bugreport
is a Rust library that helps application developers to automatically collect
information about the system and the environment that users can send along with a bug
report (similar to git bugreport
or ffmpeg … -report
).
Note: This library is in an early stage and the API may change in the future.
The following code
use bugreport::{bugreport, collector::*, format::Markdown};
fn main() {
bugreport!()
.info(SoftwareVersion::default())
.info(OperatingSystem::default())
.info(CommandLine::default())
.info(EnvironmentVariables::list(&["SHELL", "EDITOR"]))
.info(CommandOutput::new("Python version", "python", &["-V"]))
.info(CompileTimeInformation::default())
.print::<Markdown>();
}
generates bug report information that looks like this.
- Crate information (name, version, git hash)
- Operating system (type, name, version)
- Command line (including all arguments)
- Environment variables (e.g.
SHELL
,PATH
, …) - File contents (e.g. config files)
- Directory contents
- Command output (e.g.
bash --version
) - Compile time information (profile, target, architecture, cpu features, etc.)
- Current working directory
- Date and time
- User defined collectors
- Markdown export
- Open report output in editor (instead of printing to stdout, see
git bugreport
) - Ask user for permission to gather information?
- Automatic anonymization of information? (e.g.: remove
/home/username
from paths) - JSON export (?)
ffmpeg
s-report
option- Interesting: "Setting the environment variable FFREPORT to any value has the same effect."
- see also: https://ffmpeg.org/bugreports.html
git bugreport
- https://git-scm.com/docs/git-bugreport
- git version --build-options
grails bugreport
Other crates that might be useful:
human-panic
- Make panic messages nice for humans to read.