| .. _logging-cookbook: |
| |
| ================ |
| Logging Cookbook |
| ================ |
| |
| :Author: Vinay Sajip <vinay_sajip at red-dove dot com> |
| |
| This page contains a number of recipes related to logging, which have been found |
| useful in the past. |
| |
| .. currentmodule:: logging |
| |
| Using logging in multiple modules |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| Multiple calls to ``logging.getLogger('someLogger')`` return a reference to the |
| same logger object. This is true not only within the same module, but also |
| across modules as long as it is in the same Python interpreter process. It is |
| true for references to the same object; additionally, application code can |
| define and configure a parent logger in one module and create (but not |
| configure) a child logger in a separate module, and all logger calls to the |
| child will pass up to the parent. Here is a main module:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import auxiliary_module |
| |
| # create logger with 'spam_application' |
| logger = logging.getLogger('spam_application') |
| logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| # create file handler which logs even debug messages |
| fh = logging.FileHandler('spam.log') |
| fh.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| # create console handler with a higher log level |
| ch = logging.StreamHandler() |
| ch.setLevel(logging.ERROR) |
| # create formatter and add it to the handlers |
| formatter = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s') |
| fh.setFormatter(formatter) |
| ch.setFormatter(formatter) |
| # add the handlers to the logger |
| logger.addHandler(fh) |
| logger.addHandler(ch) |
| |
| logger.info('creating an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary') |
| a = auxiliary_module.Auxiliary() |
| logger.info('created an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary') |
| logger.info('calling auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something') |
| a.do_something() |
| logger.info('finished auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something') |
| logger.info('calling auxiliary_module.some_function()') |
| auxiliary_module.some_function() |
| logger.info('done with auxiliary_module.some_function()') |
| |
| Here is the auxiliary module:: |
| |
| import logging |
| |
| # create logger |
| module_logger = logging.getLogger('spam_application.auxiliary') |
| |
| class Auxiliary: |
| def __init__(self): |
| self.logger = logging.getLogger('spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary') |
| self.logger.info('creating an instance of Auxiliary') |
| |
| def do_something(self): |
| self.logger.info('doing something') |
| a = 1 + 1 |
| self.logger.info('done doing something') |
| |
| def some_function(): |
| module_logger.info('received a call to "some_function"') |
| |
| The output looks like this:: |
| |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,663 - spam_application - INFO - |
| creating an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,665 - spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary - INFO - |
| creating an instance of Auxiliary |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,665 - spam_application - INFO - |
| created an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,668 - spam_application - INFO - |
| calling auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,668 - spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary - INFO - |
| doing something |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,669 - spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary - INFO - |
| done doing something |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,670 - spam_application - INFO - |
| finished auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,671 - spam_application - INFO - |
| calling auxiliary_module.some_function() |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,672 - spam_application.auxiliary - INFO - |
| received a call to 'some_function' |
| 2005-03-23 23:47:11,673 - spam_application - INFO - |
| done with auxiliary_module.some_function() |
| |
| Logging from multiple threads |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Logging from multiple threads requires no special effort. The following example |
| shows logging from the main (initial) thread and another thread:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import threading |
| import time |
| |
| def worker(arg): |
| while not arg['stop']: |
| logging.debug('Hi from myfunc') |
| time.sleep(0.5) |
| |
| def main(): |
| logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG, format='%(relativeCreated)6d %(threadName)s %(message)s') |
| info = {'stop': False} |
| thread = threading.Thread(target=worker, args=(info,)) |
| thread.start() |
| while True: |
| try: |
| logging.debug('Hello from main') |
| time.sleep(0.75) |
| except KeyboardInterrupt: |
| info['stop'] = True |
| break |
| thread.join() |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| main() |
| |
| When run, the script should print something like the following:: |
| |
| 0 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| 3 MainThread Hello from main |
| 505 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| 755 MainThread Hello from main |
| 1007 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| 1507 MainThread Hello from main |
| 1508 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| 2010 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| 2258 MainThread Hello from main |
| 2512 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| 3009 MainThread Hello from main |
| 3013 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| 3515 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| 3761 MainThread Hello from main |
| 4017 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| 4513 MainThread Hello from main |
| 4518 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc |
| |
| This shows the logging output interspersed as one might expect. This approach |
| works for more threads than shown here, of course. |
| |
| Multiple handlers and formatters |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Loggers are plain Python objects. The :meth:`~Logger.addHandler` method has no |
| minimum or maximum quota for the number of handlers you may add. Sometimes it |
| will be beneficial for an application to log all messages of all severities to a |
| text file while simultaneously logging errors or above to the console. To set |
| this up, simply configure the appropriate handlers. The logging calls in the |
| application code will remain unchanged. Here is a slight modification to the |
| previous simple module-based configuration example:: |
| |
| import logging |
| |
| logger = logging.getLogger('simple_example') |
| logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| # create file handler which logs even debug messages |
| fh = logging.FileHandler('spam.log') |
| fh.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| # create console handler with a higher log level |
| ch = logging.StreamHandler() |
| ch.setLevel(logging.ERROR) |
| # create formatter and add it to the handlers |
| formatter = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s') |
| ch.setFormatter(formatter) |
| fh.setFormatter(formatter) |
| # add the handlers to logger |
| logger.addHandler(ch) |
| logger.addHandler(fh) |
| |
| # 'application' code |
| logger.debug('debug message') |
| logger.info('info message') |
| logger.warn('warn message') |
| logger.error('error message') |
| logger.critical('critical message') |
| |
| Notice that the 'application' code does not care about multiple handlers. All |
| that changed was the addition and configuration of a new handler named *fh*. |
| |
| The ability to create new handlers with higher- or lower-severity filters can be |
| very helpful when writing and testing an application. Instead of using many |
| ``print`` statements for debugging, use ``logger.debug``: Unlike the print |
| statements, which you will have to delete or comment out later, the logger.debug |
| statements can remain intact in the source code and remain dormant until you |
| need them again. At that time, the only change that needs to happen is to |
| modify the severity level of the logger and/or handler to debug. |
| |
| .. _multiple-destinations: |
| |
| Logging to multiple destinations |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| Let's say you want to log to console and file with different message formats and |
| in differing circumstances. Say you want to log messages with levels of DEBUG |
| and higher to file, and those messages at level INFO and higher to the console. |
| Let's also assume that the file should contain timestamps, but the console |
| messages should not. Here's how you can achieve this:: |
| |
| import logging |
| |
| # set up logging to file - see previous section for more details |
| logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG, |
| format='%(asctime)s %(name)-12s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s', |
| datefmt='%m-%d %H:%M', |
| filename='/temp/myapp.log', |
| filemode='w') |
| # define a Handler which writes INFO messages or higher to the sys.stderr |
| console = logging.StreamHandler() |
| console.setLevel(logging.INFO) |
| # set a format which is simpler for console use |
| formatter = logging.Formatter('%(name)-12s: %(levelname)-8s %(message)s') |
| # tell the handler to use this format |
| console.setFormatter(formatter) |
| # add the handler to the root logger |
| logging.getLogger('').addHandler(console) |
| |
| # Now, we can log to the root logger, or any other logger. First the root... |
| logging.info('Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.') |
| |
| # Now, define a couple of other loggers which might represent areas in your |
| # application: |
| |
| logger1 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area1') |
| logger2 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area2') |
| |
| logger1.debug('Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.') |
| logger1.info('How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.') |
| logger2.warning('Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.') |
| logger2.error('The five boxing wizards jump quickly.') |
| |
| When you run this, on the console you will see :: |
| |
| root : INFO Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz. |
| myapp.area1 : INFO How quickly daft jumping zebras vex. |
| myapp.area2 : WARNING Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack. |
| myapp.area2 : ERROR The five boxing wizards jump quickly. |
| |
| and in the file you will see something like :: |
| |
| 10-22 22:19 root INFO Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz. |
| 10-22 22:19 myapp.area1 DEBUG Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim. |
| 10-22 22:19 myapp.area1 INFO How quickly daft jumping zebras vex. |
| 10-22 22:19 myapp.area2 WARNING Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack. |
| 10-22 22:19 myapp.area2 ERROR The five boxing wizards jump quickly. |
| |
| As you can see, the DEBUG message only shows up in the file. The other messages |
| are sent to both destinations. |
| |
| This example uses console and file handlers, but you can use any number and |
| combination of handlers you choose. |
| |
| |
| Configuration server example |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| Here is an example of a module using the logging configuration server:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import logging.config |
| import time |
| import os |
| |
| # read initial config file |
| logging.config.fileConfig('logging.conf') |
| |
| # create and start listener on port 9999 |
| t = logging.config.listen(9999) |
| t.start() |
| |
| logger = logging.getLogger('simpleExample') |
| |
| try: |
| # loop through logging calls to see the difference |
| # new configurations make, until Ctrl+C is pressed |
| while True: |
| logger.debug('debug message') |
| logger.info('info message') |
| logger.warn('warn message') |
| logger.error('error message') |
| logger.critical('critical message') |
| time.sleep(5) |
| except KeyboardInterrupt: |
| # cleanup |
