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BitLogger/docs/api/async-logger-has-failed.md
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2026-05-12 13:55:05 +08:00

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name, group, category, update-time, description, key-word
name group category update-time description key-word
async-logger-has-failed api async 20260512 Read whether the async logger worker has encountered a failure during queue drain.
async
logger
failure
public

Async-logger-has-failed

Read whether the async logger worker has encountered a failure. This helper is a compact health signal for async delivery problems.

Interface

pub fn[S] AsyncLogger::has_failed(self : AsyncLogger[S]) -> Bool {}

input

  • self : AsyncLogger[S] - Async logger whose failure flag should be inspected.

output

  • Bool - Whether the worker has failed.

Explanation

Detailed rules explaining key parameters and behaviors

  • run() clears previous failure state at startup.
  • If the worker loop raises an error, the logger records that failure and exposes it through this flag.
  • This helper is intentionally compact and should usually be paired with last_error() for details.
  • Failure state is about runtime drain execution, not whether records were dropped due to overflow policy.

How to Use

Here are some specific examples provided.

When Need A Fast Failure Signal

When runtime diagnostics should branch on worker health:

if logger.has_failed() {
  println(logger.last_error())
}

In this example, the code checks failure state first, then reads the error detail.

When Inspect Async Runtime State In Tests

When a test needs to confirm that drain execution stayed healthy:

ignore(logger.has_failed())

In this example, the helper exposes a simple pass-fail runtime indicator.

Error Case

e.g.:

  • If has_failed() is false, queue pressure or dropped records may still exist for non-failure reasons.

  • If has_failed() is true, callers should inspect last_error() or state() for more context.

Notes

  1. This helper reports worker failure, not general queue stress.

  2. Pair it with last_error() when you need actionable detail.