| # Copyright 2001-2005 by Vinay Sajip. All Rights Reserved. |
| # |
| # Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its |
| # documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, |
| # provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that |
| # both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in |
| # supporting documentation, and that the name of Vinay Sajip |
| # not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution |
| # of the software without specific, written prior permission. |
| # VINAY SAJIP DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING |
| # ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL |
| # VINAY SAJIP BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR |
| # ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER |
| # IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT |
| # OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. |
| |
| """ |
| Additional handlers for the logging package for Python. The core package is |
| based on PEP 282 and comments thereto in comp.lang.python, and influenced by |
| Apache's log4j system. |
| |
| Should work under Python versions >= 1.5.2, except that source line |
| information is not available unless 'sys._getframe()' is. |
| |
| Copyright (C) 2001-2004 Vinay Sajip. All Rights Reserved. |
| |
| To use, simply 'import logging' and log away! |
| """ |
| |
| import sys, logging, socket, types, os, string, cPickle, struct, time, glob |
| |
| try: |
| import codecs |
| except ImportError: |
| codecs = None |
| |
| # |
| # Some constants... |
| # |
| |
| DEFAULT_TCP_LOGGING_PORT = 9020 |
| DEFAULT_UDP_LOGGING_PORT = 9021 |
| DEFAULT_HTTP_LOGGING_PORT = 9022 |
| DEFAULT_SOAP_LOGGING_PORT = 9023 |
| SYSLOG_UDP_PORT = 514 |
| |
| _MIDNIGHT = 24 * 60 * 60 # number of seconds in a day |
| |
| class BaseRotatingHandler(logging.FileHandler): |
| """ |
| Base class for handlers that rotate log files at a certain point. |
| Not meant to be instantiated directly. Instead, use RotatingFileHandler |
| or TimedRotatingFileHandler. |
| """ |
| def __init__(self, filename, mode, encoding=None): |
| """ |
| Use the specified filename for streamed logging |
| """ |
| if codecs is None: |
| encoding = None |
| logging.FileHandler.__init__(self, filename, mode, encoding) |
| self.mode = mode |
| self.encoding = encoding |
| |
| def emit(self, record): |
| """ |
| Emit a record. |
| |
| Output the record to the file, catering for rollover as described |
| in doRollover(). |
| """ |
| try: |
| if self.shouldRollover(record): |
| self.doRollover() |
| logging.FileHandler.emit(self, record) |
| except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit): |
| raise |
| except: |
| self.handleError(record) |
| |
| class RotatingFileHandler(BaseRotatingHandler): |
| """ |
| Handler for logging to a set of files, which switches from one file |
| to the next when the current file reaches a certain size. |
| """ |
| def __init__(self, filename, mode='a', maxBytes=0, backupCount=0, encoding=None): |
| """ |
| Open the specified file and use it as the stream for logging. |
| |
| By default, the file grows indefinitely. You can specify particular |
| values of maxBytes and backupCount to allow the file to rollover at |
| a predetermined size. |
| |
| Rollover occurs whenever the current log file is nearly maxBytes in |
| length. If backupCount is >= 1, the system will successively create |
| new files with the same pathname as the base file, but with extensions |
| ".1", ".2" etc. appended to it. For example, with a backupCount of 5 |
| and a base file name of "app.log", you would get "app.log", |
| "app.log.1", "app.log.2", ... through to "app.log.5". The file being |
| written to is always "app.log" - when it gets filled up, it is closed |
| and renamed to "app.log.1", and if files "app.log.1", "app.log.2" etc. |
| exist, then they are renamed to "app.log.2", "app.log.3" etc. |
| respectively. |
| |
| If maxBytes is zero, rollover never occurs. |
| """ |
| if maxBytes > 0: |
| mode = 'a' # doesn't make sense otherwise! |
| BaseRotatingHandler.__init__(self, filename, mode, encoding) |
| self.maxBytes = maxBytes |
| self.backupCount = backupCount |
| |
| def doRollover(self): |
| """ |
| Do a rollover, as described in __init__(). |