| logging.config.stopListening() |
| t.join() |
| |
| And here is a script that takes a filename and sends that file to the server, |
| properly preceded with the binary-encoded length, as the new logging |
| configuration:: |
| |
| #!/usr/bin/env python |
| import socket, sys, struct |
| |
| with open(sys.argv[1], 'rb') as f: |
| data_to_send = f.read() |
| |
| HOST = 'localhost' |
| PORT = 9999 |
| s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) |
| print('connecting...') |
| s.connect((HOST, PORT)) |
| print('sending config...') |
| s.send(struct.pack('>L', len(data_to_send))) |
| s.send(data_to_send) |
| s.close() |
| print('complete') |
| |
| |
| Dealing with handlers that block |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| .. currentmodule:: logging.handlers |
| |
| Sometimes you have to get your logging handlers to do their work without |
| blocking the thread you're logging from. This is common in Web applications, |
| though of course it also occurs in other scenarios. |
| |
| A common culprit which demonstrates sluggish behaviour is the |
| :class:`SMTPHandler`: sending emails can take a long time, for a |
| number of reasons outside the developer's control (for example, a poorly |
| performing mail or network infrastructure). But almost any network-based |
| handler can block: Even a :class:`SocketHandler` operation may do a |
| DNS query under the hood which is too slow (and this query can be deep in the |
| socket library code, below the Python layer, and outside your control). |
| |
| One solution is to use a two-part approach. For the first part, attach only a |
| :class:`QueueHandler` to those loggers which are accessed from |
| performance-critical threads. They simply write to their queue, which can be |
| sized to a large enough capacity or initialized with no upper bound to their |
| size. The write to the queue will typically be accepted quickly, though you |
| will probably need to catch the :exc:`queue.Full` exception as a precaution |
| in your code. If you are a library developer who has performance-critical |
| threads in their code, be sure to document this (together with a suggestion to |
| attach only ``QueueHandlers`` to your loggers) for the benefit of other |
| developers who will use your code. |
| |
| The second part of the solution is :class:`QueueListener`, which has been |
| designed as the counterpart to :class:`QueueHandler`. A |
| :class:`QueueListener` is very simple: it's passed a queue and some handlers, |
| and it fires up an internal thread which listens to its queue for LogRecords |
| sent from ``QueueHandlers`` (or any other source of ``LogRecords``, for that |
| matter). The ``LogRecords`` are removed from the queue and passed to the |
| handlers for processing. |
| |
| The advantage of having a separate :class:`QueueListener` class is that you |
| can use the same instance to service multiple ``QueueHandlers``. This is more |
| resource-friendly than, say, having threaded versions of the existing handler |
| classes, which would eat up one thread per handler for no particular benefit. |
| |
| An example of using these two classes follows (imports omitted):: |
| |
| que = queue.Queue(-1) # no limit on size |
| queue_handler = QueueHandler(que) |
| handler = logging.StreamHandler() |
| listener = QueueListener(que, handler) |
| root = logging.getLogger() |
| root.addHandler(queue_handler) |
| formatter = logging.Formatter('%(threadName)s: %(message)s') |
| handler.setFormatter(formatter) |
| listener.start() |
| # The log output will display the thread which generated |
| # the event (the main thread) rather than the internal |
| # thread which monitors the internal queue. This is what |
| # you want to happen. |
| root.warning('Look out!') |
| listener.stop() |
| |
| which, when run, will produce: |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| MainThread: Look out! |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.5 |
| Prior to Python 3.5, the :class:`QueueListener` always passed every message |
| received from the queue to every handler it was initialized with. (This was |
| because it was assumed that level filtering was all done on the other side, |
| where the queue is filled.) From 3.5 onwards, this behaviour can be changed |
| by passing a keyword argument ``respect_handler_level=True`` to the |
| listener's constructor. When this is done, the listener compares the level |
| of each message with the handler's level, and only passes a message to a |
| handler if it's appropriate to do so. |
| |
| .. _network-logging: |
| |
| Sending and receiving logging events across a network |
| ----------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Let's say you want to send logging events across a network, and handle them at |
| the receiving end. A simple way of doing this is attaching a |
| :class:`SocketHandler` instance to the root logger at the sending end:: |
| |
| import logging, logging.handlers |
| |
| rootLogger = logging.getLogger('') |
| rootLogger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| socketHandler = logging.handlers.SocketHandler('localhost', |
| logging.handlers.DEFAULT_TCP_LOGGING_PORT) |
| # don't bother with a formatter, since a socket handler sends the event as |
| # an unformatted pickle |
| rootLogger.addHandler(socketHandler) |
| |
| # Now, we can log to the root logger, or any other logger. First the root... |
| logging.info('Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.') |
| |
| # Now, define a couple of other loggers which might represent areas in your |
| # application: |
| |
| logger1 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area1') |
| logger2 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area2') |
| |
| logger1.debug('Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.') |
| logger1.info('How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.') |
| logger2.warning('Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.') |
| logger2.error('The five boxing wizards jump quickly.') |
| |
| At the receiving end, you can set up a receiver using the :mod:`socketserver` |
| module. Here is a basic working example:: |
| |
| import pickle |
| import logging |
| import logging.handlers |
| import socketserver |
| import struct |
| |
| |
| class LogRecordStreamHandler(socketserver.StreamRequestHandler): |
| """Handler for a streaming logging request. |
| |
| This basically logs the record using whatever logging policy is |
| configured locally. |
| """ |
| |
| def handle(self): |
| """ |
| Handle multiple requests - each expected to be a 4-byte length, |
| followed by the LogRecord in pickle format. Logs the record |
| according to whatever policy is configured locally. |
| """ |
| while True: |
| chunk = self.connection.recv(4) |
| if len(chunk) < 4: |
| break |
| slen = struct.unpack('>L', chunk)[0] |
| chunk = self.connection.recv(slen) |
| while len(chunk) < slen: |
| chunk = chunk + self.connection.recv(slen - len(chunk)) |
| obj = self.unPickle(chunk) |
| record = logging.makeLogRecord(obj) |
| self.handleLogRecord(record) |
| |
| def unPickle(self, data): |
| return pickle.loads(data) |
| |
| def handleLogRecord(self, record): |
| # if a name is specified, we use the named logger rather than the one |
| # implied by the record. |
| if self.server.logname is not None: |
| name = self.server.logname |
| else: |
| name = record.name |
| logger = logging.getLogger(name) |
| # N.B. EVERY record gets logged. This is because Logger.handle |
| # is normally called AFTER logger-level filtering. If you want |
| # to do filtering, do it at the client end to save wasting |
| # cycles and network bandwidth! |
| logger.handle(record) |
| |
| class LogRecordSocketReceiver(socketserver.ThreadingTCPServer): |
| """ |
| Simple TCP socket-based logging receiver suitable for testing. |
| """ |
| |
| allow_reuse_address = True |
| |
| def __init__(self, host='localhost', |
| port=logging.handlers.DEFAULT_TCP_LOGGING_PORT, |
| handler=LogRecordStreamHandler): |
| socketserver.ThreadingTCPServer.__init__(self, (host, port), handler) |
| self.abort = 0 |
| self.timeout = 1 |
| self.logname = None |
| |
| def serve_until_stopped(self): |
| import select |
| abort = 0 |
| while not abort: |
| rd, wr, ex = select.select([self.socket.fileno()], |
| [], [], |
| self.timeout) |
| if rd: |
| self.handle_request() |
| abort = self.abort |
| |
| def main(): |
| logging.basicConfig( |
| format='%(relativeCreated)5d %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s') |
| tcpserver = LogRecordSocketReceiver() |
| print('About to start TCP server...') |
| tcpserver.serve_until_stopped() |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| main() |
| |
| First run the server, and then the client. On the client side, nothing is |
| printed on the console; on the server side, you should see something like:: |
| |
| About to start TCP server... |
| 59 root INFO Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz. |
| 59 myapp.area1 DEBUG Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim. |
| 69 myapp.area1 INFO How quickly daft jumping zebras vex. |
| 69 myapp.area2 WARNING Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack. |
| 69 myapp.area2 ERROR The five boxing wizards jump quickly. |
| |
| Note that there are some security issues with pickle in some scenarios. If |
| these affect you, you can use an alternative serialization scheme by overriding |
| the :meth:`~handlers.SocketHandler.makePickle` method and implementing your |
| alternative there, as well as adapting the above script to use your alternative |
| serialization. |
| |
| |
| .. _context-info: |
| |
| Adding contextual information to your logging output |
| ---------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Sometimes you want logging output to contain contextual information in |
| addition to the parameters passed to the logging call. For example, in a |
| networked application, it may be desirable to log client-specific information |
| in the log (e.g. remote client's username, or IP address). Although you could |
| use the *extra* parameter to achieve this, it's not always convenient to pass |
| the information in this way. While it might be tempting to create |
| :class:`Logger` instances on a per-connection basis, this is not a good idea |
| because these instances are not garbage collected. While this is not a problem |
| in practice, when the number of :class:`Logger` instances is dependent on the |
| level of granularity you want to use in logging an application, it could |
| be hard to manage if the number of :class:`Logger` instances becomes |
| effectively unbounded. |
| |
| |
| Using LoggerAdapters to impart contextual information |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| An easy way in which you can pass contextual information to be output along |
| with logging event information is to use the :class:`LoggerAdapter` class. |
| This class is designed to look like a :class:`Logger`, so that you can call |
| :meth:`debug`, :meth:`info`, :meth:`warning`, :meth:`error`, |
| :meth:`exception`, :meth:`critical` and :meth:`log`. These methods have the |
| same signatures as their counterparts in :class:`Logger`, so you can use the |
| two types of instances interchangeably. |
| |
| When you create an instance of :class:`LoggerAdapter`, you pass it a |
| :class:`Logger` instance and a dict-like object which contains your contextual |
| information. When you call one of the logging methods on an instance of |
| :class:`LoggerAdapter`, it delegates the call to the underlying instance of |
| :class:`Logger` passed to its constructor, and arranges to pass the contextual |
| information in the delegated call. Here's a snippet from the code of |
| :class:`LoggerAdapter`:: |
| |
| def debug(self, msg, *args, **kwargs): |
| """ |
| Delegate a debug call to the underlying logger, after adding |
| contextual information from this adapter instance. |
| """ |
| msg, kwargs = self.process(msg, kwargs) |
| self.logger.debug(msg, *args, **kwargs) |
| |
| The :meth:`~LoggerAdapter.process` method of :class:`LoggerAdapter` is where the |
| contextual information is added to the logging output. It's passed the message |
| and keyword arguments of the logging call, and it passes back (potentially) |
