Debug
Please read Substrate to Polkadot SDK page first.
Debugging is a necessity in all walks of software development, and blockchain is no exception. Most of the same tools used for general purpose Rust debugging also apply to Substrate.
Logging utilities
You can use Rust's logging API to debug your runtimes. This comes with a number of macros, including debug
and info
.
For example, after updating your pallet's Cargo.toml
file with the log
crate just use log::info!
to log to your console:
pub fn do_something(origin) -> DispatchResult {
let who = ensure_signed(origin)?;
let my_val: u32 = 777;
Something::put(my_val);
log::info!("called by {:?}", who);
Self::deposit_event(RawEvent::SomethingStored(my_val, who));
Ok(())
}
Printable trait
The Printable trait is meant to be a way to print from the runtime in no_std
and in std
. The print
function works with any type that implements the Printable
trait.
Substrate implements this trait for some types (u8
, u32
, u64
, usize
, &[u8]
, &str
) by default.
You can also implement it for your own custom types. Here is an example of implementing it for a pallet's Error
type using the node-template as the example codebase.
use sp_runtime::traits::Printable;
use sp_runtime::print;
#[frame_support::pallet]
pub mod pallet {
// The pallet's errors
#[pallet::error]
pub enum Error<T> {
/// Value was None
NoneValue,
/// Value reached maximum and cannot be incremented further
StorageOverflow,
}
impl<T: Config> Printable for Error<T> {
fn print(&self) {
match self {
Error::NoneValue => "Invalid Value".print(),
Error::StorageOverflow => "Value Exceeded and Overflowed".print(),
_ => "Invalid Error Case".print(),
}
}
}
}
/// takes no parameters, attempts to increment storage value, and possibly throws an error
pub fn cause_error(origin) -> dispatch::DispatchResult {
// Check it was signed and get the signer. See also: ensure_root and ensure_none
let _who = ensure_signed(origin)?;
print!("My Test Message");
match Something::get() {
None => {
print(Error::<T>::NoneValue);
Err(Error::<T>::NoneValue)?
}
Some(old) => {
let new = old.checked_add(1).ok_or(
{
print(Error::<T>::StorageOverflow);
Error::<T>::StorageOverflow
})?;
Something::put(new);
Ok(())
},
}
}
Run the node binary with the RUST_LOG environment variable to print the values.
RUST_LOG=runtime=debug ./target/release/node-template --dev
The values are printed in the terminal or the standard output every time that the runtime function gets called.
2020-01-01 tokio-blocking-driver DEBUG runtime My Test Message <-- str implements Printable by default
2020-01-01 tokio-blocking-driver DEBUG runtime Invalid Value <-- the custom string from NoneValue
2020-01-01 tokio-blocking-driver DEBUG runtime DispatchError
2020-01-01 tokio-blocking-driver DEBUG runtime 8
2020-01-01 tokio-blocking-driver DEBUG runtime 0 <-- index value from the Error enum definition
2020-01-01 tokio-blocking-driver DEBUG runtime NoneValue <-- str which holds the name of the ident of the error
Keep in mind that adding print functions to the runtime increases the size of the Rust and Wasm binaries with debug code not needed in production.
Substrate's own print function
For legacy use cases, Substrate provides extra tools for Print
debugging (or tracing). You can use the print
function to log the status of the runtime execution.
use sp_runtime::print;
// --snip--
pub fn do_something(origin) -> DispatchResult {
print!("Execute do_something");
let who = ensure_signed(origin)?;
let my_val: u32 = 777;
Something::put(my_val);
print!("After storing my_val");
Self::deposit_event(RawEvent::SomethingStored(my_val, who));
Ok(())
}
// --snip--
Start the chain using the RUST_LOG
environment variable to see the print logs.
RUST_LOG=runtime=debug ./target/release/node-template --dev
The values are printed in the terminal or the standard output if the Error gets triggered.
2020-01-01 00:00:00 tokio-blocking-driver DEBUG runtime Execute do_something
2020-01-01 00:00:00 tokio-blocking-driver DEBUG runtime After storing my_val
If std
The legacy print
function allows you to print and have an implementation of the Printable
trait.
However, in some legacy cases you may want to do more than print, or not bother with Substrate-specific traits just for debugging purposes.
The if_std!
macro is useful for this situation.
One caveat of using this macro is that the code inside will only execute when you are actually running the native version of the runtime.
use sp_std::if_std; // Import into scope the if_std! macro.
The println!
statement should be inside of the if_std
macro.
#[pallet::call]
impl<T: Config<I>, I: 'static> Pallet<T, I> {
// --snip--
pub fn do_something(origin) -> DispatchResult {
let who = ensure_signed(origin)?;
let my_val: u32 = 777;
Something::put(my_val);
if_std! {
// This code is only being compiled and executed when the `std` feature is enabled.
println!("Hello native world!");
println!("My value is: {:#?}", my_val);
println!("The caller account is: {:#?}", who);
}
Self::deposit_event(RawEvent::SomethingStored(my_val, who));
Ok(())
}
// --snip--
}
The values are printed in the terminal or the standard output every time that the runtime function gets called.
$ 2020-01-01 00:00:00 Substrate Node
2020-01-01 00:00:00 version x.y.z-x86_64-linux-gnu
2020-01-01 00:00:00 by Anonymous, 2017, 2020
2020-01-01 00:00:00 Chain specification: Development
2020-01-01 00:00:00 Node name: my-node-007
2020-01-01 00:00:00 Roles: AUTHORITY
2020-01-01 00:00:00 Imported 999 (0x3d7a…ab6e)
# --snip--
-> Hello native world!
-> My value is: 777
-> The caller account is: d43593c715fdd31c61141abd04a99fd6822c8558854ccde39a5684e7a56da27d (5GrwvaEF...)
# --snip--
2020-01-01 00:00:00 Imported 1000 (0x3d7a…ab6e)