| """ |
| |
| self.stream.close() |
| if self.backupCount > 0: |
| for i in range(self.backupCount - 1, 0, -1): |
| sfn = "%s.%d" % (self.baseFilename, i) |
| dfn = "%s.%d" % (self.baseFilename, i + 1) |
| if os.path.exists(sfn): |
| #print "%s -> %s" % (sfn, dfn) |
| if os.path.exists(dfn): |
| os.remove(dfn) |
| os.rename(sfn, dfn) |
| dfn = self.baseFilename + ".1" |
| if os.path.exists(dfn): |
| os.remove(dfn) |
| os.rename(self.baseFilename, dfn) |
| #print "%s -> %s" % (self.baseFilename, dfn) |
| if self.encoding: |
| self.stream = codecs.open(self.baseFilename, 'w', self.encoding) |
| else: |
| self.stream = open(self.baseFilename, 'w') |
| |
| def shouldRollover(self, record): |
| """ |
| Determine if rollover should occur. |
| |
| Basically, see if the supplied record would cause the file to exceed |
| the size limit we have. |
| """ |
| if self.maxBytes > 0: # are we rolling over? |
| msg = "%s\n" % self.format(record) |
| self.stream.seek(0, 2) #due to non-posix-compliant Windows feature |
| if self.stream.tell() + len(msg) >= self.maxBytes: |
| return 1 |
| return 0 |
| |
| class TimedRotatingFileHandler(BaseRotatingHandler): |
| """ |
| Handler for logging to a file, rotating the log file at certain timed |
| intervals. |
| |
| If backupCount is > 0, when rollover is done, no more than backupCount |
| files are kept - the oldest ones are deleted. |
| """ |
| def __init__(self, filename, when='h', interval=1, backupCount=0, encoding=None): |
| BaseRotatingHandler.__init__(self, filename, 'a', encoding) |
| self.when = string.upper(when) |
| self.backupCount = backupCount |
| # Calculate the real rollover interval, which is just the number of |
| # seconds between rollovers. Also set the filename suffix used when |
| # a rollover occurs. Current 'when' events supported: |
| # S - Seconds |
| # M - Minutes |
| # H - Hours |
| # D - Days |
| # midnight - roll over at midnight |
| # W{0-6} - roll over on a certain day; 0 - Monday |
| # |
| # Case of the 'when' specifier is not important; lower or upper case |
| # will work. |
| currentTime = int(time.time()) |
| if self.when == 'S': |
| self.interval = 1 # one second |
| self.suffix = "%Y-%m-%d_%H-%M-%S" |
| elif self.when == 'M': |
| self.interval = 60 # one minute |
| self.suffix = "%Y-%m-%d_%H-%M" |
| elif self.when == 'H': |
| self.interval = 60 * 60 # one hour |
| self.suffix = "%Y-%m-%d_%H" |
| elif self.when == 'D' or self.when == 'MIDNIGHT': |
| self.interval = 60 * 60 * 24 # one day |
| self.suffix = "%Y-%m-%d" |
| elif self.when.startswith('W'): |
| self.interval = 60 * 60 * 24 * 7 # one week |
| if len(self.when) != 2: |
| raise ValueError("You must specify a day for weekly rollover from 0 to 6 (0 is Monday): %s" % self.when) |
| if self.when[1] < '0' or self.when[1] > '6': |
| raise ValueError("Invalid day specified for weekly rollover: %s" % self.when) |
| self.dayOfWeek = int(self.when[1]) |
| self.suffix = "%Y-%m-%d" |
| else: |
| raise ValueError("Invalid rollover interval specified: %s" % self.when) |
| |
| self.interval = self.interval * interval # multiply by units requested |
| self.rolloverAt = currentTime + self.interval |
| |
| # If we are rolling over at midnight or weekly, then the interval is already known. |
| # What we need to figure out is WHEN the next interval is. In other words, |
| # if you are rolling over at midnight, then your base interval is 1 day, |
| # but you want to start that one day clock at midnight, not now. So, we |
| # have to fudge the rolloverAt value in order to trigger the first rollover |
| # at the right time. After that, the regular interval will take care of |
| # the rest. Note that this code doesn't care about leap seconds. :) |
| if self.when == 'MIDNIGHT' or self.when.startswith('W'): |
| # This could be done with less code, but I wanted it to be clear |
| t = time.localtime(currentTime) |
| currentHour = t[3] |
| currentMinute = t[4] |
| currentSecond = t[5] |
| # r is the number of seconds left between now and midnight |
| r = _MIDNIGHT - ((currentHour * 60 + currentMinute) * 60 + |
| currentSecond) |
| self.rolloverAt = currentTime + r |
| # If we are rolling over on a certain day, add in the number of days until |
| # the next rollover, but offset by 1 since we just calculated the time |