| modified versions of these to use in the call to the underlying logger. The |
| default implementation of this method leaves the message alone, but inserts |
| an 'extra' key in the keyword argument whose value is the dict-like object |
| passed to the constructor. Of course, if you had passed an 'extra' keyword |
| argument in the call to the adapter, it will be silently overwritten. |
| |
| The advantage of using 'extra' is that the values in the dict-like object are |
| merged into the :class:`LogRecord` instance's __dict__, allowing you to use |
| customized strings with your :class:`Formatter` instances which know about |
| the keys of the dict-like object. If you need a different method, e.g. if you |
| want to prepend or append the contextual information to the message string, |
| you just need to subclass :class:`LoggerAdapter` and override |
| :meth:`~LoggerAdapter.process` to do what you need. Here is a simple example:: |
| |
| class CustomAdapter(logging.LoggerAdapter): |
| """ |
| This example adapter expects the passed in dict-like object to have a |
| 'connid' key, whose value in brackets is prepended to the log message. |
| """ |
| def process(self, msg, kwargs): |
| return '[%s] %s' % (self.extra['connid'], msg), kwargs |
| |
| which you can use like this:: |
| |
| logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) |
| adapter = CustomAdapter(logger, {'connid': some_conn_id}) |
| |
| Then any events that you log to the adapter will have the value of |
| ``some_conn_id`` prepended to the log messages. |
| |
| Using objects other than dicts to pass contextual information |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| You don't need to pass an actual dict to a :class:`LoggerAdapter` - you could |
| pass an instance of a class which implements ``__getitem__`` and ``__iter__`` so |
| that it looks like a dict to logging. This would be useful if you want to |
| generate values dynamically (whereas the values in a dict would be constant). |
| |
| |
| .. _filters-contextual: |
| |
| Using Filters to impart contextual information |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| You can also add contextual information to log output using a user-defined |
| :class:`Filter`. ``Filter`` instances are allowed to modify the ``LogRecords`` |
| passed to them, including adding additional attributes which can then be output |
| using a suitable format string, or if needed a custom :class:`Formatter`. |
| |
| For example in a web application, the request being processed (or at least, |
| the interesting parts of it) can be stored in a threadlocal |
| (:class:`threading.local`) variable, and then accessed from a ``Filter`` to |
| add, say, information from the request - say, the remote IP address and remote |
| user's username - to the ``LogRecord``, using the attribute names 'ip' and |
| 'user' as in the ``LoggerAdapter`` example above. In that case, the same format |
| string can be used to get similar output to that shown above. Here's an example |
| script:: |
| |
| import logging |
| from random import choice |
| |
| class ContextFilter(logging.Filter): |
| """ |
| This is a filter which injects contextual information into the log. |
| |
| Rather than use actual contextual information, we just use random |
| data in this demo. |
| """ |
| |
| USERS = ['jim', 'fred', 'sheila'] |
| IPS = ['123.231.231.123', '127.0.0.1', '192.168.0.1'] |
| |
| def filter(self, record): |
| |
| record.ip = choice(ContextFilter.IPS) |
| record.user = choice(ContextFilter.USERS) |
| return True |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| levels = (logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, logging.ERROR, logging.CRITICAL) |
| logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG, |
| format='%(asctime)-15s %(name)-5s %(levelname)-8s IP: %(ip)-15s User: %(user)-8s %(message)s') |
| a1 = logging.getLogger('a.b.c') |
| a2 = logging.getLogger('d.e.f') |
| |
| f = ContextFilter() |
| a1.addFilter(f) |
| a2.addFilter(f) |
| a1.debug('A debug message') |
| a1.info('An info message with %s', 'some parameters') |
| for x in range(10): |
| lvl = choice(levels) |
| lvlname = logging.getLevelName(lvl) |
| a2.log(lvl, 'A message at %s level with %d %s', lvlname, 2, 'parameters') |
| |
| which, when run, produces something like:: |
| |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,292 a.b.c DEBUG IP: 123.231.231.123 User: fred A debug message |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 a.b.c INFO IP: 192.168.0.1 User: sheila An info message with some parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 d.e.f CRITICAL IP: 127.0.0.1 User: sheila A message at CRITICAL level with 2 parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 d.e.f ERROR IP: 127.0.0.1 User: jim A message at ERROR level with 2 parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 d.e.f DEBUG IP: 127.0.0.1 User: sheila A message at DEBUG level with 2 parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 d.e.f ERROR IP: 123.231.231.123 User: fred A message at ERROR level with 2 parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 d.e.f CRITICAL IP: 192.168.0.1 User: jim A message at CRITICAL level with 2 parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 d.e.f CRITICAL IP: 127.0.0.1 User: sheila A message at CRITICAL level with 2 parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 d.e.f DEBUG IP: 192.168.0.1 User: jim A message at DEBUG level with 2 parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,301 d.e.f ERROR IP: 127.0.0.1 User: sheila A message at ERROR level with 2 parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,301 d.e.f DEBUG IP: 123.231.231.123 User: fred A message at DEBUG level with 2 parameters |
| 2010-09-06 22:38:15,301 d.e.f INFO IP: 123.231.231.123 User: fred A message at INFO level with 2 parameters |
| |
| |
| .. _multiple-processes: |
| |
| Logging to a single file from multiple processes |
| ------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| Although logging is thread-safe, and logging to a single file from multiple |
| threads in a single process *is* supported, logging to a single file from |
| *multiple processes* is *not* supported, because there is no standard way to |
| serialize access to a single file across multiple processes in Python. If you |
| need to log to a single file from multiple processes, one way of doing this is |
| to have all the processes log to a :class:`~handlers.SocketHandler`, and have a |
| separate process which implements a socket server which reads from the socket |
| and logs to file. (If you prefer, you can dedicate one thread in one of the |
| existing processes to perform this function.) |
| :ref:`This section <network-logging>` documents this approach in more detail and |
| includes a working socket receiver which can be used as a starting point for you |
| to adapt in your own applications. |
| |
| If you are using a recent version of Python which includes the |
| :mod:`multiprocessing` module, you could write your own handler which uses the |
| :class:`~multiprocessing.Lock` class from this module to serialize access to the |
| file from your processes. The existing :class:`FileHandler` and subclasses do |
| not make use of :mod:`multiprocessing` at present, though they may do so in the |
| future. Note that at present, the :mod:`multiprocessing` module does not provide |
| working lock functionality on all platforms (see |
| https://bugs.python.org/issue3770). |
| |
| .. currentmodule:: logging.handlers |
| |
| Alternatively, you can use a ``Queue`` and a :class:`QueueHandler` to send |
| all logging events to one of the processes in your multi-process application. |
| The following example script demonstrates how you can do this; in the example |
| a separate listener process listens for events sent by other processes and logs |
| them according to its own logging configuration. Although the example only |
| demonstrates one way of doing it (for example, you may want to use a listener |
| thread rather than a separate listener process -- the implementation would be |
| analogous) it does allow for completely different logging configurations for |
| the listener and the other processes in your application, and can be used as |
| the basis for code meeting your own specific requirements:: |
| |
| # You'll need these imports in your own code |
| import logging |
| import logging.handlers |
| import multiprocessing |
| |
| # Next two import lines for this demo only |
| from random import choice, random |
| import time |
| |
| # |
| # Because you'll want to define the logging configurations for listener and workers, the |
| # listener and worker process functions take a configurer parameter which is a callable |
| # for configuring logging for that process. These functions are also passed the queue, |
| # which they use for communication. |
| # |
| # In practice, you can configure the listener however you want, but note that in this |
| # simple example, the listener does not apply level or filter logic to received records. |
| # In practice, you would probably want to do this logic in the worker processes, to avoid |
| # sending events which would be filtered out between processes. |
| # |
| # The size of the rotated files is made small so you can see the results easily. |
| def listener_configurer(): |
| root = logging.getLogger() |
| h = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler('mptest.log', 'a', 300, 10) |
| f = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s %(processName)-10s %(name)s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s') |
| h.setFormatter(f) |
| root.addHandler(h) |
| |
| # This is the listener process top-level loop: wait for logging events |
| # (LogRecords)on the queue and handle them, quit when you get a None for a |
| # LogRecord. |
| def listener_process(queue, configurer): |
| configurer() |
| while True: |
| try: |
| record = queue.get() |
| if record is None: # We send this as a sentinel to tell the listener to quit. |
| break |
| logger = logging.getLogger(record.name) |
| logger.handle(record) # No level or filter logic applied - just do it! |
| except Exception: |
| import sys, traceback |
| print('Whoops! Problem:', file=sys.stderr) |
| traceback.print_exc(file=sys.stderr) |
| |
| # Arrays used for random selections in this demo |
| |
| LEVELS = [logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, |
| logging.ERROR, logging.CRITICAL] |
| |
| LOGGERS = ['a.b.c', 'd.e.f'] |
| |
| MESSAGES = [ |
| 'Random message #1', |
| 'Random message #2', |
| 'Random message #3', |
| ] |
| |
| # The worker configuration is done at the start of the worker process run. |
| # Note that on Windows you can't rely on fork semantics, so each process |
| # will run the logging configuration code when it starts. |
| def worker_configurer(queue): |
| h = logging.handlers.QueueHandler(queue) # Just the one handler needed |
| root = logging.getLogger() |
| root.addHandler(h) |
| # send all messages, for demo; no other level or filter logic applied. |
| root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| |
| # This is the worker process top-level loop, which just logs ten events with |
| # random intervening delays before terminating. |
| # The print messages are just so you know it's doing something! |
| def worker_process(queue, configurer): |
| configurer(queue) |
| name = multiprocessing.current_process().name |
| print('Worker started: %s' % name) |
| for i in range(10): |
| time.sleep(random()) |
| logger = logging.getLogger(choice(LOGGERS)) |
| level = choice(LEVELS) |
| message = choice(MESSAGES) |
| logger.log(level, message) |
| print('Worker finished: %s' % name) |
| |
| # Here's where the demo gets orchestrated. Create the queue, create and start |
| # the listener, create ten workers and start them, wait for them to finish, |
| # then send a None to the queue to tell the listener to finish. |
| def main(): |
| queue = multiprocessing.Queue(-1) |
| listener = multiprocessing.Process(target=listener_process, |
| args=(queue, listener_configurer)) |
| listener.start() |
| workers = [] |
| for i in range(10): |
| worker = multiprocessing.Process(target=worker_process, |
| args=(queue, worker_configurer)) |
