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-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
-
-<html>
-<head>
-<title>How To Use Google Logging Library (glog)</title>
-
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
-<link href="http://www.google.com/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon"
-      rel="shortcut icon">
-<link href="designstyle.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet">
-<style type="text/css">
-<!--
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-    color: #3366ff;
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-    color: #000;
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-  }
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-//-->
-</style>
-</head>
-
-<body>
-
-<h1>How To Use Google Logging Library (glog)</h1>
-<small>(as of
-<script type=text/javascript>
-  var lm = new Date(document.lastModified);
-  document.write(lm.toDateString());
-</script>)
-</small>
-<br>
-
-<h2> <A NAME=intro>Introduction</A> </h2>
-
-<p><b>Google glog</b> is a library that implements application-level
-logging.  This library provides logging APIs based on C++-style
-streams and various helper macros.
-You can log a message by simply streaming things to LOG(&lt;a
-particular <a href="#severity">severity level</a>&gt;), e.g.
-
-<pre>
-   #include &lt;glog/logging.h&gt;
-
-   int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
-     // Initialize Google's logging library.
-     google::InitGoogleLogging(argv[0]);
-
-     // ...
-     LOG(INFO) &lt;&lt; "Found " &lt;&lt; num_cookies &lt;&lt; " cookies";
-   }
-</pre>
-
-<p>Google glog defines a series of macros that simplify many common logging
-tasks.  You can log messages by severity level, control logging
-behavior from the command line, log based on conditionals, abort the
-program when expected conditions are not met, introduce your own
-verbose logging levels, and more.  This document describes the
-functionality supported by glog.  Please note that this document
-doesn't describe all features in this library, but the most useful
-ones.  If you want to find less common features, please check
-header files under <code>src/glog</code> directory.
-
-<h2> <A NAME=severity>Severity Level</A> </h2>
-
-<p>
-You can specify one of the following severity levels (in
-increasing order of severity): <code>INFO</code>, <code>WARNING</code>,
-<code>ERROR</code>, and <code>FATAL</code>.
-Logging a <code>FATAL</code> message terminates the program (after the
-message is logged).
-Note that messages of a given severity are logged not only in the
-logfile for that severity, but also in all logfiles of lower severity.
-E.g., a message of severity <code>FATAL</code> will be logged to the
-logfiles of severity <code>FATAL</code>, <code>ERROR</code>,
-<code>WARNING</code>, and <code>INFO</code>.
-
-<p>
-The <code>DFATAL</code> severity logs a <code>FATAL</code> error in
-debug mode (i.e., there is no <code>NDEBUG</code> macro defined), but
-avoids halting the program in production by automatically reducing the
-severity to <code>ERROR</code>.
-
-<p>Unless otherwise specified, glog writes to the filename
-"/tmp/&lt;program name&gt;.&lt;hostname&gt;.&lt;user name&gt;.log.&lt;severity level&gt;.&lt;date&gt;.&lt;time&gt;.&lt;pid&gt;"
-(e.g., "/tmp/hello_world.example.com.hamaji.log.INFO.20080709-222411.10474").
-By default, glog copies the log messages of severity level
-<code>ERROR</code> or <code>FATAL</code> to standard error (stderr)
-in addition to log files.
-
-<h2><A NAME=flags>Setting Flags</A></h2>
-
-<p>Several flags influence glog's output behavior.
-If the <a href="https://github.com/gflags/gflags">Google
-gflags library</a> is installed on your machine, the
-<code>configure</code> script (see the INSTALL file in the package for
-detail of this script) will automatically detect and use it,
-allowing you to pass flags on the command line.  For example, if you
-want to turn the flag <code>--logtostderr</code> on, you can start
-your application with the following command line:
-
-<pre>
-   ./your_application --logtostderr=1
-</pre>
-
-If the Google gflags library isn't installed, you set flags via
-environment variables, prefixing the flag name with "GLOG_", e.g.
-
-<pre>
-   GLOG_logtostderr=1 ./your_application
-</pre>
-
-<!-- TODO(hamaji): Fill the version number
-<p>By glog version 0.x.x, you can use GLOG_* environment variables
-even if you have gflags. If both an environment variable and a flag
-are specified, the value specified by a flag wins. E.g., if GLOG_v=0
-and --v=1, the verbosity will be 1, not 0.