| # until the next day starts. There are three cases: |
| # Case 1) The day to rollover is today; in this case, do nothing |
| # Case 2) The day to rollover is further in the interval (i.e., today is |
| # day 2 (Wednesday) and rollover is on day 6 (Sunday). Days to |
| # next rollover is simply 6 - 2 - 1, or 3. |
| # Case 3) The day to rollover is behind us in the interval (i.e., today |
| # is day 5 (Saturday) and rollover is on day 3 (Thursday). |
| # Days to rollover is 6 - 5 + 3, or 4. In this case, it's the |
| # number of days left in the current week (1) plus the number |
| # of days in the next week until the rollover day (3). |
| if when.startswith('W'): |
| day = t[6] # 0 is Monday |
| if day > self.dayOfWeek: |
| daysToWait = (day - self.dayOfWeek) - 1 |
| self.rolloverAt = self.rolloverAt + (daysToWait * (60 * 60 * 24)) |
| if day < self.dayOfWeek: |
| daysToWait = (6 - self.dayOfWeek) + day |
| self.rolloverAt = self.rolloverAt + (daysToWait * (60 * 60 * 24)) |
| |
| #print "Will rollover at %d, %d seconds from now" % (self.rolloverAt, self.rolloverAt - currentTime) |
| |
| def shouldRollover(self, record): |
| """ |
| Determine if rollover should occur |
| |
| record is not used, as we are just comparing times, but it is needed so |
| the method siguratures are the same |
| """ |
| t = int(time.time()) |
| if t >= self.rolloverAt: |
| return 1 |
| #print "No need to rollover: %d, %d" % (t, self.rolloverAt) |
| return 0 |
| |
| def doRollover(self): |
| """ |
| do a rollover; in this case, a date/time stamp is appended to the filename |
| when the rollover happens. However, you want the file to be named for the |
| start of the interval, not the current time. If there is a backup count, |
| then we have to get a list of matching filenames, sort them and remove |
| the one with the oldest suffix. |
| """ |
| self.stream.close() |
| # get the time that this sequence started at and make it a TimeTuple |
| t = self.rolloverAt - self.interval |
| timeTuple = time.localtime(t) |
| dfn = self.baseFilename + "." + time.strftime(self.suffix, timeTuple) |
| if os.path.exists(dfn): |
| os.remove(dfn) |
| os.rename(self.baseFilename, dfn) |
| if self.backupCount > 0: |
| # find the oldest log file and delete it |
| s = glob.glob(self.baseFilename + ".20*") |
| if len(s) > self.backupCount: |
| s.sort() |
| os.remove(s[0]) |
| #print "%s -> %s" % (self.baseFilename, dfn) |
| if self.encoding: |
| self.stream = codecs.open(self.baseFilename, 'w', self.encoding) |
| else: |
| self.stream = open(self.baseFilename, 'w') |
| self.rolloverAt = self.rolloverAt + self.interval |
| |
| class SocketHandler(logging.Handler): |
| """ |
| A handler class which writes logging records, in pickle format, to |
| a streaming socket. The socket is kept open across logging calls. |
| If the peer resets it, an attempt is made to reconnect on the next call. |
| The pickle which is sent is that of the LogRecord's attribute dictionary |
| (__dict__), so that the receiver does not need to have the logging module |
| installed in order to process the logging event. |
| |
| To unpickle the record at the receiving end into a LogRecord, use the |
| makeLogRecord function. |
| """ |
| |
| def __init__(self, host, port): |
| """ |
| Initializes the handler with a specific host address and port. |
| |
| The attribute 'closeOnError' is set to 1 - which means that if |
| a socket error occurs, the socket is silently closed and then |
| reopened on the next logging call. |
| """ |
| logging.Handler.__init__(self) |
| self.host = host |
| self.port = port |
| self.sock = None |
| self.closeOnError = 0 |
| self.retryTime = None |
| # |
| # Exponential backoff parameters. |
| # |
| self.retryStart = 1.0 |
| self.retryMax = 30.0 |
| self.retryFactor = 2.0 |
| |
| def makeSocket(self): |
| """ |
| A factory method which allows subclasses to define the precise |
| type of socket they want. |
| """ |
| s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) |
| s.connect((self.host, self.port)) |
| return s |
| |
| def createSocket(self): |
| """ |
| Try to create a socket, using an exponential backoff with |
| a max retry time. Thanks to Robert Olson for the original patch |
| (SF #815911) which has been slightly refactored. |
| """ |
| now = time.time() |
