Logger::INFO, 'Non-error information')
#   # => I, [2022-05-07T17:59:14.349167 #20536]  INFO -- : Non-error information
#   logger.add(Logger::WARN, 'Non-error warning')
#   # => W, [2022-05-07T18:00:45.337538 #20536]  WARN -- : Non-error warning
#   logger.add(Logger::ERROR, 'Non-fatal error')
#   # => E, [2022-05-07T18:02:41.592912 #20536] ERROR -- : Non-fatal error
#   logger.add(Logger::FATAL, 'Fatal error')
#   # => F, [2022-05-07T18:05:24.703931 #20536] FATAL -- : Fatal error
#   logger.add(Logger::UNKNOWN, 'Most severe')
#   # => A, [2022-05-07T18:07:54.657491 #20536]   ANY -- : Most severe
#
# The default initial level setting is Logger::DEBUG, the lowest level,
# which means that all entries are to be written, regardless of severity:
#
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout)
#   logger.level # => 0
#   logger.add(0, "My message")
#   # => D, [2022-05-11T15:10:59.773668 #20536] DEBUG -- : My message
#
# You can specify a different setting in a new logger
# using keyword argument +level+ with an appropriate value:
#
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout, level: Logger::ERROR)
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout, level: 'error')
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout, level: :error)
#   logger.level # => 3
#
# With this level, entries with severity Logger::ERROR and higher
# are written, while those with lower severities are not written:
#
#   logger = Logger.new($stdout, level: Logger::ERROR)
#   logger.add(3)
#   # => E, [2022-05-11T15:17:20.933362 #20536] ERROR -- : nil
#   logger.add(2) # Silent.
#
# You can set the log level for an existing logger
# with method #level=:
#
#   logger.level = Logger::ERROR
#
# These shorthand methods also set the level:
#
#   logger.debug! # => 0
#   logger.info!  # => 1
#   logger.warn!  # => 2
#   logger.error! # => 3
#   logger.fatal! # => 4
#
# You can retrieve the log level with method #level.
#
#   logger.level = Logger::ERROR
#   logger.level # => 3
#
# These methods return whether a given
# level is to be written:
#
#   logger.level = Logger::ERROR
#   logger.debug? # => false
#   logger.info?  # => false
#   logger.warn?  # => false
#   logger.error? # => true
#   logger.fatal? # => true
#
# == Log File Rotation
#
# By default, a log file is a single file that grows indefinitely
# (until explicitly closed); there is no file rotation.
#
# To keep log files to a manageable size,
# you can use _log_ _file_ _rotation_, which uses multiple log files:
#
# - Each log file has entries for a non-overlapping
#   time interval.
# - Only the most recent log file is open and active;
#   the others are closed and inactive.
#
# === Size-Based Rotation
#
# For size-based log file rotation, call Logger.new with:
#
# - Argument +logdev+ as a file path.
# - Argument +shift_age+ with a positive integer:
#   the number of log files to be in the rotation.
# - Argument +shift_size+ as a positive integer:
#   the maximum size (in bytes) of each log file;
#   defaults to 1048576 (1 megabyte).
#
# Examples:
#
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', 3)           # Three 1-megabyte files.
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', 5, 10485760) # Five 10-megabyte files.
#
# For these examples, suppose:
#
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', 3)
#
# Logging begins in the new log file, +t.log+;
# the log file is "full" and ready for rotation
# when a new entry would cause its size to exceed +shift_size+.
#
# The first time +t.log+ is full:
#
# - +t.log+ is closed and renamed to +t.log.0+.
# - A new file +t.log+ is opened.
#
# The second time +t.log+ is full:
#
# - +t.log.0 is renamed as +t.log.1+.
# - +t.log+ is closed and renamed to +t.log.0+.
# - A new file +t.log+ is opened.
#
# Each subsequent time that +t.log+ is full,
# the log files are rotated:
#
# - +t.log.1+ is removed.
# - +t.log.0 is renamed as +t.log.1+.
# - +t.log+ is closed and renamed to +t.log.0+.
# - A new file +t.log+ is opened.
#
# === Periodic Rotation
#
# For periodic rotation, call Logger.new with:
#
# - Argument +logdev+ as a file path.
# - Argument +shift_age+ as a string period indicator.
#
# Examples:
#
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', 'daily')   # Rotate log files daily.
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', 'weekly')  # Rotate log files weekly.
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', 'monthly') # Rotate log files monthly.
#
# Example:
#
#   logger = Logger.new('t.log', 'daily')
#
# When the given period expires:
#
# - The base log file, +t.log+ is closed and renamed
#   with a date-based suffix such as +t.log.20220509+.
# - A new log file +t.log+ is opened.
# - Nothing is removed.
#
# The default format for the suffix is <tt>'%Y%m%d'</tt>,
# which produces a suffix similar to the one above.
# You can set a different format using create-time option
# +shift_period_suffix+;
# see details and suggestions at
# {Time#strftime}[rdoc-ref:Time#strftime].
#
class Logger
  _, name, rev = %w$Id$
  if name
    name = name.chomp(",v")
  else
    name = File.basename(__FILE__)
  end
  rev ||= "v#{VERSION}"
  ProgName = "#{name}/#{rev}"