--->
-
-<p>The following flags are most commonly used:
-
-<dl>
-<dt><code>logtostderr</code> (<code>bool</code>, default=<code>false</code>)
-<dd>Log messages to stderr instead of logfiles.<br>
-Note: you can set binary flags to <code>true</code> by specifying
-<code>1</code>, <code>true</code>, or <code>yes</code> (case
-insensitive).
-Also, you can set binary flags to <code>false</code> by specifying
-<code>0</code>, <code>false</code>, or <code>no</code> (again, case
-insensitive).
-<dt><code>stderrthreshold</code> (<code>int</code>, default=2, which
-is <code>ERROR</code>)
-<dd>Copy log messages at or above this level to stderr in
-addition to logfiles.  The numbers of severity levels
-<code>INFO</code>, <code>WARNING</code>, <code>ERROR</code>, and
-<code>FATAL</code> are 0, 1, 2, and 3, respectively.
-<dt><code>minloglevel</code> (<code>int</code>, default=0, which
-is <code>INFO</code>)
-<dd>Log messages at or above this level.  Again, the numbers of
-severity levels <code>INFO</code>, <code>WARNING</code>,
-<code>ERROR</code>, and <code>FATAL</code> are 0, 1, 2, and 3,
-respectively.
-<dt><code>log_dir</code> (<code>string</code>, default="")
-<dd>If specified, logfiles are written into this directory instead
-of the default logging directory.
-<dt><code>v</code> (<code>int</code>, default=0)
-<dd>Show all <code>VLOG(m)</code> messages for <code>m</code> less or
-equal the value of this flag.  Overridable by --vmodule.
-See <a href="#verbose">the section about verbose logging</a> for more
-detail.
-<dt><code>vmodule</code> (<code>string</code>, default="")
-<dd>Per-module verbose level.  The argument has to contain a
-comma-separated list of &lt;module name&gt;=&lt;log level&gt;.
-&lt;module name&gt;
-is a glob pattern (e.g., <code>gfs*</code> for all modules whose name
-starts with "gfs"), matched against the filename base
-(that is, name ignoring .cc/.h./-inl.h).
-&lt;log level&gt; overrides any value given by --v.
-See also <a href="#verbose">the section about verbose logging</a>.
-</dl>
-
-<p>There are some other flags defined in logging.cc.  Please grep the
-source code for "DEFINE_" to see a complete list of all flags.
-
-<p>You can also modify flag values in your program by modifying global
-variables <code>FLAGS_*</code> . Most settings start working
-immediately after you update <code>FLAGS_*</code> . The exceptions are
-the flags related to destination files. For example, you might want to
-set <code>FLAGS_log_dir</code> before
-calling <code>google::InitGoogleLogging</code> . Here is an example:
-
-<pre>
-   LOG(INFO) << "file";
-   // Most flags work immediately after updating values.
-   FLAGS_logtostderr = 1;
-   LOG(INFO) << "stderr";
-   FLAGS_logtostderr = 0;
-   // This won't change the log destination. If you want to set this
-   // value, you should do this before google::InitGoogleLogging .
-   FLAGS_log_dir = "/some/log/directory";
-   LOG(INFO) << "the same file";
-</pre>
-
-<h2><A NAME=conditional>Conditional / Occasional Logging</A></h2>
-
-<p>Sometimes, you may only want to log a message under certain
-conditions. You can use the following macros to perform conditional
-logging:
-
-<pre>
-   LOG_IF(INFO, num_cookies &gt; 10) &lt;&lt; "Got lots of cookies";
-</pre>
-
-The "Got lots of cookies" message is logged only when the variable
-<code>num_cookies</code> exceeds 10.
-
-If a line of code is executed many times, it may be useful to only log
-a message at certain intervals.  This kind of logging is most useful
-for informational messages.
-
-<pre>
-   LOG_EVERY_N(INFO, 10) &lt;&lt; "Got the " &lt;&lt; google::COUNTER &lt;&lt; "th cookie";
-</pre>
-
-<p>The above line outputs a log messages on the 1st, 11th,
-21st, ... times it is executed.  Note that the special
-<code>google::COUNTER</code> value is used to identify which repetition is
-happening.
