Expand description
§no_debug
§Helper types to omit debug info for select values.
Provides wrapper structs with default Debug
impls.
This allows you to use the default implementation of Debug
for large structs while enabling you
to:
- avoid using
Debug
impls that traverse deeply nested or overly large structures, - avoid using a
Debug
impl that leaks info that should not be logged.
This can improve:
- readability (logs can focus on the information you care about),
- debuggability & security (logs can be more complete without accidentally leaking private info),
- and performance (complex data structures don’t need to be traversed for debugging unless intentionally requested via
Deref
).
Example usage: Hiding a user’s password from logs.
use no_debug::{NoDebug, WithTypeInfo, Ellipses};
#[derive(Debug)]
struct UserInfo {
username: String,
password: NoDebug<String>, // Defaults to WithTypeInfo
posts: NoDebug<Vec<String>, Ellipses>,
}
let user = UserInfo {
username: "Cypher1".to_string(),
password: "hunter2".to_string().into(),
posts: vec![
"long post 1...".to_string(),
"long post 2...".to_string(),
"long post 3...".to_string(),
].into()
};
// The password is hidden by default
assert_eq!(
format!("{:#?}", user),
r#"UserInfo {
username: "Cypher1",
password: <no debug: alloc::string::String>,
posts: ...,
}"#
);
// And when accessed
assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", user.password), r#"<no debug: alloc::string::String>"#);
// But it can be extracted easily for operating on the data inside, at which point it is
// visible again.
assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", *user.password), r#""hunter2""#);
// The debug output is based on the Msg type.
assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", user.posts), r#"..."#);
// Output can be changed easily with a type conversion
let post_with_type: NoDebug<Vec<String>, WithTypeInfo> = user.posts.take().into();
assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", post_with_type), r#"<no debug: alloc::vec::Vec<alloc::string::String>>"#);