| # Either retryTime is None, in which case this |
| # is the first time back after a disconnect, or |
| # we've waited long enough. |
| if self.retryTime is None: |
| attempt = 1 |
| else: |
| attempt = (now >= self.retryTime) |
| if attempt: |
| try: |
| self.sock = self.makeSocket() |
| self.retryTime = None # next time, no delay before trying |
| except: |
| #Creation failed, so set the retry time and return. |
| if self.retryTime is None: |
| self.retryPeriod = self.retryStart |
| else: |
| self.retryPeriod = self.retryPeriod * self.retryFactor |
| if self.retryPeriod > self.retryMax: |
| self.retryPeriod = self.retryMax |
| self.retryTime = now + self.retryPeriod |
| |
| def send(self, s): |
| """ |
| Send a pickled string to the socket. |
| |
| This function allows for partial sends which can happen when the |
| network is busy. |
| """ |
| if self.sock is None: |
| self.createSocket() |
| #self.sock can be None either because we haven't reached the retry |
| #time yet, or because we have reached the retry time and retried, |
| #but are still unable to connect. |
| if self.sock: |
| try: |
| if hasattr(self.sock, "sendall"): |
| self.sock.sendall(s) |
| else: |
| sentsofar = 0 |
| left = len(s) |
| while left > 0: |
| sent = self.sock.send(s[sentsofar:]) |
| sentsofar = sentsofar + sent |
| left = left - sent |
| except socket.error: |
| self.sock.close() |
| self.sock = None # so we can call createSocket next time |
| |
| def makePickle(self, record): |
| """ |
| Pickles the record in binary format with a length prefix, and |
| returns it ready for transmission across the socket. |
| """ |
| ei = record.exc_info |
| if ei: |
| dummy = self.format(record) # just to get traceback text into record.exc_text |
| record.exc_info = None # to avoid Unpickleable error |
| s = cPickle.dumps(record.__dict__, 1) |
| if ei: |
| record.exc_info = ei # for next handler |
| slen = struct.pack(">L", len(s)) |
| return slen + s |
| |
| def handleError(self, record): |
| """ |
| Handle an error during logging. |
| |
| An error has occurred during logging. Most likely cause - |
| connection lost. Close the socket so that we can retry on the |
| next event. |
| """ |
| if self.closeOnError and self.sock: |
| self.sock.close() |
| self.sock = None #try to reconnect next time |
| else: |
| logging.Handler.handleError(self, record) |
| |
| def emit(self, record): |
| """ |
| Emit a record. |
| |
| Pickles the record and writes it to the socket in binary format. |
| If there is an error with the socket, silently drop the packet. |
| If there was a problem with the socket, re-establishes the |
| socket. |
| """ |
| try: |
| s = self.makePickle(record) |
| self.send(s) |
| except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit): |
| raise |
| except: |
| self.handleError(record) |
| |
| def close(self): |
| """ |
| Closes the socket. |
| """ |
| if self.sock: |
| self.sock.close() |
| self.sock = None |
| logging.Handler.close(self) |
| |
| class DatagramHandler(SocketHandler): |
| """ |
| A handler class which writes logging records, in pickle format, to |
| a datagram socket. The pickle which is sent is that of the LogRecord's |
| attribute dictionary (__dict__), so that the receiver does not need to |
| have the logging module installed in order to process the logging event. |
| |
| To unpickle the record at the receiving end into a LogRecord, use the |
| makeLogRecord function. |
| |
| """ |
| def __init__(self, host, port): |
| """ |
| Initializes the handler with a specific host address and port. |
| """ |
| SocketHandler.__init__(self, host, port) |
| self.closeOnError = 0 |
| |
| def makeSocket(self): |
| """ |
| The factory method of SocketHandler is here overridden to create |
| a UDP socket (SOCK_DGRAM). |
| """ |
| s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM) |
| return s |
| |
| def send(self, s): |
| """ |
| Send a pickled string to a socket. |
| |
| This function no longer allows for partial sends which can happen |
| when the network is busy - UDP does not guarantee delivery and |
| can deliver packets out of sequence. |
| """ |
| if self.sock is None: |
| self.createSocket() |
| self.sock.sendto(s, (self.host, self.port)) |
| |
| class SysLogHandler(logging.Handler): |
| """ |
| A handler class which sends formatted logging records to a syslog |