-
-<p>You can combine conditional and occasional logging with the
-following macro.
-
-<pre>
-   LOG_IF_EVERY_N(INFO, (size &gt; 1024), 10) &lt;&lt; "Got the " &lt;&lt; google::COUNTER
-                                           &lt;&lt; "th big cookie";
-</pre>
-
-<p>Instead of outputting a message every nth time, you can also limit
-the output to the first n occurrences:
-
-<pre>
-   LOG_FIRST_N(INFO, 20) &lt;&lt; "Got the " &lt;&lt; google::COUNTER &lt;&lt; "th cookie";
-</pre>
-
-<p>Outputs log messages for the first 20 times it is executed.  Again,
-the <code>google::COUNTER</code> identifier indicates which repetition is
-happening.
-
-<h2><A NAME=debug>Debug Mode Support</A></h2>
-
-<p>Special "debug mode" logging macros only have an effect in debug
-mode and are compiled away to nothing for non-debug mode
-compiles.  Use these macros to avoid slowing down your production
-application due to excessive logging.
-
-<pre>
-   DLOG(INFO) &lt;&lt; "Found cookies";
-
-   DLOG_IF(INFO, num_cookies &gt; 10) &lt;&lt; "Got lots of cookies";
-
-   DLOG_EVERY_N(INFO, 10) &lt;&lt; "Got the " &lt;&lt; google::COUNTER &lt;&lt; "th cookie";
-</pre>
-
-<h2><A NAME=check>CHECK Macros</A></h2>
-
-<p>It is a good practice to check expected conditions in your program
-frequently to detect errors as early as possible. The
-<code>CHECK</code> macro provides the ability to abort the application
-when a condition is not met, similar to the <code>assert</code> macro
-defined in the standard C library.
-
-<p><code>CHECK</code> aborts the application if a condition is not
-true.  Unlike <code>assert</code>, it is *not* controlled by
-<code>NDEBUG</code>, so the check will be executed regardless of
-compilation mode.  Therefore, <code>fp-&gt;Write(x)</code> in the
-following example is always executed:
-
-<pre>
-   CHECK(fp-&gt;Write(x) == 4) &lt;&lt; "Write failed!";
-</pre>
-
-<p>There are various helper macros for
-equality/inequality checks - <code>CHECK_EQ</code>,
-<code>CHECK_NE</code>, <code>CHECK_LE</code>, <code>CHECK_LT</code>,
-<code>CHECK_GE</code>, and <code>CHECK_GT</code>.
-They compare two values, and log a
-<code>FATAL</code> message including the two values when the result is
-not as expected.  The values must have <code>operator&lt;&lt;(ostream,
-...)</code> defined.
-
-<p>You may append to the error message like so:
-
-<pre>
-   CHECK_NE(1, 2) &lt;&lt; ": The world must be ending!";
-</pre>
-
-<p>We are very careful to ensure that each argument is evaluated exactly
-once, and that anything which is legal to pass as a function argument is
-legal here.  In particular, the arguments may be temporary expressions
-which will end up being destroyed at the end of the apparent statement,
-for example:
-
-<pre>
-   CHECK_EQ(string("abc")[1], 'b');
-</pre>
-
-<p>The compiler reports an error if one of the arguments is a
-pointer and the other is NULL. To work around this, simply static_cast
-NULL to the type of the desired pointer.
-
-<pre>
-   CHECK_EQ(some_ptr, static_cast&lt;SomeType*&gt;(NULL));
-</pre>
-
-<p>Better yet, use the CHECK_NOTNULL macro:
-
-<pre>
-   CHECK_NOTNULL(some_ptr);
-   some_ptr-&gt;DoSomething();
-</pre>
-
-<p>Since this macro returns the given pointer, this is very useful in
-constructor initializer lists.
-
-<pre>
-   struct S {
-     S(Something* ptr) : ptr_(CHECK_NOTNULL(ptr)) {}
-     Something* ptr_;
-   };
-</pre>
-
-<p>Note that you cannot use this macro as a C++ stream due to this
-feature.  Please use <code>CHECK_EQ</code> described above to log a
-custom message before aborting the application.