| workers.append(worker) |
| worker.start() |
| for w in workers: |
| w.join() |
| queue.put_nowait(None) |
| listener.join() |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| main() |
| |
| A variant of the above script keeps the logging in the main process, in a |
| separate thread:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import logging.config |
| import logging.handlers |
| from multiprocessing import Process, Queue |
| import random |
| import threading |
| import time |
| |
| def logger_thread(q): |
| while True: |
| record = q.get() |
| if record is None: |
| break |
| logger = logging.getLogger(record.name) |
| logger.handle(record) |
| |
| |
| def worker_process(q): |
| qh = logging.handlers.QueueHandler(q) |
| root = logging.getLogger() |
| root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| root.addHandler(qh) |
| levels = [logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, logging.ERROR, |
| logging.CRITICAL] |
| loggers = ['foo', 'foo.bar', 'foo.bar.baz', |
| 'spam', 'spam.ham', 'spam.ham.eggs'] |
| for i in range(100): |
| lvl = random.choice(levels) |
| logger = logging.getLogger(random.choice(loggers)) |
| logger.log(lvl, 'Message no. %d', i) |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| q = Queue() |
| d = { |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'formatters': { |
| 'detailed': { |
| 'class': 'logging.Formatter', |
| 'format': '%(asctime)s %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(processName)-10s %(message)s' |
| } |
| }, |
| 'handlers': { |
| 'console': { |
| 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler', |
| 'level': 'INFO', |
| }, |
| 'file': { |
| 'class': 'logging.FileHandler', |
| 'filename': 'mplog.log', |
| 'mode': 'w', |
| 'formatter': 'detailed', |
| }, |
| 'foofile': { |
| 'class': 'logging.FileHandler', |
| 'filename': 'mplog-foo.log', |
| 'mode': 'w', |
| 'formatter': 'detailed', |
| }, |
| 'errors': { |
| 'class': 'logging.FileHandler', |
| 'filename': 'mplog-errors.log', |
| 'mode': 'w', |
| 'level': 'ERROR', |
| 'formatter': 'detailed', |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'loggers': { |
| 'foo': { |
| 'handlers': ['foofile'] |
| } |
| }, |
| 'root': { |
| 'level': 'DEBUG', |
| 'handlers': ['console', 'file', 'errors'] |
| }, |
| } |
| workers = [] |
| for i in range(5): |
| wp = Process(target=worker_process, name='worker %d' % (i + 1), args=(q,)) |
| workers.append(wp) |
| wp.start() |
| logging.config.dictConfig(d) |
| lp = threading.Thread(target=logger_thread, args=(q,)) |
| lp.start() |
| # At this point, the main process could do some useful work of its own |
| # Once it's done that, it can wait for the workers to terminate... |
| for wp in workers: |
| wp.join() |
| # And now tell the logging thread to finish up, too |
| q.put(None) |
| lp.join() |
| |
| This variant shows how you can e.g. apply configuration for particular loggers |
| - e.g. the ``foo`` logger has a special handler which stores all events in the |
| ``foo`` subsystem in a file ``mplog-foo.log``. This will be used by the logging |
| machinery in the main process (even though the logging events are generated in |
| the worker processes) to direct the messages to the appropriate destinations. |
| |
| Using file rotation |
| ------------------- |
| |
| .. sectionauthor:: Doug Hellmann, Vinay Sajip (changes) |
| .. (see <http://blog.doughellmann.com/2007/05/pymotw-logging.html>) |
| |
| Sometimes you want to let a log file grow to a certain size, then open a new |
| file and log to that. You may want to keep a certain number of these files, and |
| when that many files have been created, rotate the files so that the number of |
| files and the size of the files both remain bounded. For this usage pattern, the |
| logging package provides a :class:`~handlers.RotatingFileHandler`:: |
| |
| import glob |
| import logging |
| import logging.handlers |
| |
| LOG_FILENAME = 'logging_rotatingfile_example.out' |
| |
| # Set up a specific logger with our desired output level |
| my_logger = logging.getLogger('MyLogger') |
| my_logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| |
| # Add the log message handler to the logger |
| handler = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler( |
| LOG_FILENAME, maxBytes=20, backupCount=5) |
| |
| my_logger.addHandler(handler) |
| |
| # Log some messages |
| for i in range(20): |
| my_logger.debug('i = %d' % i) |
| |
| # See what files are created |
| logfiles = glob.glob('%s*' % LOG_FILENAME) |
| |
| for filename in logfiles: |
| print(filename) |
| |
| The result should be 6 separate files, each with part of the log history for the |
| application:: |
| |
| logging_rotatingfile_example.out |
| logging_rotatingfile_example.out.1 |
| logging_rotatingfile_example.out.2 |
| logging_rotatingfile_example.out.3 |
| logging_rotatingfile_example.out.4 |
| logging_rotatingfile_example.out.5 |
| |
| The most current file is always :file:`logging_rotatingfile_example.out`, |
| and each time it reaches the size limit it is renamed with the suffix |
| ``.1``. Each of the existing backup files is renamed to increment the suffix |
| (``.1`` becomes ``.2``, etc.) and the ``.6`` file is erased. |
| |
| Obviously this example sets the log length much too small as an extreme |
| example. You would want to set *maxBytes* to an appropriate value. |
| |
| .. _format-styles: |
| |
| Use of alternative formatting styles |
| ------------------------------------ |
| |
| When logging was added to the Python standard library, the only way of |
| formatting messages with variable content was to use the %-formatting |
| method. Since then, Python has gained two new formatting approaches: |
| :class:`string.Template` (added in Python 2.4) and :meth:`str.format` |
| (added in Python 2.6). |
| |
| Logging (as of 3.2) provides improved support for these two additional |
| formatting styles. The :class:`Formatter` class been enhanced to take an |
| additional, optional keyword parameter named ``style``. This defaults to |
| ``'%'``, but other possible values are ``'{'`` and ``'$'``, which correspond |
| to the other two formatting styles. Backwards compatibility is maintained by |
| default (as you would expect), but by explicitly specifying a style parameter, |
| you get the ability to specify format strings which work with |
| :meth:`str.format` or :class:`string.Template`. Here's an example console |
| session to show the possibilities: |
| |
| .. code-block:: pycon |
| |
| >>> import logging |
| >>> root = logging.getLogger() |
| >>> root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| >>> handler = logging.StreamHandler() |
| >>> bf = logging.Formatter('{asctime} {name} {levelname:8s} {message}', |
| ... style='{') |
| >>> handler.setFormatter(bf) |
| >>> root.addHandler(handler) |
| >>> logger = logging.getLogger('foo.bar') |
| >>> logger.debug('This is a DEBUG message') |
| 2010-10-28 15:11:55,341 foo.bar DEBUG This is a DEBUG message |
| >>> logger.critical('This is a CRITICAL message') |
| 2010-10-28 15:12:11,526 foo.bar CRITICAL This is a CRITICAL message |
| >>> df = logging.Formatter('$asctime $name ${levelname} $message', |
| ... style='$') |
| >>> handler.setFormatter(df) |
| >>> logger.debug('This is a DEBUG message') |
| 2010-10-28 15:13:06,924 foo.bar DEBUG This is a DEBUG message |
| >>> logger.critical('This is a CRITICAL message') |
| 2010-10-28 15:13:11,494 foo.bar CRITICAL This is a CRITICAL message |
| >>> |
| |
| Note that the formatting of logging messages for final output to logs is |
| completely independent of how an individual logging message is constructed. |
| That can still use %-formatting, as shown here:: |
| |
| >>> logger.error('This is an%s %s %s', 'other,', 'ERROR,', 'message') |
| 2010-10-28 15:19:29,833 foo.bar ERROR This is another, ERROR, message |
| >>> |
| |
| Logging calls (``logger.debug()``, ``logger.info()`` etc.) only take |
| positional parameters for the actual logging message itself, with keyword |
| parameters used only for determining options for how to handle the actual |
| logging call (e.g. the ``exc_info`` keyword parameter to indicate that |
| traceback information should be logged, or the ``extra`` keyword parameter |
| to indicate additional contextual information to be added to the log). So |
| you cannot directly make logging calls using :meth:`str.format` or |
| :class:`string.Template` syntax, because internally the logging package |
| uses %-formatting to merge the format string and the variable arguments. |
| There would no changing this while preserving backward compatibility, since |
| all logging calls which are out there in existing code will be using %-format |
| strings. |
| |
| There is, however, a way that you can use {}- and $- formatting to construct |
| your individual log messages. Recall that for a message you can use an |
| arbitrary object as a message format string, and that the logging package will |
| call ``str()`` on that object to get the actual format string. Consider the |
| following two classes:: |
| |
| class BraceMessage: |
| def __init__(self, fmt, *args, **kwargs): |
| self.fmt = fmt |
| self.args = args |
| self.kwargs = kwargs |
| |
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.fmt.format(*self.args, **self.kwargs) |
| |
| class DollarMessage: |
| def __init__(self, fmt, **kwargs): |
| self.fmt = fmt |
| self.kwargs = kwargs |
| |
| def __str__(self): |
| from string import Template |
| return Template(self.fmt).substitute(**self.kwargs) |
| |
| Either of these can be used in place of a format string, to allow {}- or |
| $-formatting to be used to build the actual "message" part which appears in the |
| formatted log output in place of "%(message)s" or "{message}" or "$message". |
| It's a little unwieldy to use the class names whenever you want to log |
| something, but it's quite palatable if you use an alias such as __ (double |
| underscore --- not to be confused with _, the single underscore used as a |
| synonym/alias for :func:`gettext.gettext` or its brethren). |
| |
| The above classes are not included in Python, though they're easy enough to |
| copy and paste into your own code. They can be used as follows (assuming that |
| they're declared in a module called ``wherever``): |
| |
| .. code-block:: pycon |
| |
| >>> from wherever import BraceMessage as __ |
| >>> print(__('Message with {0} {name}', 2, name='placeholders')) |
| Message with 2 placeholders |
| >>> class Point: pass |
| ... |
| >>> p = Point() |
| >>> p.x = 0.5 |
| >>> p.y = 0.5 |
| >>> print(__('Message with coordinates: ({point.x:.2f}, {point.y:.2f})', |
| ... point=p)) |
| Message with coordinates: (0.50, 0.50) |
| >>> from wherever import DollarMessage as __ |
| >>> print(__('Message with $num $what', num=2, what='placeholders')) |
| Message with 2 placeholders |
| >>> |
| |
| While the above examples use ``print()`` to show how the formatting works, you |
| would of course use ``logger.debug()`` or similar to actually log using this |
| approach. |
| |
| One thing to note is that you pay no significant performance penalty with this |
| approach: the actual formatting happens not when you make the logging call, but |
| when (and if) the logged message is actually about to be output to a log by a |
| handler. So the only slightly unusual thing which might trip you up is that the |
| parentheses go around the format string and the arguments, not just the format |
| string. That's because the __ notation is just syntax sugar for a constructor |
| call to one of the XXXMessage classes. |
| |
| If you prefer, you can use a :class:`LoggerAdapter` to achieve a similar effect |
| to the above, as in the following example:: |
| |
| import logging |
| |
| class Message(object): |
| def __init__(self, fmt, args): |
| self.fmt = fmt |
| self.args = args |
| |
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.fmt.format(*self.args) |
| |
| class StyleAdapter(logging.LoggerAdapter): |
| def __init__(self, logger, extra=None): |
| super(StyleAdapter, self).__init__(logger, extra or {}) |
| |
| def log(self, level, msg, *args, **kwargs): |
| if self.isEnabledFor(level): |
| msg, kwargs = self.process(msg, kwargs) |
| self.logger._log(level, Message(msg, args), (), **kwargs) |
| |