| server. Based on Sam Rushing's syslog module: |
| http://www.nightmare.com/squirl/python-ext/misc/syslog.py |
| Contributed by Nicolas Untz (after which minor refactoring changes |
| have been made). |
| """ |
| |
| # from <linux/sys/syslog.h>: |
| # ====================================================================== |
| # priorities/facilities are encoded into a single 32-bit quantity, where |
| # the bottom 3 bits are the priority (0-7) and the top 28 bits are the |
| # facility (0-big number). Both the priorities and the facilities map |
| # roughly one-to-one to strings in the syslogd(8) source code. This |
| # mapping is included in this file. |
| # |
| # priorities (these are ordered) |
| |
| LOG_EMERG = 0 # system is unusable |
| LOG_ALERT = 1 # action must be taken immediately |
| LOG_CRIT = 2 # critical conditions |
| LOG_ERR = 3 # error conditions |
| LOG_WARNING = 4 # warning conditions |
| LOG_NOTICE = 5 # normal but significant condition |
| LOG_INFO = 6 # informational |
| LOG_DEBUG = 7 # debug-level messages |
| |
| # facility codes |
| LOG_KERN = 0 # kernel messages |
| LOG_USER = 1 # random user-level messages |
| LOG_MAIL = 2 # mail system |
| LOG_DAEMON = 3 # system daemons |
| LOG_AUTH = 4 # security/authorization messages |
| LOG_SYSLOG = 5 # messages generated internally by syslogd |
| LOG_LPR = 6 # line printer subsystem |
| LOG_NEWS = 7 # network news subsystem |
| LOG_UUCP = 8 # UUCP subsystem |
| LOG_CRON = 9 # clock daemon |
| LOG_AUTHPRIV = 10 # security/authorization messages (private) |
| |
| # other codes through 15 reserved for system use |
| LOG_LOCAL0 = 16 # reserved for local use |
| LOG_LOCAL1 = 17 # reserved for local use |
| LOG_LOCAL2 = 18 # reserved for local use |
| LOG_LOCAL3 = 19 # reserved for local use |
| LOG_LOCAL4 = 20 # reserved for local use |
| LOG_LOCAL5 = 21 # reserved for local use |
| LOG_LOCAL6 = 22 # reserved for local use |
| LOG_LOCAL7 = 23 # reserved for local use |
| |
| priority_names = { |
| "alert": LOG_ALERT, |
| "crit": LOG_CRIT, |
| "critical": LOG_CRIT, |
| "debug": LOG_DEBUG, |
| "emerg": LOG_EMERG, |
| "err": LOG_ERR, |
| "error": LOG_ERR, # DEPRECATED |
| "info": LOG_INFO, |
| "notice": LOG_NOTICE, |
| "panic": LOG_EMERG, # DEPRECATED |
| "warn": LOG_WARNING, # DEPRECATED |
| "warning": LOG_WARNING, |
| } |
| |
| facility_names = { |
| "auth": LOG_AUTH, |
| "authpriv": LOG_AUTHPRIV, |
| "cron": LOG_CRON, |
| "daemon": LOG_DAEMON, |
| "kern": LOG_KERN, |
| "lpr": LOG_LPR, |
| "mail": LOG_MAIL, |
| "news": LOG_NEWS, |
| "security": LOG_AUTH, # DEPRECATED |
| "syslog": LOG_SYSLOG, |
| "user": LOG_USER, |
| "uucp": LOG_UUCP, |
| "local0": LOG_LOCAL0, |
| "local1": LOG_LOCAL1, |
| "local2": LOG_LOCAL2, |
| "local3": LOG_LOCAL3, |
| "local4": LOG_LOCAL4, |
| "local5": LOG_LOCAL5, |
| "local6": LOG_LOCAL6, |
| "local7": LOG_LOCAL7, |
| } |
| |
| #The map below appears to be trivially lowercasing the key. However, |
| #there's more to it than meets the eye - in some locales, lowercasing |
| #gives unexpected results. See SF #1524081: in the Turkish locale, |
| #"INFO".lower() != "info" |
| priority_map = { |
| "DEBUG" : "debug", |
| "INFO" : "info", |
| "WARNING" : "warning", |
| "ERROR" : "error", |
| "CRITICAL" : "critical" |
| } |
| |
| def __init__(self, address=('localhost', SYSLOG_UDP_PORT), facility=LOG_USER): |
| """ |
| Initialize a handler. |
| |
| If address is specified as a string, UNIX socket is used. |
| If facility is not specified, LOG_USER is used. |
| """ |
| logging.Handler.__init__(self) |
| |
| self.address = address |
| self.facility = facility |
| if type(address) == types.StringType: |
| self._connect_unixsocket(address) |
| self.unixsocket = 1 |
| else: |
| self.socket = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM) |
| self.unixsocket = 0 |
| |
| self.formatter = None |
| |
| def _connect_unixsocket(self, address): |
| self.socket = socket.socket(socket.AF_UNIX, socket.SOCK_DGRAM) |
| # syslog may require either DGRAM or STREAM sockets |
| try: |
| self.socket.connect(address) |
| except socket.error: |
| self.socket.close() |
| self.socket = socket.socket(socket.AF_UNIX, socket.SOCK_STREAM) |
| self.socket.connect(address) |
| |
| # curious: when talking to the unix-domain '/dev/log' socket, a |