-
-<p>If you are comparing C strings (char *), a handy set of macros
-performs case sensitive as well as case insensitive comparisons -
-<code>CHECK_STREQ</code>, <code>CHECK_STRNE</code>,
-<code>CHECK_STRCASEEQ</code>, and <code>CHECK_STRCASENE</code>.  The
-CASE versions are case-insensitive.  You can safely pass <code>NULL</code>
-pointers for this macro.  They treat <code>NULL</code> and any
-non-<code>NULL</code> string as not equal.  Two <code>NULL</code>s are
-equal.
-
-<p>Note that both arguments may be temporary strings which are
-destructed at the end of the current "full expression"
-(e.g., <code>CHECK_STREQ(Foo().c_str(), Bar().c_str())</code> where
-<code>Foo</code> and <code>Bar</code> return C++'s
-<code>std::string</code>).
-
-<p>The <code>CHECK_DOUBLE_EQ</code> macro checks the equality of two
-floating point values, accepting a small error margin.
-<code>CHECK_NEAR</code> accepts a third floating point argument, which
-specifies the acceptable error margin.
-
-<h2><A NAME=verbose>Verbose Logging</A></h2>
-
-<p>When you are chasing difficult bugs, thorough log messages are very
-useful.  However, you may want to ignore too verbose messages in usual
-development.  For such verbose logging, glog provides the
-<code>VLOG</code> macro, which allows you to define your own numeric
-logging levels.  The <code>--v</code> command line option controls
-which verbose messages are logged:
-
-<pre>
-   VLOG(1) &lt;&lt; "I'm printed when you run the program with --v=1 or higher";
-   VLOG(2) &lt;&lt; "I'm printed when you run the program with --v=2 or higher";
-</pre>
-
-<p>With <code>VLOG</code>, the lower the verbose level, the more
-likely messages are to be logged.  For example, if
-<code>--v==1</code>, <code>VLOG(1)</code> will log, but
-<code>VLOG(2)</code> will not log.  This is opposite of the severity
-level, where <code>INFO</code> is 0, and <code>ERROR</code> is 2.
-<code>--minloglevel</code> of 1 will log <code>WARNING</code> and
-above.  Though you can specify any integers for both <code>VLOG</code>
-macro and <code>--v</code> flag, the common values for them are small
-positive integers.  For example, if you write <code>VLOG(0)</code>,
-you should specify <code>--v=-1</code> or lower to silence it.  This
-is less useful since we may not want verbose logs by default in most
-cases.  The <code>VLOG</code> macros always log at the
-<code>INFO</code> log level (when they log at all).
-
-<p>Verbose logging can be controlled from the command line on a
-per-module basis:
-
-<pre>
-   --vmodule=mapreduce=2,file=1,gfs*=3 --v=0
-</pre>
-
-<p>will:
-
-<ul>
-  <li>a. Print VLOG(2) and lower messages from mapreduce.{h,cc}
-  <li>b. Print VLOG(1) and lower messages from file.{h,cc}
-  <li>c. Print VLOG(3) and lower messages from files prefixed with "gfs"
-  <li>d. Print VLOG(0) and lower messages from elsewhere
-</ul>
-
-<p>The wildcarding functionality shown by (c) supports both '*'
-(matches 0 or more characters) and '?' (matches any single character)
-wildcards.  Please also check the section about <a
-href="#flags">command line flags</a>.
-
-<p>There's also <code>VLOG_IS_ON(n)</code> "verbose level" condition
-macro.  This macro returns true when the <code>--v</code> is equal or
-greater than <code>n</code>.  To be used as
-
-<pre>
-   if (VLOG_IS_ON(2)) {
-     // do some logging preparation and logging
-     // that can't be accomplished with just VLOG(2) &lt;&lt; ...;
-   }
-</pre>
-
-<p>Verbose level condition macros <code>VLOG_IF</code>,
-<code>VLOG_EVERY_N</code> and <code>VLOG_IF_EVERY_N</code> behave
-analogous to <code>LOG_IF</code>, <code>LOG_EVERY_N</code>,
-<code>LOF_IF_EVERY</code>, but accept a numeric verbosity level as
-opposed to a severity level.