| logger = StyleAdapter(logging.getLogger(__name__)) |
| |
| def main(): |
| logger.debug('Hello, {}', 'world!') |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG) |
| main() |
| |
| The above script should log the message ``Hello, world!`` when run with |
| Python 3.2 or later. |
| |
| |
| .. currentmodule:: logging |
| |
| .. _custom-logrecord: |
| |
| Customizing ``LogRecord`` |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Every logging event is represented by a :class:`LogRecord` instance. |
| When an event is logged and not filtered out by a logger's level, a |
| :class:`LogRecord` is created, populated with information about the event and |
| then passed to the handlers for that logger (and its ancestors, up to and |
| including the logger where further propagation up the hierarchy is disabled). |
| Before Python 3.2, there were only two places where this creation was done: |
| |
| * :meth:`Logger.makeRecord`, which is called in the normal process of |
| logging an event. This invoked :class:`LogRecord` directly to create an |
| instance. |
| * :func:`makeLogRecord`, which is called with a dictionary containing |
| attributes to be added to the LogRecord. This is typically invoked when a |
| suitable dictionary has been received over the network (e.g. in pickle form |
| via a :class:`~handlers.SocketHandler`, or in JSON form via an |
| :class:`~handlers.HTTPHandler`). |
| |
| This has usually meant that if you need to do anything special with a |
| :class:`LogRecord`, you've had to do one of the following. |
| |
| * Create your own :class:`Logger` subclass, which overrides |
| :meth:`Logger.makeRecord`, and set it using :func:`~logging.setLoggerClass` |
| before any loggers that you care about are instantiated. |
| * Add a :class:`Filter` to a logger or handler, which does the |
| necessary special manipulation you need when its |
| :meth:`~Filter.filter` method is called. |
| |
| The first approach would be a little unwieldy in the scenario where (say) |
| several different libraries wanted to do different things. Each would attempt |
| to set its own :class:`Logger` subclass, and the one which did this last would |
| win. |
| |
| The second approach works reasonably well for many cases, but does not allow |
| you to e.g. use a specialized subclass of :class:`LogRecord`. Library |
| developers can set a suitable filter on their loggers, but they would have to |
| remember to do this every time they introduced a new logger (which they would |
| do simply by adding new packages or modules and doing :: |
| |
| logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) |
| |
| at module level). It's probably one too many things to think about. Developers |
| could also add the filter to a :class:`~logging.NullHandler` attached to their |
| top-level logger, but this would not be invoked if an application developer |
| attached a handler to a lower-level library logger --- so output from that |
| handler would not reflect the intentions of the library developer. |
| |
| In Python 3.2 and later, :class:`~logging.LogRecord` creation is done through a |
| factory, which you can specify. The factory is just a callable you can set with |
| :func:`~logging.setLogRecordFactory`, and interrogate with |
| :func:`~logging.getLogRecordFactory`. The factory is invoked with the same |
| signature as the :class:`~logging.LogRecord` constructor, as :class:`LogRecord` |
| is the default setting for the factory. |
| |
| This approach allows a custom factory to control all aspects of LogRecord |
| creation. For example, you could return a subclass, or just add some additional |
| attributes to the record once created, using a pattern similar to this:: |
| |
| old_factory = logging.getLogRecordFactory() |
| |
| def record_factory(*args, **kwargs): |
| record = old_factory(*args, **kwargs) |
| record.custom_attribute = 0xdecafbad |
| return record |
| |
| logging.setLogRecordFactory(record_factory) |
| |
| This pattern allows different libraries to chain factories together, and as |
| long as they don't overwrite each other's attributes or unintentionally |
| overwrite the attributes provided as standard, there should be no surprises. |
| However, it should be borne in mind that each link in the chain adds run-time |
| overhead to all logging operations, and the technique should only be used when |
| the use of a :class:`Filter` does not provide the desired result. |
| |
| |
| .. _zeromq-handlers: |
| |
| Subclassing QueueHandler - a ZeroMQ example |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| You can use a :class:`QueueHandler` subclass to send messages to other kinds |
| of queues, for example a ZeroMQ 'publish' socket. In the example below,the |
| socket is created separately and passed to the handler (as its 'queue'):: |
| |
| import zmq # using pyzmq, the Python binding for ZeroMQ |
| import json # for serializing records portably |
| |
| ctx = zmq.Context() |
| sock = zmq.Socket(ctx, zmq.PUB) # or zmq.PUSH, or other suitable value |
| sock.bind('tcp://*:5556') # or wherever |
| |
| class ZeroMQSocketHandler(QueueHandler): |
| def enqueue(self, record): |
| data = json.dumps(record.__dict__) |
| self.queue.send(data) |
| |
| handler = ZeroMQSocketHandler(sock) |
| |
| |
| Of course there are other ways of organizing this, for example passing in the |
| data needed by the handler to create the socket:: |
| |
| class ZeroMQSocketHandler(QueueHandler): |
| def __init__(self, uri, socktype=zmq.PUB, ctx=None): |
| self.ctx = ctx or zmq.Context() |
| socket = zmq.Socket(self.ctx, socktype) |
| socket.bind(uri) |
| QueueHandler.__init__(self, socket) |
| |
| def enqueue(self, record): |
| data = json.dumps(record.__dict__) |
| self.queue.send(data) |
| |
| def close(self): |
| self.queue.close() |
| |
| |
| Subclassing QueueListener - a ZeroMQ example |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| You can also subclass :class:`QueueListener` to get messages from other kinds |
| of queues, for example a ZeroMQ 'subscribe' socket. Here's an example:: |
| |
| class ZeroMQSocketListener(QueueListener): |
| def __init__(self, uri, *handlers, **kwargs): |
| self.ctx = kwargs.get('ctx') or zmq.Context() |
| socket = zmq.Socket(self.ctx, zmq.SUB) |
| socket.setsockopt(zmq.SUBSCRIBE, '') # subscribe to everything |
| socket.connect(uri) |
| |
| def dequeue(self): |
| msg = self.queue.recv() |
| return logging.makeLogRecord(json.loads(msg)) |
| |
| |
| .. seealso:: |
| |
| Module :mod:`logging` |
| API reference for the logging module. |
| |
| Module :mod:`logging.config` |
| Configuration API for the logging module. |
| |
| Module :mod:`logging.handlers` |
| Useful handlers included with the logging module. |
| |
| :ref:`A basic logging tutorial <logging-basic-tutorial>` |
| |
| :ref:`A more advanced logging tutorial <logging-advanced-tutorial>` |
| |
| |
| An example dictionary-based configuration |
| ----------------------------------------- |
| |
| Below is an example of a logging configuration dictionary - it's taken from |
| the `documentation on the Django project <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/topics/logging/#configuring-logging>`_. |
| This dictionary is passed to :func:`~config.dictConfig` to put the configuration into effect:: |
| |
| LOGGING = { |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'disable_existing_loggers': True, |
| 'formatters': { |
| 'verbose': { |
| 'format': '%(levelname)s %(asctime)s %(module)s %(process)d %(thread)d %(message)s' |
| }, |
| 'simple': { |
| 'format': '%(levelname)s %(message)s' |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'filters': { |
| 'special': { |
| '()': 'project.logging.SpecialFilter', |
| 'foo': 'bar', |
| } |
| }, |
| 'handlers': { |
| 'null': { |
| 'level':'DEBUG', |
| 'class':'django.utils.log.NullHandler', |
| }, |
| 'console':{ |
| 'level':'DEBUG', |
| 'class':'logging.StreamHandler', |
| 'formatter': 'simple' |
| }, |
| 'mail_admins': { |
| 'level': 'ERROR', |
| 'class': 'django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler', |
| 'filters': ['special'] |
| } |
| }, |
| 'loggers': { |
| 'django': { |
| 'handlers':['null'], |
| 'propagate': True, |
| 'level':'INFO', |
| }, |
| 'django.request': { |
| 'handlers': ['mail_admins'], |
| 'level': 'ERROR', |
| 'propagate': False, |
| }, |
| 'myproject.custom': { |
| 'handlers': ['console', 'mail_admins'], |
| 'level': 'INFO', |
| 'filters': ['special'] |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| For more information about this configuration, you can see the `relevant |
| section <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/topics/logging/#configuring-logging>`_ |
| of the Django documentation. |
| |
| .. _cookbook-rotator-namer: |
| |
| Using a rotator and namer to customize log rotation processing |
| -------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| An example of how you can define a namer and rotator is given in the following |
| snippet, which shows zlib-based compression of the log file:: |
| |
| def namer(name): |
| return name + ".gz" |
| |
| def rotator(source, dest): |
| with open(source, "rb") as sf: |
| data = sf.read() |
| compressed = zlib.compress(data, 9) |
| with open(dest, "wb") as df: |
| df.write(compressed) |
| os.remove(source) |
| |
| rh = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler(...) |
| rh.rotator = rotator |
| rh.namer = namer |
| |
| These are not "true" .gz files, as they are bare compressed data, with no |
| "container" such as you’d find in an actual gzip file. This snippet is just |
| for illustration purposes. |
| |
| A more elaborate multiprocessing example |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| The following working example shows how logging can be used with multiprocessing |
| using configuration files. The configurations are fairly simple, but serve to |
| illustrate how more complex ones could be implemented in a real multiprocessing |
| scenario. |
| |
| In the example, the main process spawns a listener process and some worker |
| processes. Each of the main process, the listener and the workers have three |
| separate configurations (the workers all share the same configuration). We can |
| see logging in the main process, how the workers log to a QueueHandler and how |
| the listener implements a QueueListener and a more complex logging |
| configuration, and arranges to dispatch events received via the queue to the |
| handlers specified in the configuration. Note that these configurations are |
| purely illustrative, but you should be able to adapt this example to your own |
| scenario. |
| |
| Here's the script - the docstrings and the comments hopefully explain how it |
| works:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import logging.config |
| import logging.handlers |
| from multiprocessing import Process, Queue, Event, current_process |
| import os |
| import random |
| import time |
| |
| class MyHandler: |
| """ |
| A simple handler for logging events. It runs in the listener process and |
| dispatches events to loggers based on the name in the received record, |
| which then get dispatched, by the logging system, to the handlers |
| configured for those loggers. |
| """ |
| def handle(self, record): |
| logger = logging.getLogger(record.name) |
| # The process name is transformed just to show that it's the listener |
| # doing the logging to files and console |
| record.processName = '%s (for %s)' % (current_process().name, record.processName) |
| logger.handle(record) |
| |
| def listener_process(q, stop_event, config): |
| """ |
| This could be done in the main process, but is just done in a separate |
| process for illustrative purposes. |
| |
| This initialises logging according to the specified configuration, |
| starts the listener and waits for the main process to signal completion |
| via the event. The listener is then stopped, and the process exits. |
| """ |
| logging.config.dictConfig(config) |
| listener = logging.handlers.QueueListener(q, MyHandler()) |
| listener.start() |
| if os.name == 'posix': |
| # On POSIX, the setup logger will have been configured in the |
| # parent process, but should have been disabled following the |
| # dictConfig call. |
| # On Windows, since fork isn't used, the setup logger won't |