  include Severity

  # Logging severity threshold (e.g. <tt>Logger::INFO</tt>).
  def level
    @level_override[Fiber.current] || @level
  end

  # Sets the log level; returns +severity+.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  # Argument +severity+ may be an integer, a string, or a symbol:
  #
  #   logger.level = Logger::ERROR # => 3
  #   logger.level = 3             # => 3
  #   logger.level = 'error'       # => "error"
  #   logger.level = :error        # => :error
  #
  # Logger#sev_threshold= is an alias for Logger#level=.
  #
  def level=(severity)
    @level = Severity.coerce(severity)
  end

  # Adjust the log level during the block execution for the current Fiber only
  #
  #   logger.with_level(:debug) do
  #     logger.debug { "Hello" }
  #   end
  def with_level(severity)
    prev, @level_override[Fiber.current] = level, Severity.coerce(severity)
    begin
      yield
    ensure
      if prev
        @level_override[Fiber.current] = prev
      else
        @level_override.delete(Fiber.current)
      end
    end
  end

  # Program name to include in log messages.
  attr_accessor :progname

  # Sets the date-time format.
  #
  # Argument +datetime_format+ should be either of these:
  #
  # - A string suitable for use as a format for method
  #   {Time#strftime}[rdoc-ref:Time#strftime].
  # - +nil+: the logger uses <tt>'%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%6N'</tt>.
  #
  def datetime_format=(datetime_format)
    @default_formatter.datetime_format = datetime_format
  end

  # Returns the date-time format; see #datetime_format=.
  #
  def datetime_format
    @default_formatter.datetime_format
  end

  # Sets or retrieves the logger entry formatter proc.
  #
  # When +formatter+ is +nil+, the logger uses Logger::Formatter.
  #
  # When +formatter+ is a proc, a new entry is formatted by the proc,
  # which is called with four arguments:
  #
  # - +severity+: The severity of the entry.
  # - +time+: A Time object representing the entry's timestamp.
  # - +progname+: The program name for the entry.
  # - +msg+: The message for the entry (string or string-convertible object).
  #
  # The proc should return a string containing the formatted entry.
  #
  # This custom formatter uses
  # {String#dump}[rdoc-ref:String#dump]
  # to escape the message string:
  #
  #   logger = Logger.new($stdout, progname: 'mung')
  #   original_formatter = logger.formatter || Logger::Formatter.new
  #   logger.formatter = proc { |severity, time, progname, msg|
  #     original_formatter.call(severity, time, progname, msg.dump)
  #   }
  #   logger.add(Logger::INFO, "hello \n ''")
  #   logger.add(Logger::INFO, "\f\x00\xff\\\"")
  #
  # Output:
  #
  #   I, [2022-05-13T13:16:29.637488 #8492]  INFO -- mung: "hello \n ''"
  #   I, [2022-05-13T13:16:29.637610 #8492]  INFO -- mung: "\f\x00\xFF\\\""
  #
  attr_accessor :formatter

  alias sev_threshold level
  alias sev_threshold= level=

  # Returns +true+ if the log level allows entries with severity
  # Logger::DEBUG to be written, +false+ otherwise.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def debug?; level <= DEBUG; end

