As this is a background process on server side, don't use javascript.
1). WC Logs and the WC_Logger
Class in WooCommerce for better debugging
To access the results of the log easily from the dashboard, you can log to a WC logger rather than the error log.
You can access error logs by going to WooCommerce > System Status > Logs.
Then you will be able to choose and "view"the error log file you need, giving you the debugging details that you need. Error logs are also located in the /wc-logs folder within your site install.
Running a stack trace on a caught exception (example):
// Log any exceptions to a WC logger
$log = new WC_Logger();
$log_entry = print_r( $e, true );
$log_entry .= 'Exception Trace: ' . print_r( $e->getTraceAsString(), true );
$log->log( 'new-woocommerce-log-name', $log_entry );
Notes:
For example:
$logger = wc_get_logger();
$logger->debug( 'debug message', array( 'source' => 'my-extension' ) );
Related:
2). Debugging with WordPress WP_DEBUG
Log (as an alternative)
a) First edit your wp-config.php
file adding the following lines to enable debug (if these are already defined, edit the values):
define( 'WP_DEBUG', true );
define( 'WP_DEBUG_LOG', true );
define( 'WP_DEBUG_DISPLAY', false );
As errors are logged, they should appear in wp-content/debug.log
. You can open this file in a text editor.
b) On your code: Use the following (where $variable
is the variable to be displayed in the error log:
error_log( print_r( $variable, true ) );
Now you will get the data for debugging.
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