| # exist in the child, so it would be created and the message |
| # would appear - hence the "if posix" clause. |
| logger = logging.getLogger('setup') |
| logger.critical('Should not appear, because of disabled logger ...') |
| stop_event.wait() |
| listener.stop() |
| |
| def worker_process(config): |
| """ |
| A number of these are spawned for the purpose of illustration. In |
| practice, they could be a heterogeneous bunch of processes rather than |
| ones which are identical to each other. |
| |
| This initialises logging according to the specified configuration, |
| and logs a hundred messages with random levels to randomly selected |
| loggers. |
| |
| A small sleep is added to allow other processes a chance to run. This |
| is not strictly needed, but it mixes the output from the different |
| processes a bit more than if it's left out. |
| """ |
| logging.config.dictConfig(config) |
| levels = [logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, logging.ERROR, |
| logging.CRITICAL] |
| loggers = ['foo', 'foo.bar', 'foo.bar.baz', |
| 'spam', 'spam.ham', 'spam.ham.eggs'] |
| if os.name == 'posix': |
| # On POSIX, the setup logger will have been configured in the |
| # parent process, but should have been disabled following the |
| # dictConfig call. |
| # On Windows, since fork isn't used, the setup logger won't |
| # exist in the child, so it would be created and the message |
| # would appear - hence the "if posix" clause. |
| logger = logging.getLogger('setup') |
| logger.critical('Should not appear, because of disabled logger ...') |
| for i in range(100): |
| lvl = random.choice(levels) |
| logger = logging.getLogger(random.choice(loggers)) |
| logger.log(lvl, 'Message no. %d', i) |
| time.sleep(0.01) |
| |
| def main(): |
| q = Queue() |
| # The main process gets a simple configuration which prints to the console. |
| config_initial = { |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'formatters': { |
| 'detailed': { |
| 'class': 'logging.Formatter', |
| 'format': '%(asctime)s %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(processName)-10s %(message)s' |
| } |
| }, |
| 'handlers': { |
| 'console': { |
| 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler', |
| 'level': 'INFO', |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'root': { |
| 'level': 'DEBUG', |
| 'handlers': ['console'] |
| }, |
| } |
| # The worker process configuration is just a QueueHandler attached to the |
| # root logger, which allows all messages to be sent to the queue. |
| # We disable existing loggers to disable the "setup" logger used in the |
| # parent process. This is needed on POSIX because the logger will |
| # be there in the child following a fork(). |
| config_worker = { |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'disable_existing_loggers': True, |
| 'handlers': { |
| 'queue': { |
| 'class': 'logging.handlers.QueueHandler', |
| 'queue': q, |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'root': { |
| 'level': 'DEBUG', |
| 'handlers': ['queue'] |
| }, |
| } |
| # The listener process configuration shows that the full flexibility of |
| # logging configuration is available to dispatch events to handlers however |
| # you want. |
| # We disable existing loggers to disable the "setup" logger used in the |
| # parent process. This is needed on POSIX because the logger will |
| # be there in the child following a fork(). |
| config_listener = { |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'disable_existing_loggers': True, |
| 'formatters': { |
| 'detailed': { |
| 'class': 'logging.Formatter', |
| 'format': '%(asctime)s %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(processName)-10s %(message)s' |
| }, |
| 'simple': { |
| 'class': 'logging.Formatter', |
| 'format': '%(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(processName)-10s %(message)s' |
| } |
| }, |
| 'handlers': { |
| 'console': { |
| 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler', |
| 'level': 'INFO', |
| 'formatter': 'simple', |
| }, |
| 'file': { |
| 'class': 'logging.FileHandler', |
| 'filename': 'mplog.log', |
| 'mode': 'w', |
| 'formatter': 'detailed', |
| }, |
| 'foofile': { |
| 'class': 'logging.FileHandler', |
| 'filename': 'mplog-foo.log', |
| 'mode': 'w', |
| 'formatter': 'detailed', |
| }, |
| 'errors': { |
| 'class': 'logging.FileHandler', |
| 'filename': 'mplog-errors.log', |
| 'mode': 'w', |
| 'level': 'ERROR', |
| 'formatter': 'detailed', |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'loggers': { |
| 'foo': { |
| 'handlers': ['foofile'] |
| } |
| }, |
| 'root': { |
| 'level': 'DEBUG', |
| 'handlers': ['console', 'file', 'errors'] |
| }, |
| } |
| # Log some initial events, just to show that logging in the parent works |
| # normally. |
| logging.config.dictConfig(config_initial) |
| logger = logging.getLogger('setup') |
| logger.info('About to create workers ...') |
| workers = [] |
| for i in range(5): |
| wp = Process(target=worker_process, name='worker %d' % (i + 1), |
| args=(config_worker,)) |
| workers.append(wp) |
| wp.start() |
| logger.info('Started worker: %s', wp.name) |
| logger.info('About to create listener ...') |
| stop_event = Event() |
| lp = Process(target=listener_process, name='listener', |
| args=(q, stop_event, config_listener)) |
| lp.start() |
| logger.info('Started listener') |
| # We now hang around for the workers to finish their work. |
| for wp in workers: |
| wp.join() |
| # Workers all done, listening can now stop. |
| # Logging in the parent still works normally. |
| logger.info('Telling listener to stop ...') |
| stop_event.set() |
| lp.join() |
| logger.info('All done.') |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| main() |
| |
| |
| Inserting a BOM into messages sent to a SysLogHandler |
| ----------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| `RFC 5424 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5424>`_ requires that a |
| Unicode message be sent to a syslog daemon as a set of bytes which have the |
| following structure: an optional pure-ASCII component, followed by a UTF-8 Byte |
| Order Mark (BOM), followed by Unicode encoded using UTF-8. (See the `relevant |
| section of the specification <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5424#section-6>`_.) |
| |
| In Python 3.1, code was added to |
| :class:`~logging.handlers.SysLogHandler` to insert a BOM into the message, but |
| unfortunately, it was implemented incorrectly, with the BOM appearing at the |
| beginning of the message and hence not allowing any pure-ASCII component to |
| appear before it. |
| |
| As this behaviour is broken, the incorrect BOM insertion code is being removed |
| from Python 3.2.4 and later. However, it is not being replaced, and if you |
| want to produce RFC 5424-compliant messages which include a BOM, an optional |
| pure-ASCII sequence before it and arbitrary Unicode after it, encoded using |
| UTF-8, then you need to do the following: |
| |
| #. Attach a :class:`~logging.Formatter` instance to your |
| :class:`~logging.handlers.SysLogHandler` instance, with a format string |
| such as:: |
| |
| 'ASCII section\ufeffUnicode section' |
| |
| The Unicode code point U+FEFF, when encoded using UTF-8, will be |
| encoded as a UTF-8 BOM -- the byte-string ``b'\xef\xbb\xbf'``. |
| |
| #. Replace the ASCII section with whatever placeholders you like, but make sure |
| that the data that appears in there after substitution is always ASCII (that |
| way, it will remain unchanged after UTF-8 encoding). |
| |
| #. Replace the Unicode section with whatever placeholders you like; if the data |
| which appears there after substitution contains characters outside the ASCII |
| range, that's fine -- it will be encoded using UTF-8. |
| |
| The formatted message *will* be encoded using UTF-8 encoding by |
| ``SysLogHandler``. If you follow the above rules, you should be able to produce |
| RFC 5424-compliant messages. If you don't, logging may not complain, but your |
| messages will not be RFC 5424-compliant, and your syslog daemon may complain. |
| |
| |
| Implementing structured logging |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| Although most logging messages are intended for reading by humans, and thus not |
| readily machine-parseable, there might be circumstances where you want to output |
| messages in a structured format which *is* capable of being parsed by a program |
| (without needing complex regular expressions to parse the log message). This is |
| straightforward to achieve using the logging package. There are a number of |
| ways in which this could be achieved, but the following is a simple approach |
| which uses JSON to serialise the event in a machine-parseable manner:: |
| |
| import json |
| import logging |
| |
| class StructuredMessage(object): |
| def __init__(self, message, **kwargs): |
| self.message = message |
| self.kwargs = kwargs |
| |
| def __str__(self): |
| return '%s >>> %s' % (self.message, json.dumps(self.kwargs)) |
| |
| _ = StructuredMessage # optional, to improve readability |
| |
| logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO, format='%(message)s') |
| logging.info(_('message 1', foo='bar', bar='baz', num=123, fnum=123.456)) |
| |
| If the above script is run, it prints:: |
| |
| message 1 >>> {"fnum": 123.456, "num": 123, "bar": "baz", "foo": "bar"} |
| |
| Note that the order of items might be different according to the version of |
| Python used. |
| |
| If you need more specialised processing, you can use a custom JSON encoder, |
| as in the following complete example:: |
| |
| from __future__ import unicode_literals |
| |
| import json |
| import logging |
| |
| # This next bit is to ensure the script runs unchanged on 2.x and 3.x |
| try: |
| unicode |
| except NameError: |
| unicode = str |
| |
| class Encoder(json.JSONEncoder): |
| def default(self, o): |
| if isinstance(o, set): |
| return tuple(o) |
| elif isinstance(o, unicode): |
| return o.encode('unicode_escape').decode('ascii') |
| return super(Encoder, self).default(o) |
| |
| class StructuredMessage(object): |
| def __init__(self, message, **kwargs): |
| self.message = message |
| self.kwargs = kwargs |
| |
| def __str__(self): |
| s = Encoder().encode(self.kwargs) |
| return '%s >>> %s' % (self.message, s) |
| |
| _ = StructuredMessage # optional, to improve readability |
| |
| def main(): |
| logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO, format='%(message)s') |
| logging.info(_('message 1', set_value={1, 2, 3}, snowman='\u2603')) |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| main() |
| |
| When the above script is run, it prints:: |
| |
| message 1 >>> {"snowman": "\u2603", "set_value": [1, 2, 3]} |
| |
| Note that the order of items might be different according to the version of |
| Python used. |
| |
| |
| .. _custom-handlers: |
| |
| .. currentmodule:: logging.config |
| |
| Customizing handlers with :func:`dictConfig` |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| There are times when you want to customize logging handlers in particular ways, |
| and if you use :func:`dictConfig` you may be able to do this without |
| subclassing. As an example, consider that you may want to set the ownership of a |
| log file. On POSIX, this is easily done using :func:`shutil.chown`, but the file |
| handlers in the stdlib don't offer built-in support. You can customize handler |
| creation using a plain function such as:: |
| |
| def owned_file_handler(filename, mode='a', encoding=None, owner=None): |
| if owner: |
| if not os.path.exists(filename): |
| open(filename, 'a').close() |
| shutil.chown(filename, *owner) |
| return logging.FileHandler(filename, mode, encoding) |
| |
| You can then specify, in a logging configuration passed to :func:`dictConfig`, |
| that a logging handler be created by calling this function:: |
| |
| LOGGING = { |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'disable_existing_loggers': False, |
| 'formatters': { |
| 'default': { |
| 'format': '%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(name)s %(message)s' |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'handlers': { |
| 'file':{ |
| # The values below are popped from this dictionary and |