  # Sets the log level to Logger::DEBUG.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def debug!; self.level = DEBUG; end

  # Returns +true+ if the log level allows entries with severity
  # Logger::INFO to be written, +false+ otherwise.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def info?; level <= INFO; end

  # Sets the log level to Logger::INFO.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def info!; self.level = INFO; end

  # Returns +true+ if the log level allows entries with severity
  # Logger::WARN to be written, +false+ otherwise.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def warn?; level <= WARN; end

  # Sets the log level to Logger::WARN.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def warn!; self.level = WARN; end

  # Returns +true+ if the log level allows entries with severity
  # Logger::ERROR to be written, +false+ otherwise.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def error?; level <= ERROR; end

  # Sets the log level to Logger::ERROR.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def error!; self.level = ERROR; end

  # Returns +true+ if the log level allows entries with severity
  # Logger::FATAL to be written, +false+ otherwise.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def fatal?; level <= FATAL; end

  # Sets the log level to Logger::FATAL.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level].
  #
  def fatal!; self.level = FATAL; end

  # :call-seq:
  #    Logger.new(logdev, shift_age = 0, shift_size = 1048576, **options)
  #
  # With the single argument +logdev+,
  # returns a new logger with all default options:
  #
  #   Logger.new('t.log') # => #<Logger:0x000001e685dc6ac8>
  #
  # Argument +logdev+ must be one of:
  #
  # - A string filepath: entries are to be written
  #   to the file at that path; if the file at that path exists,
  #   new entries are appended.
  # - An IO stream (typically +$stdout+, +$stderr+. or an open file):
  #   entries are to be written to the given stream.
  # - +nil+ or +File::NULL+: no entries are to be written.
  #
  # Examples:
  #
  #   Logger.new('t.log')
  #   Logger.new($stdout)
  #
  # The keyword options are:
  #
  # - +level+: sets the log level; default value is Logger::DEBUG.
  #   See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level]:
  #
  #     Logger.new('t.log', level: Logger::ERROR)
  #
  # - +progname+: sets the default program name; default is +nil+.
  #   See {Program Name}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Program+Name]:
  #
  #     Logger.new('t.log', progname: 'mung')
  #
  # - +formatter+: sets the entry formatter; default is +nil+.
  #   See {formatter=}[Logger.html#attribute-i-formatter].
  # - +datetime_format+: sets the format for entry timestamp;
  #   default is +nil+.
  #   See #datetime_format=.
  # - +binmode+: sets whether the logger writes in binary mode;
  #   default is +false+.
  # - +shift_period_suffix+: sets the format for the filename suffix
  #   for periodic log file rotation; default is <tt>'%Y%m%d'</tt>.
  #   See {Periodic Rotation}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Periodic+Rotation].
  #
  def initialize(logdev, shift_age = 0, shift_size = 1048576, level: DEBUG,
                 progname: nil, formatter: nil, datetime_format: nil,
                 binmode: false, shift_period_suffix: '%Y%m%d')
    self.level = level
    self.progname = progname
    @default_formatter = Formatter.new
    self.datetime_format = datetime_format
    self.formatter = formatter
    @logdev = nil
    @level_override = {}
    if logdev && logdev != File::NULL
      @logdev = LogDevice.new(logdev, shift_age: shift_age,
        shift_size: shift_size,
        shift_period_suffix: shift_period_suffix,
        binmode: binmode)
    end
  end

  # Sets the logger's output stream:
  #
  # - If +logdev+ is +nil+, reopens the current output stream.
  # - If +logdev+ is a filepath, opens the indicated file for append.
  # - If +logdev+ is an IO stream
  #   (usually <tt>$stdout</tt>, <tt>$stderr</tt>, or an open File object),
  #   opens the stream for append.
  #
  # Example:
  #
  #   logger = Logger.new('t.log')
  #   logger.add(Logger::ERROR, 'one')
  #   logger.close
  #   logger.add(Logger::ERROR, 'two') # Prints 'log writing failed. closed stream'
  #   logger.reopen
  #   logger.add(Logger::ERROR, 'three')
  #   logger.close
  #   File.readlines('t.log')
  #   # =>
  #   # ["# Logfile created on 2022-05-12 14:21:19 -0500 by logger.rb/v1.5.0\n",
  #   #  "E, [2022-05-12T14:21:27.596726 #22428] ERROR -- : one\n",
  #   #  "E, [2022-05-12T14:23:05.847241 #22428] ERROR -- : three\n"]
  #
  def reopen(logdev = nil)
    @logdev&.reopen(logdev)
    self
  end