| # zero-terminator seems to be required. this string is placed |
| # into a class variable so that it can be overridden if |
| # necessary. |
| log_format_string = '<%d>%s\000' |
| |
| def encodePriority(self, facility, priority): |
| """ |
| Encode the facility and priority. You can pass in strings or |
| integers - if strings are passed, the facility_names and |
| priority_names mapping dictionaries are used to convert them to |
| integers. |
| """ |
| if type(facility) == types.StringType: |
| facility = self.facility_names[facility] |
| if type(priority) == types.StringType: |
| priority = self.priority_names[priority] |
| return (facility << 3) | priority |
| |
| def close (self): |
| """ |
| Closes the socket. |
| """ |
| if self.unixsocket: |
| self.socket.close() |
| logging.Handler.close(self) |
| |
| def mapPriority(self, levelName): |
| """ |
| Map a logging level name to a key in the priority_names map. |
| This is useful in two scenarios: when custom levels are being |
| used, and in the case where you can't do a straightforward |
| mapping by lowercasing the logging level name because of locale- |
| specific issues (see SF #1524081). |
| """ |
| return self.priority_map.get(levelName, "warning") |
| |
| def emit(self, record): |
| """ |
| Emit a record. |
| |
| The record is formatted, and then sent to the syslog server. If |
| exception information is present, it is NOT sent to the server. |
| """ |
| msg = self.format(record) |
| """ |
| We need to convert record level to lowercase, maybe this will |
| change in the future. |
| """ |
| msg = self.log_format_string % ( |
| self.encodePriority(self.facility, |
| self.mapPriority(record.levelname)), |
| msg) |
| try: |
| if self.unixsocket: |
| try: |
| self.socket.send(msg) |
| except socket.error: |
| self._connect_unixsocket(self.address) |
| self.socket.send(msg) |
| else: |
| self.socket.sendto(msg, self.address) |
| except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit): |
| raise |
| except: |
| self.handleError(record) |
| |
| class SMTPHandler(logging.Handler): |
| """ |
| A handler class which sends an SMTP email for each logging event. |
| """ |
| def __init__(self, mailhost, fromaddr, toaddrs, subject): |
| """ |
| Initialize the handler. |
| |
| Initialize the instance with the from and to addresses and subject |
| line of the email. To specify a non-standard SMTP port, use the |
| (host, port) tuple format for the mailhost argument. |
| """ |
| logging.Handler.__init__(self) |
| if type(mailhost) == types.TupleType: |
| host, port = mailhost |
| self.mailhost = host |
| self.mailport = port |
| else: |
| self.mailhost = mailhost |
| self.mailport = None |
| self.fromaddr = fromaddr |
| if type(toaddrs) == types.StringType: |
| toaddrs = [toaddrs] |
| self.toaddrs = toaddrs |
| self.subject = subject |
| |
| def getSubject(self, record): |
| """ |
| Determine the subject for the email. |
| |
| If you want to specify a subject line which is record-dependent, |
| override this method. |
| """ |
| return self.subject |
| |
| weekdayname = ['Mon', 'Tue', 'Wed', 'Thu', 'Fri', 'Sat', 'Sun'] |
| |
| monthname = [None, |
| 'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun', |
| 'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec'] |
| |
| def date_time(self): |
| """ |
| Return the current date and time formatted for a MIME header. |
| Needed for Python 1.5.2 (no email package available) |
| """ |
| year, month, day, hh, mm, ss, wd, y, z = time.gmtime(time.time()) |
| s = "%s, %02d %3s %4d %02d:%02d:%02d GMT" % ( |
| self.weekdayname[wd], |
| day, self.monthname[month], year, |
| hh, mm, ss) |
| return s |
| |
| def emit(self, record): |
| """ |
| Emit a record. |
| |
| Format the record and send it to the specified addressees. |
| """ |
| try: |
| import smtplib |
| try: |
| from email.Utils import formatdate |
| except: |
| formatdate = self.date_time |
| port = self.mailport |
| if not port: |
| port = smtplib.SMTP_PORT |
| smtp = smtplib.SMTP(self.mailhost, port) |
| msg = self.format(record) |
| msg = "From: %s\r\nTo: %s\r\nSubject: %s\r\nDate: %s\r\n\r\n%s" % ( |
| self.fromaddr, |
| string.join(self.toaddrs, ","), |
| self.getSubject(record), |
| formatdate(), msg) |
| smtp.sendmail(self.fromaddr, self.toaddrs, msg) |