| # used to create the handler, set the handler's level and |
| # its formatter. |
| '()': owned_file_handler, |
| 'level':'DEBUG', |
| 'formatter': 'default', |
| # The values below are passed to the handler creator callable |
| # as keyword arguments. |
| 'owner': ['pulse', 'pulse'], |
| 'filename': 'chowntest.log', |
| 'mode': 'w', |
| 'encoding': 'utf-8', |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'root': { |
| 'handlers': ['file'], |
| 'level': 'DEBUG', |
| }, |
| } |
| |
| In this example I am setting the ownership using the ``pulse`` user and group, |
| just for the purposes of illustration. Putting it together into a working |
| script, ``chowntest.py``:: |
| |
| import logging, logging.config, os, shutil |
| |
| def owned_file_handler(filename, mode='a', encoding=None, owner=None): |
| if owner: |
| if not os.path.exists(filename): |
| open(filename, 'a').close() |
| shutil.chown(filename, *owner) |
| return logging.FileHandler(filename, mode, encoding) |
| |
| LOGGING = { |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'disable_existing_loggers': False, |
| 'formatters': { |
| 'default': { |
| 'format': '%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(name)s %(message)s' |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'handlers': { |
| 'file':{ |
| # The values below are popped from this dictionary and |
| # used to create the handler, set the handler's level and |
| # its formatter. |
| '()': owned_file_handler, |
| 'level':'DEBUG', |
| 'formatter': 'default', |
| # The values below are passed to the handler creator callable |
| # as keyword arguments. |
| 'owner': ['pulse', 'pulse'], |
| 'filename': 'chowntest.log', |
| 'mode': 'w', |
| 'encoding': 'utf-8', |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'root': { |
| 'handlers': ['file'], |
| 'level': 'DEBUG', |
| }, |
| } |
| |
| logging.config.dictConfig(LOGGING) |
| logger = logging.getLogger('mylogger') |
| logger.debug('A debug message') |
| |
| To run this, you will probably need to run as ``root``: |
| |
| .. code-block:: shell-session |
| |
| $ sudo python3.3 chowntest.py |
| $ cat chowntest.log |
| 2013-11-05 09:34:51,128 DEBUG mylogger A debug message |
| $ ls -l chowntest.log |
| -rw-r--r-- 1 pulse pulse 55 2013-11-05 09:34 chowntest.log |
| |
| Note that this example uses Python 3.3 because that's where :func:`shutil.chown` |
| makes an appearance. This approach should work with any Python version that |
| supports :func:`dictConfig` - namely, Python 2.7, 3.2 or later. With pre-3.3 |
| versions, you would need to implement the actual ownership change using e.g. |
| :func:`os.chown`. |
| |
| In practice, the handler-creating function may be in a utility module somewhere |
| in your project. Instead of the line in the configuration:: |
| |
| '()': owned_file_handler, |
| |
| you could use e.g.:: |
| |
| '()': 'ext://project.util.owned_file_handler', |
| |
| where ``project.util`` can be replaced with the actual name of the package |
| where the function resides. In the above working script, using |
| ``'ext://__main__.owned_file_handler'`` should work. Here, the actual callable |
| is resolved by :func:`dictConfig` from the ``ext://`` specification. |
| |
| This example hopefully also points the way to how you could implement other |
| types of file change - e.g. setting specific POSIX permission bits - in the |
| same way, using :func:`os.chmod`. |
| |
| Of course, the approach could also be extended to types of handler other than a |
| :class:`~logging.FileHandler` - for example, one of the rotating file handlers, |
| or a different type of handler altogether. |
| |
| |
| .. currentmodule:: logging |
| |
| .. _formatting-styles: |
| |
| Using particular formatting styles throughout your application |
| -------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| In Python 3.2, the :class:`~logging.Formatter` gained a ``style`` keyword |
| parameter which, while defaulting to ``%`` for backward compatibility, allowed |
| the specification of ``{`` or ``$`` to support the formatting approaches |
| supported by :meth:`str.format` and :class:`string.Template`. Note that this |
| governs the formatting of logging messages for final output to logs, and is |
| completely orthogonal to how an individual logging message is constructed. |
| |
| Logging calls (:meth:`~Logger.debug`, :meth:`~Logger.info` etc.) only take |
| positional parameters for the actual logging message itself, with keyword |
| parameters used only for determining options for how to handle the logging call |
| (e.g. the ``exc_info`` keyword parameter to indicate that traceback information |
| should be logged, or the ``extra`` keyword parameter to indicate additional |
| contextual information to be added to the log). So you cannot directly make |
| logging calls using :meth:`str.format` or :class:`string.Template` syntax, |
| because internally the logging package uses %-formatting to merge the format |
| string and the variable arguments. There would no changing this while preserving |
| backward compatibility, since all logging calls which are out there in existing |
| code will be using %-format strings. |
| |
| There have been suggestions to associate format styles with specific loggers, |
| but that approach also runs into backward compatibility problems because any |
| existing code could be using a given logger name and using %-formatting. |
| |
| For logging to work interoperably between any third-party libraries and your |
| code, decisions about formatting need to be made at the level of the |
| individual logging call. This opens up a couple of ways in which alternative |
| formatting styles can be accommodated. |
| |
| |
| Using LogRecord factories |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| In Python 3.2, along with the :class:`~logging.Formatter` changes mentioned |
| above, the logging package gained the ability to allow users to set their own |
| :class:`LogRecord` subclasses, using the :func:`setLogRecordFactory` function. |
| You can use this to set your own subclass of :class:`LogRecord`, which does the |
| Right Thing by overriding the :meth:`~LogRecord.getMessage` method. The base |
| class implementation of this method is where the ``msg % args`` formatting |
| happens, and where you can substitute your alternate formatting; however, you |
| should be careful to support all formatting styles and allow %-formatting as |
| the default, to ensure interoperability with other code. Care should also be |
| taken to call ``str(self.msg)``, just as the base implementation does. |
| |
| Refer to the reference documentation on :func:`setLogRecordFactory` and |
| :class:`LogRecord` for more information. |
| |
| |
| Using custom message objects |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| There is another, perhaps simpler way that you can use {}- and $- formatting to |
| construct your individual log messages. You may recall (from |
| :ref:`arbitrary-object-messages`) that when logging you can use an arbitrary |
| object as a message format string, and that the logging package will call |
| :func:`str` on that object to get the actual format string. Consider the |
| following two classes:: |
| |
| class BraceMessage(object): |
| def __init__(self, fmt, *args, **kwargs): |
| self.fmt = fmt |
| self.args = args |
| self.kwargs = kwargs |
| |
| def __str__(self): |
| return self.fmt.format(*self.args, **self.kwargs) |
| |
| class DollarMessage(object): |
| def __init__(self, fmt, **kwargs): |
| self.fmt = fmt |
| self.kwargs = kwargs |
| |
| def __str__(self): |
| from string import Template |
| return Template(self.fmt).substitute(**self.kwargs) |
| |
| Either of these can be used in place of a format string, to allow {}- or |
| $-formatting to be used to build the actual "message" part which appears in the |
| formatted log output in place of “%(message)s” or “{message}” or “$message”. |
| If you find it a little unwieldy to use the class names whenever you want to log |
| something, you can make it more palatable if you use an alias such as ``M`` or |
| ``_`` for the message (or perhaps ``__``, if you are using ``_`` for |
| localization). |
| |
| Examples of this approach are given below. Firstly, formatting with |
| :meth:`str.format`:: |
| |
| >>> __ = BraceMessage |
| >>> print(__('Message with {0} {1}', 2, 'placeholders')) |
| Message with 2 placeholders |
| >>> class Point: pass |
| ... |
| >>> p = Point() |
| >>> p.x = 0.5 |
| >>> p.y = 0.5 |
| >>> print(__('Message with coordinates: ({point.x:.2f}, {point.y:.2f})', point=p)) |
| Message with coordinates: (0.50, 0.50) |
| |
| Secondly, formatting with :class:`string.Template`:: |
| |
| >>> __ = DollarMessage |
| >>> print(__('Message with $num $what', num=2, what='placeholders')) |
| Message with 2 placeholders |
| >>> |
| |
| One thing to note is that you pay no significant performance penalty with this |
| approach: the actual formatting happens not when you make the logging call, but |
| when (and if) the logged message is actually about to be output to a log by a |
| handler. So the only slightly unusual thing which might trip you up is that the |
| parentheses go around the format string and the arguments, not just the format |
| string. That’s because the __ notation is just syntax sugar for a constructor |
| call to one of the ``XXXMessage`` classes shown above. |
| |
| |
| .. _filters-dictconfig: |
| |
| .. currentmodule:: logging.config |
| |
| Configuring filters with :func:`dictConfig` |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| You *can* configure filters using :func:`~logging.config.dictConfig`, though it |
| might not be obvious at first glance how to do it (hence this recipe). Since |
| :class:`~logging.Filter` is the only filter class included in the standard |
| library, and it is unlikely to cater to many requirements (it's only there as a |
| base class), you will typically need to define your own :class:`~logging.Filter` |
| subclass with an overridden :meth:`~logging.Filter.filter` method. To do this, |
| specify the ``()`` key in the configuration dictionary for the filter, |
| specifying a callable which will be used to create the filter (a class is the |
| most obvious, but you can provide any callable which returns a |
| :class:`~logging.Filter` instance). Here is a complete example:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import logging.config |
| import sys |
| |
| class MyFilter(logging.Filter): |
| def __init__(self, param=None): |
| self.param = param |
| |
| def filter(self, record): |
| if self.param is None: |
| allow = True |
| else: |
| allow = self.param not in record.msg |
| if allow: |
| record.msg = 'changed: ' + record.msg |
| return allow |
| |
| LOGGING = { |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'filters': { |
| 'myfilter': { |
| '()': MyFilter, |
| 'param': 'noshow', |
| } |
| }, |
| 'handlers': { |
| 'console': { |
| 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler', |
| 'filters': ['myfilter'] |
| } |
| }, |
| 'root': { |
| 'level': 'DEBUG', |
| 'handlers': ['console'] |
| }, |
| } |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| logging.config.dictConfig(LOGGING) |
| logging.debug('hello') |
| logging.debug('hello - noshow') |
| |
| This example shows how you can pass configuration data to the callable which |
| constructs the instance, in the form of keyword parameters. When run, the above |
| script will print:: |
| |
| changed: hello |
| |
| which shows that the filter is working as configured. |
| |
| A couple of extra points to note: |
| |
| * If you can't refer to the callable directly in the configuration (e.g. if it |
| lives in a different module, and you can't import it directly where the |
| configuration dictionary is), you can use the form ``ext://...`` as described |
| in :ref:`logging-config-dict-externalobj`. For example, you could have used |
| the text ``'ext://__main__.MyFilter'`` instead of ``MyFilter`` in the above |
| example. |
| |
| * As well as for filters, this technique can also be used to configure custom |
| handlers and formatters. See :ref:`logging-config-dict-userdef` for more |
| information on how logging supports using user-defined objects in its |
| configuration, and see the other cookbook recipe :ref:`custom-handlers` above. |