-
-<pre>
-   VLOG_IF(1, (size &gt; 1024))
-      &lt;&lt; "I'm printed when size is more than 1024 and when you run the "
-         "program with --v=1 or more";
-   VLOG_EVERY_N(1, 10)
-      &lt;&lt; "I'm printed every 10th occurrence, and when you run the program "
-         "with --v=1 or more. Present occurence is " &lt;&lt; google::COUNTER;
-   VLOG_IF_EVERY_N(1, (size &gt; 1024), 10)
-      &lt;&lt; "I'm printed on every 10th occurence of case when size is more "
-         " than 1024, when you run the program with --v=1 or more. ";
-         "Present occurence is " &lt;&lt; google::COUNTER;
-</pre>
-
-<h2> <A name="signal">Failure Signal Handler</A> </h2>
-
-<p>
-The library provides a convenient signal handler that will dump useful
-information when the program crashes on certain signals such as SIGSEGV.
-The signal handler can be installed by
-google::InstallFailureSignalHandler().  The following is an example of output
-from the signal handler.
-
-<pre>
-*** Aborted at 1225095260 (unix time) try "date -d @1225095260" if you are using GNU date ***
-*** SIGSEGV (@0x0) received by PID 17711 (TID 0x7f893090a6f0) from PID 0; stack trace: ***
-PC: @           0x412eb1 TestWaitingLogSink::send()
-    @     0x7f892fb417d0 (unknown)
-    @           0x412eb1 TestWaitingLogSink::send()
-    @     0x7f89304f7f06 google::LogMessage::SendToLog()
-    @     0x7f89304f35af google::LogMessage::Flush()
-    @     0x7f89304f3739 google::LogMessage::~LogMessage()
-    @           0x408cf4 TestLogSinkWaitTillSent()
-    @           0x4115de main
-    @     0x7f892f7ef1c4 (unknown)
-    @           0x4046f9 (unknown)
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-By default, the signal handler writes the failure dump to the standard
-error.  You can customize the destination by InstallFailureWriter().
-
-<h2> <A name="misc">Miscellaneous Notes</A> </h2>
-
-<h3><A NAME=message>Performance of Messages</A></h3>
-
-<p>The conditional logging macros provided by glog (e.g.,
-<code>CHECK</code>, <code>LOG_IF</code>, <code>VLOG</code>, ...) are
-carefully implemented and don't execute the right hand side
-expressions when the conditions are false.  So, the following check
-may not sacrifice the performance of your application.
-
-<pre>
-   CHECK(obj.ok) &lt;&lt; obj.CreatePrettyFormattedStringButVerySlow();
-</pre>
-
-<h3><A NAME=failure>User-defined Failure Function</A></h3>
-
-<p><code>FATAL</code> severity level messages or unsatisfied
-<code>CHECK</code> condition terminate your program.  You can change
-the behavior of the termination by
-<code>InstallFailureFunction</code>.
-
-<pre>
-   void YourFailureFunction() {
-     // Reports something...
-     exit(1);
-   }
-
-   int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
-     google::InstallFailureFunction(&amp;YourFailureFunction);
-   }
-</pre>
-
-<p>By default, glog tries to dump stacktrace and makes the program
-exit with status 1.  The stacktrace is produced only when you run the
-program on an architecture for which glog supports stack tracing (as
-of September 2008, glog supports stack tracing for x86 and x86_64).
-
-<h3><A NAME=raw>Raw Logging</A></h3>
-
-<p>The header file <code>&lt;glog/raw_logging.h&gt;</code> can be
-used for thread-safe logging, which does not allocate any memory or
-acquire any locks.  Therefore, the macros defined in this
-header file can be used by low-level memory allocation and
-synchronization code.
-Please check <code>src/glog/raw_logging.h.in</code> for detail.
-</p>
-
-<h3><A NAME=plog>Google Style perror()</A></h3>
-
-<p><code>PLOG()</code> and <code>PLOG_IF()</code> and
-<code>PCHECK()</code> behave exactly like their <code>LOG*</code> and
-<code>CHECK</code> equivalents with the addition that they append a
-description of the current state of errno to their output lines.
-E.g.
-
-<pre>
-   PCHECK(write(1, NULL, 2) &gt;= 0) &lt;&lt; "Write NULL failed";
-</pre>
-
-<p>This check fails with the following error message.