| smtp.quit() |
| except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit): |
| raise |
| except: |
| self.handleError(record) |
| |
| class NTEventLogHandler(logging.Handler): |
| """ |
| A handler class which sends events to the NT Event Log. Adds a |
| registry entry for the specified application name. If no dllname is |
| provided, win32service.pyd (which contains some basic message |
| placeholders) is used. Note that use of these placeholders will make |
| your event logs big, as the entire message source is held in the log. |
| If you want slimmer logs, you have to pass in the name of your own DLL |
| which contains the message definitions you want to use in the event log. |
| """ |
| def __init__(self, appname, dllname=None, logtype="Application"): |
| logging.Handler.__init__(self) |
| try: |
| import win32evtlogutil, win32evtlog |
| self.appname = appname |
| self._welu = win32evtlogutil |
| if not dllname: |
| dllname = os.path.split(self._welu.__file__) |
| dllname = os.path.split(dllname[0]) |
| dllname = os.path.join(dllname[0], r'win32service.pyd') |
| self.dllname = dllname |
| self.logtype = logtype |
| self._welu.AddSourceToRegistry(appname, dllname, logtype) |
| self.deftype = win32evtlog.EVENTLOG_ERROR_TYPE |
| self.typemap = { |
| logging.DEBUG : win32evtlog.EVENTLOG_INFORMATION_TYPE, |
| logging.INFO : win32evtlog.EVENTLOG_INFORMATION_TYPE, |
| logging.WARNING : win32evtlog.EVENTLOG_WARNING_TYPE, |
| logging.ERROR : win32evtlog.EVENTLOG_ERROR_TYPE, |
| logging.CRITICAL: win32evtlog.EVENTLOG_ERROR_TYPE, |
| } |
| except ImportError: |
| print "The Python Win32 extensions for NT (service, event "\ |
| "logging) appear not to be available." |
| self._welu = None |
| |
| def getMessageID(self, record): |
| """ |
| Return the message ID for the event record. If you are using your |
| own messages, you could do this by having the msg passed to the |
| logger being an ID rather than a formatting string. Then, in here, |
| you could use a dictionary lookup to get the message ID. This |
| version returns 1, which is the base message ID in win32service.pyd. |
| """ |
| return 1 |
| |
| def getEventCategory(self, record): |
| """ |
| Return the event category for the record. |
| |
| Override this if you want to specify your own categories. This version |
| returns 0. |
| """ |
| return 0 |
| |
| def getEventType(self, record): |
| """ |
| Return the event type for the record. |
| |
| Override this if you want to specify your own types. This version does |
| a mapping using the handler's typemap attribute, which is set up in |
| __init__() to a dictionary which contains mappings for DEBUG, INFO, |
| WARNING, ERROR and CRITICAL. If you are using your own levels you will |
| either need to override this method or place a suitable dictionary in |
| the handler's typemap attribute. |
| """ |
| return self.typemap.get(record.levelno, self.deftype) |
| |
| def emit(self, record): |
| """ |
| Emit a record. |
| |
| Determine the message ID, event category and event type. Then |
| log the message in the NT event log. |
| """ |
| if self._welu: |
| try: |
| id = self.getMessageID(record) |
| cat = self.getEventCategory(record) |
| type = self.getEventType(record) |
| msg = self.format(record) |
| self._welu.ReportEvent(self.appname, id, cat, type, [msg]) |
| except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit): |
| raise |
| except: |
| self.handleError(record) |
| |
| def close(self): |
| """ |
| Clean up this handler. |
| |
| You can remove the application name from the registry as a |
| source of event log entries. However, if you do this, you will |
| not be able to see the events as you intended in the Event Log |
| Viewer - it needs to be able to access the registry to get the |
| DLL name. |
| """ |
| #self._welu.RemoveSourceFromRegistry(self.appname, self.logtype) |
| logging.Handler.close(self) |
| |
| class HTTPHandler(logging.Handler): |
| """ |
| A class which sends records to a Web server, using either GET or |
| POST semantics. |
| """ |
| def __init__(self, host, url, method="GET"): |
| """ |
| Initialize the instance with the host, the request URL, and the method |
| ("GET" or "POST") |
| """ |
| logging.Handler.__init__(self) |
| method = string.upper(method) |
| if method not in ["GET", "POST"]: |
