Front-end protocol logging
GUI protocol exchanges can be logged to a file with the
--start-guilog=filename
option of fglrun,
and replayed with the --run-guilog=filename
option.
Sensitive and personal data may be written to the output. Make sure that the log output is written to files that can only be read by application administrators.
--start-guilog/--run-guilog
options are used to simulate a program execution
by connecting with a front-end, without the program files. Basically, the runtime system connects
with the front-end and replays the abstract user interface exchanges.--start-guilog/--run-guilog
options, the front-end must be started and listening for
direct connections.The --start-guilog=filename
instructs
fglrun to start the program and log into filename, all user
interface exchanges with the front-end. This option is typically used on site, with the program
files.
With the --run-guilog=filename
option, the runtime system
replays abstract user interface exchanges, as when the program was executed with the
--start-guilog
option. This step can be done without the program files.
This GUI log feature can be used to set up non-regression tests for front-ends, and to provide a log file to your support center in order to replay a specific application issue. It is typically used to implement tests with the GGC tool. For more details, see the Genero Ghost Client User Guide.
The options take the log file as parameter:
UNIX™ (shell) example:
$ fglrun --start-guilog=mylog.txt myprogram
All user interaction and AUI tree updates will be logged into the mylog.txt file.
The log file can then be replayed with the --run-guilog
option, to mimic the
user interaction and program, to reproduce potential issues in front-ends:
$ fglrun --run-guilog=mylog.txt myprogram
RUN cmd
[WITHOUT WAITING]
, the parent program and each child program will write into the same log
file. When replaying the GUI log file, the runtime system is able to identify parent and child
program logs in order to restart individual processes.ENTER
to replay each event step by step, or type c
to continue by
playing the full
log:$ fglrun --run-guilog=mylog.txt myprogram
enter: one step; c: continue
*** new process
<< 32351 3 i:meta Client{{name "GDC"}{version "3.00.06-152753"}{host ...
>> 32351 56 o:om 0 {{an 0 UserInterface 0 {{name "guilog"} {text "guilog"} { ...
$
<< 32351 4181 i:event _om 0{}{{ActionEvent 0{{idRef "96"}}}}
*** new process
<< 32355 4186 i:meta Client{{name "GDC"}{version "3.00.06-152753"}{ho ...
>> 32355 4209 o:om 0 {{an 0 UserInterface 0 {{name "guilog"} {text "guilog"} ...
$c
<< 32355 5428 i:event _om 0{}{{ActionEvent 0{{idRef "96"}}}}
>> 32355 5429 o:om 1 {{rn 0}}
*** process terminated
*** process changed
<< 32351 6278 i:event _om 1{}{{ActionEvent 0{{idRef "97"}}}}
>> 32351 6278 o:om 2 {{un 95 {{selection "97"}}} {un 0 {{runtimeStatus "chil ...
>> 32351 6278 o:om 3 {{un 0 {{runtimeStatus "processing"}}}}
>> 32351 6283 o:om 4 {{un 0 {{focus "97"} {runtimeStatus "interactive"}}}}
*** new process
<< 32360 6296 i:meta Client{{name "GDC"}{version "3.00.06-152753-testEN"}{ho ...
>> 32360 6344 o:om 0 {{an 0 UserInterface 0 {{name "guilog"} {text "guilog"} ...
<< 32360 7341 i:event _om 0{}{{ActionEvent 0{{idRef "96"}}}}
>> 32360 7342 o:om 1 {{rn 0}}
*** process terminated
*** process changed
>> 32351 8099 o:om 5 {{rn 0}}
*** process terminated
bye!
ind pid time type: io-data
- ind: in/out indicator 1:
<<
for input,>>
for output (see below). - pid: the process id of the fglrun process.
- time: the relative time since starting the parent fglrun, in milliseconds.
- type: in/out indicator 2:
o
= data out (fglrun to front-end): This data is send unmodified to the front-end by the log player.i
= data in (front-end to fglrun): This data is informative and just displayed by the log player.
- io-data: Everything right of the colon (
:
) is AUI exchange data.