  # Creates a log entry, which may or may not be written to the log,
  # depending on the entry's severity and on the log level.
  # See {Log Level}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Log+Level]
  # and {Entries}[rdoc-ref:Logger@Entries] for details.
  #
  # Examples:
  #
  #   logger = Logger.new($stdout, progname: 'mung')
  #   logger.add(Logger::INFO)
  #   logger.add(Logger::ERROR, 'No good')
  #   logger.add(Logger::ERROR, 'No good', 'gnum')
  #
  # Output:
  #
  #   I, [2022-05-12T16:25:31.469726 #36328]  INFO -- mung: mung
  #   E, [2022-05-12T16:25:55.349414 #36328] ERROR -- mung: No good
  #   E, [2022-05-12T16:26:35.841134 #36328] ERROR -- gnum: No good
  #
  # These convenience methods have implicit severity:
  #
  # - #debug.
  # - #info.
  # - #warn.
  # - #error.
  # - #fatal.
  # - #unknown.
  #
  def add(severity, message = nil, progname = nil)
    severity ||= UNKNOWN
    if @logdev.nil? or severity < level
      return true
    end
    if progname.nil?
      progname = @progname
    end
    if message.nil?
      if block_given?
        message = yield
      else
        message = progname
        progname = @progname
      end
    end
    @logdev.write(
      format_message(format_severity(severity), Time.now, progname, message))
    true
  end
  alias log add

  # Writes the given +msg+ to the log with no formatting;
  # returns the number of characters written,
  # or +nil+ if no log device exists:
  #
  #   logger = Logger.new($stdout)
  #   logger << 'My message.' # => 10
  #
  # Output:
  #
  #   My message.
  #
  def <<(msg)
    @logdev&.write(msg)
  end

  # Equivalent to calling #add with severity <tt>Logger::DEBUG</tt>.
  #
  def debug(progname = nil, &block)
    add(DEBUG, nil, progname, &block)
  end

  # Equivalent to calling #add with severity <tt>Logger::INFO</tt>.
  #
  def info(progname = nil, &block)
    add(INFO, nil, progname, &block)
  end

  # Equivalent to calling #add with severity <tt>Logger::WARN</tt>.
  #
  def warn(progname = nil, &block)
    add(WARN, nil, progname, &block)
  end

  # Equivalent to calling #add with severity <tt>Logger::ERROR</tt>.
  #
  def error(progname = nil, &block)
    add(ERROR, nil, progname, &block)
  end

  # Equivalent to calling #add with severity <tt>Logger::FATAL</tt>.
  #
  def fatal(progname = nil, &block)
    add(FATAL, nil, progname, &block)
  end

  # Equivalent to calling #add with severity <tt>Logger::UNKNOWN</tt>.
  #
  def unknown(progname = nil, &block)
    add(UNKNOWN, nil, progname, &block)
  end

  # Closes the logger; returns +nil+:
  #
  #   logger = Logger.new('t.log')
  #   logger.close       # => nil
  #   logger.info('foo') # Prints "log writing failed. closed stream"
  #
  # Related: Logger#reopen.
  def close
    @logdev&.close
  end

private

  # \Severity label for logging (max 5 chars).
  SEV_LABEL = %w(DEBUG INFO WARN ERROR FATAL ANY).freeze

  def format_severity(severity)
    SEV_LABEL[severity] || 'ANY'
  end

  def format_message(severity, datetime, progname, msg)
    (@formatter || @default_formatter).call(severity, datetime, progname, msg)
  end
end

Youez - 2016 - github.com/yon3zu
LinuXploit