| raise ValueError, "method must be GET or POST" |
| self.host = host |
| self.url = url |
| self.method = method |
| |
| def mapLogRecord(self, record): |
| """ |
| Default implementation of mapping the log record into a dict |
| that is sent as the CGI data. Overwrite in your class. |
| Contributed by Franz Glasner. |
| """ |
| return record.__dict__ |
| |
| def emit(self, record): |
| """ |
| Emit a record. |
| |
| Send the record to the Web server as an URL-encoded dictionary |
| """ |
| try: |
| import httplib, urllib |
| host = self.host |
| h = httplib.HTTP(host) |
| url = self.url |
| data = urllib.urlencode(self.mapLogRecord(record)) |
| if self.method == "GET": |
| if (string.find(url, '?') >= 0): |
| sep = '&' |
| else: |
| sep = '?' |
| url = url + "%c%s" % (sep, data) |
| h.putrequest(self.method, url) |
| # support multiple hosts on one IP address... |
| # need to strip optional :port from host, if present |
| i = string.find(host, ":") |
| if i >= 0: |
| host = host[:i] |
| h.putheader("Host", host) |
| if self.method == "POST": |
| h.putheader("Content-type", |
| "application/x-www-form-urlencoded") |
| h.putheader("Content-length", str(len(data))) |
| h.endheaders() |
| if self.method == "POST": |
| h.send(data) |
| h.getreply() #can't do anything with the result |
| except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit): |
| raise |
| except: |
| self.handleError(record) |
| |
| class BufferingHandler(logging.Handler): |
| """ |
| A handler class which buffers logging records in memory. Whenever each |
| record is added to the buffer, a check is made to see if the buffer should |
| be flushed. If it should, then flush() is expected to do what's needed. |
| """ |
| def __init__(self, capacity): |
| """ |
| Initialize the handler with the buffer size. |
| """ |
| logging.Handler.__init__(self) |
| self.capacity = capacity |
| self.buffer = [] |
| |
| def shouldFlush(self, record): |
| """ |
| Should the handler flush its buffer? |
| |
| Returns true if the buffer is up to capacity. This method can be |
| overridden to implement custom flushing strategies. |
| """ |
| return (len(self.buffer) >= self.capacity) |
| |
| def emit(self, record): |
| """ |
| Emit a record. |
| |
| Append the record. If shouldFlush() tells us to, call flush() to process |
| the buffer. |
| """ |
| self.buffer.append(record) |
| if self.shouldFlush(record): |
| self.flush() |
| |
| def flush(self): |
| """ |
| Override to implement custom flushing behaviour. |
| |
| This version just zaps the buffer to empty. |
| """ |
| self.buffer = [] |
| |
| def close(self): |
| """ |
| Close the handler. |
| |
| This version just flushes and chains to the parent class' close(). |
| """ |
| self.flush() |
| logging.Handler.close(self) |
| |
| class MemoryHandler(BufferingHandler): |
| """ |
| A handler class which buffers logging records in memory, periodically |
| flushing them to a target handler. Flushing occurs whenever the buffer |
| is full, or when an event of a certain severity or greater is seen. |
| """ |
| def __init__(self, capacity, flushLevel=logging.ERROR, target=None): |
| """ |
| Initialize the handler with the buffer size, the level at which |
| flushing should occur and an optional target. |
| |
| Note that without a target being set either here or via setTarget(), |
| a MemoryHandler is no use to anyone! |
| """ |
| BufferingHandler.__init__(self, capacity) |
| self.flushLevel = flushLevel |
| self.target = target |
| |
| def shouldFlush(self, record): |
| """ |
| Check for buffer full or a record at the flushLevel or higher. |
| """ |
| return (len(self.buffer) >= self.capacity) or \ |
| (record.levelno >= self.flushLevel) |
| |
| def setTarget(self, target): |
| """ |
| Set the target handler for this handler. |
| """ |
| self.target = target |
| |
| def flush(self): |
| """ |
| For a MemoryHandler, flushing means just sending the buffered |
| records to the target, if there is one. Override if you want |
| different behaviour. |
| """ |
| if self.target: |
| for record in self.buffer: |
| self.target.handle(record) |
| self.buffer = [] |
| |
| def close(self): |
| """ |
| Flush, set the target to None and lose the buffer. |
| """ |
| self.flush() |
| self.target = None |
| BufferingHandler.close(self) |