-
-<pre>
-   F0825 185142 test.cc:22] Check failed: write(1, NULL, 2) &gt;= 0 Write NULL failed: Bad address [14]
-</pre>
-
-<h3><A NAME=syslog>Syslog</A></h3>
-
-<p><code>SYSLOG</code>, <code>SYSLOG_IF</code>, and
-<code>SYSLOG_EVERY_N</code> macros are available.
-These log to syslog in addition to the normal logs.  Be aware that
-logging to syslog can drastically impact performance, especially if
-syslog is configured for remote logging!  Make sure you understand the
-implications of outputting to syslog before you use these macros. In
-general, it's wise to use these macros sparingly.
-
-<h3><A NAME=strip>Strip Logging Messages</A></h3>
-
-<p>Strings used in log messages can increase the size of your binary
-and present a privacy concern.  You can therefore instruct glog to
-remove all strings which fall below a certain severity level by using
-the GOOGLE_STRIP_LOG macro:
-
-<p>If your application has code like this:
-
-<pre>
-   #define GOOGLE_STRIP_LOG 1    // this must go before the #include!
-   #include &lt;glog/logging.h&gt;
-</pre>
-
-<p>The compiler will remove the log messages whose severities are less
-than the specified integer value.  Since
-<code>VLOG</code> logs at the severity level <code>INFO</code>
-(numeric value <code>0</code>),
-setting <code>GOOGLE_STRIP_LOG</code> to 1 or greater removes
-all log messages associated with <code>VLOG</code>s as well as
-<code>INFO</code> log statements.
-
-<h3><A NAME=strip>Automatically Remove Old Logs</A></h3>
-
-<p>To enable the log cleaner:
-
-<pre>
-google::EnableLogCleaner(3); // keep your logs for 3 days
-</pre>
-
-And then Google glog will check if there are overdue logs whenever
-a flush is performed. In this example, any log file from your project whose
-last modified time is greater than 3 days will be unlink()ed.
-
-<p>This feature can be disabled at any time (if it has been enabled)
-
-<pre>
-google::DisableLogCleaner();
-</pre>
-
-<h3><A NAME=windows>Notes for Windows users</A></h3>
-
-<p>Google glog defines a severity level <code>ERROR</code>, which is
-also defined in <code>windows.h</code> . You can make glog not define
-<code>INFO</code>, <code>WARNING</code>, <code>ERROR</code>,
-and <code>FATAL</code> by defining
-<code>GLOG_NO_ABBREVIATED_SEVERITIES</code> before
-including <code>glog/logging.h</code> . Even with this macro, you can
-still use the iostream like logging facilities:
-
-<pre>
-  #define GLOG_NO_ABBREVIATED_SEVERITIES
-  #include &lt;windows.h&gt;
-  #include &lt;glog/logging.h&gt;
-
-  // ...
-
-  LOG(ERROR) &lt;&lt; "This should work";
-  LOG_IF(ERROR, x &gt; y) &lt;&lt; "This should be also OK";
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-However, you cannot
-use <code>INFO</code>, <code>WARNING</code>, <code>ERROR</code>,
-and <code>FATAL</code> anymore for functions defined
-in <code>glog/logging.h</code> .
-
-<pre>
-  #define GLOG_NO_ABBREVIATED_SEVERITIES
-  #include &lt;windows.h&gt;
-  #include &lt;glog/logging.h&gt;
-
-  // ...
-
-  // This won't work.
-  // google::FlushLogFiles(google::ERROR);
-
-  // Use this instead.
-  google::FlushLogFiles(google::GLOG_ERROR);
-</pre>
-
-<p>
-If you don't need <code>ERROR</code> defined
-by <code>windows.h</code>, there are a couple of more workarounds
-which sometimes don't work:
-
-<ul>
-  <li>#define <code>WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN</code> or <code>NOGDI</code>
-      <strong>before</strong> you #include <code>windows.h</code> .
-  <li>#undef <code>ERROR</code> <strong>after</strong> you #include
-      <code>windows.h</code> .
-</ul>
-
-<p>See <a href="http://code.google.com/p/google-glog/issues/detail?id=33">
-this issue</a> for more detail.
-
-<hr>
-<address>
-Shinichiro Hamaji<br>
-Gregor Hohpe<br>
-<script type=text/javascript>
-  var lm = new Date(document.lastModified);
-  document.write(lm.toDateString());
-</script>
-</address>
-
-</body>
-</html>