| |
| |
| .. _custom-format-exception: |
| |
| Customized exception formatting |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| There might be times when you want to do customized exception formatting - for |
| argument's sake, let's say you want exactly one line per logged event, even |
| when exception information is present. You can do this with a custom formatter |
| class, as shown in the following example:: |
| |
| import logging |
| |
| class OneLineExceptionFormatter(logging.Formatter): |
| def formatException(self, exc_info): |
| """ |
| Format an exception so that it prints on a single line. |
| """ |
| result = super(OneLineExceptionFormatter, self).formatException(exc_info) |
| return repr(result) # or format into one line however you want to |
| |
| def format(self, record): |
| s = super(OneLineExceptionFormatter, self).format(record) |
| if record.exc_text: |
| s = s.replace('\n', '') + '|' |
| return s |
| |
| def configure_logging(): |
| fh = logging.FileHandler('output.txt', 'w') |
| f = OneLineExceptionFormatter('%(asctime)s|%(levelname)s|%(message)s|', |
| '%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S') |
| fh.setFormatter(f) |
| root = logging.getLogger() |
| root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| root.addHandler(fh) |
| |
| def main(): |
| configure_logging() |
| logging.info('Sample message') |
| try: |
| x = 1 / 0 |
| except ZeroDivisionError as e: |
| logging.exception('ZeroDivisionError: %s', e) |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| main() |
| |
| When run, this produces a file with exactly two lines:: |
| |
| 28/01/2015 07:21:23|INFO|Sample message| |
| 28/01/2015 07:21:23|ERROR|ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero|'Traceback (most recent call last):\n File "logtest7.py", line 30, in main\n x = 1 / 0\nZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero'| |
| |
| While the above treatment is simplistic, it points the way to how exception |
| information can be formatted to your liking. The :mod:`traceback` module may be |
| helpful for more specialized needs. |
| |
| .. _spoken-messages: |
| |
| Speaking logging messages |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| There might be situations when it is desirable to have logging messages rendered |
| in an audible rather than a visible format. This is easy to do if you have |
| text-to-speech (TTS) functionality available in your system, even if it doesn't have |
| a Python binding. Most TTS systems have a command line program you can run, and |
| this can be invoked from a handler using :mod:`subprocess`. It's assumed here |
| that TTS command line programs won't expect to interact with users or take a |
| long time to complete, and that the frequency of logged messages will be not so |
| high as to swamp the user with messages, and that it's acceptable to have the |
| messages spoken one at a time rather than concurrently, The example implementation |
| below waits for one message to be spoken before the next is processed, and this |
| might cause other handlers to be kept waiting. Here is a short example showing |
| the approach, which assumes that the ``espeak`` TTS package is available:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import subprocess |
| import sys |
| |
| class TTSHandler(logging.Handler): |
| def emit(self, record): |
| msg = self.format(record) |
| # Speak slowly in a female English voice |
| cmd = ['espeak', '-s150', '-ven+f3', msg] |
| p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, |
| stderr=subprocess.STDOUT) |
| # wait for the program to finish |
| p.communicate() |
| |
| def configure_logging(): |
| h = TTSHandler() |
| root = logging.getLogger() |
| root.addHandler(h) |
| # the default formatter just returns the message |
| root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| |
| def main(): |
| logging.info('Hello') |
| logging.debug('Goodbye') |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| configure_logging() |
| sys.exit(main()) |
| |
| When run, this script should say "Hello" and then "Goodbye" in a female voice. |
| |
| The above approach can, of course, be adapted to other TTS systems and even |
| other systems altogether which can process messages via external programs run |
| from a command line. |
| |
| |
| .. _buffered-logging: |
| |
| Buffering logging messages and outputting them conditionally |
| ------------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| There might be situations where you want to log messages in a temporary area |
| and only output them if a certain condition occurs. For example, you may want to |
| start logging debug events in a function, and if the function completes without |
| errors, you don't want to clutter the log with the collected debug information, |
| but if there is an error, you want all the debug information to be output as well |
| as the error. |
| |
| Here is an example which shows how you could do this using a decorator for your |
| functions where you want logging to behave this way. It makes use of the |
| :class:`logging.handlers.MemoryHandler`, which allows buffering of logged events |
| until some condition occurs, at which point the buffered events are ``flushed`` |
| - passed to another handler (the ``target`` handler) for processing. By default, |
| the ``MemoryHandler`` flushed when its buffer gets filled up or an event whose |
| level is greater than or equal to a specified threshold is seen. You can use this |
| recipe with a more specialised subclass of ``MemoryHandler`` if you want custom |
| flushing behavior. |
| |
| The example script has a simple function, ``foo``, which just cycles through |
| all the logging levels, writing to ``sys.stderr`` to say what level it's about |
| to log at, and then actually logging a message at that level. You can pass a |
| parameter to ``foo`` which, if true, will log at ERROR and CRITICAL levels - |
| otherwise, it only logs at DEBUG, INFO and WARNING levels. |
| |
| The script just arranges to decorate ``foo`` with a decorator which will do the |
| conditional logging that's required. The decorator takes a logger as a parameter |
| and attaches a memory handler for the duration of the call to the decorated |
| function. The decorator can be additionally parameterised using a target handler, |
| a level at which flushing should occur, and a capacity for the buffer. These |
| default to a :class:`~logging.StreamHandler` which writes to ``sys.stderr``, |
| ``logging.ERROR`` and ``100`` respectively. |
| |
| Here's the script:: |
| |
| import logging |
| from logging.handlers import MemoryHandler |
| import sys |
| |
| logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) |
| logger.addHandler(logging.NullHandler()) |
| |
| def log_if_errors(logger, target_handler=None, flush_level=None, capacity=None): |
| if target_handler is None: |
| target_handler = logging.StreamHandler() |
| if flush_level is None: |
| flush_level = logging.ERROR |
| if capacity is None: |
| capacity = 100 |
| handler = MemoryHandler(capacity, flushLevel=flush_level, target=target_handler) |
| |
| def decorator(fn): |
| def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): |
| logger.addHandler(handler) |
| try: |
| return fn(*args, **kwargs) |
| except Exception: |
| logger.exception('call failed') |
| raise |
| finally: |
| super(MemoryHandler, handler).flush() |
| logger.removeHandler(handler) |
| return wrapper |
| |
| return decorator |
| |
| def write_line(s): |
| sys.stderr.write('%s\n' % s) |
| |
| def foo(fail=False): |
| write_line('about to log at DEBUG ...') |
| logger.debug('Actually logged at DEBUG') |
| write_line('about to log at INFO ...') |
| logger.info('Actually logged at INFO') |
| write_line('about to log at WARNING ...') |
| logger.warning('Actually logged at WARNING') |
| if fail: |
| write_line('about to log at ERROR ...') |
| logger.error('Actually logged at ERROR') |
| write_line('about to log at CRITICAL ...') |
| logger.critical('Actually logged at CRITICAL') |
| return fail |
| |
| decorated_foo = log_if_errors(logger)(foo) |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) |
| write_line('Calling undecorated foo with False') |
| assert not foo(False) |
| write_line('Calling undecorated foo with True') |
| assert foo(True) |
| write_line('Calling decorated foo with False') |
| assert not decorated_foo(False) |
| write_line('Calling decorated foo with True') |
| assert decorated_foo(True) |
| |
| When this script is run, the following output should be observed:: |
| |
| Calling undecorated foo with False |
| about to log at DEBUG ... |
| about to log at INFO ... |
| about to log at WARNING ... |
| Calling undecorated foo with True |
| about to log at DEBUG ... |
| about to log at INFO ... |
| about to log at WARNING ... |
| about to log at ERROR ... |
| about to log at CRITICAL ... |
| Calling decorated foo with False |
| about to log at DEBUG ... |
| about to log at INFO ... |
| about to log at WARNING ... |
| Calling decorated foo with True |
| about to log at DEBUG ... |
| about to log at INFO ... |
| about to log at WARNING ... |
| about to log at ERROR ... |
| Actually logged at DEBUG |
| Actually logged at INFO |
| Actually logged at WARNING |
| Actually logged at ERROR |
| about to log at CRITICAL ... |
| Actually logged at CRITICAL |
| |
| As you can see, actual logging output only occurs when an event is logged whose |
| severity is ERROR or greater, but in that case, any previous events at lower |
| severities are also logged. |
| |
| You can of course use the conventional means of decoration:: |
| |
| @log_if_errors(logger) |
| def foo(fail=False): |
| ... |
| |
| |
| .. _utc-formatting: |
| |
| Formatting times using UTC (GMT) via configuration |
| -------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Sometimes you want to format times using UTC, which can be done using a class |
| such as `UTCFormatter`, shown below:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import time |
| |
| class UTCFormatter(logging.Formatter): |
| converter = time.gmtime |
| |
| and you can then use the ``UTCFormatter`` in your code instead of |
| :class:`~logging.Formatter`. If you want to do that via configuration, you can |
| use the :func:`~logging.config.dictConfig` API with an approach illustrated by |
| the following complete example:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import logging.config |
| import time |
| |
| class UTCFormatter(logging.Formatter): |
| converter = time.gmtime |
| |
| LOGGING = { |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'disable_existing_loggers': False, |
| 'formatters': { |
| 'utc': { |
| '()': UTCFormatter, |
| 'format': '%(asctime)s %(message)s', |
| }, |
| 'local': { |
| 'format': '%(asctime)s %(message)s', |
| } |
| }, |
| 'handlers': { |
| 'console1': { |
| 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler', |
| 'formatter': 'utc', |
| }, |
| 'console2': { |
| 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler', |
| 'formatter': 'local', |
| }, |
| }, |
| 'root': { |
| 'handlers': ['console1', 'console2'], |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| logging.config.dictConfig(LOGGING) |
| logging.warning('The local time is %s', time.asctime()) |
| |
| When this script is run, it should print something like:: |
| |
| 2015-10-17 12:53:29,501 The local time is Sat Oct 17 13:53:29 2015 |
| 2015-10-17 13:53:29,501 The local time is Sat Oct 17 13:53:29 2015 |
| |
| showing how the time is formatted both as local time and UTC, one for each |
| handler. |
| |
| |
| .. _context-manager: |
| |
| Using a context manager for selective logging |
| --------------------------------------------- |
| |
| There are times when it would be useful to temporarily change the logging |
| configuration and revert it back after doing something. For this, a context |
| manager is the most obvious way of saving and restoring the logging context. |
| Here is a simple example of such a context manager, which allows you to |
| optionally change the logging level and add a logging handler purely in the |
| scope of the context manager:: |
| |
| import logging |
| import sys |
| |
| class LoggingContext(object): |
| def __init__(self, logger, level=None, handler=None, close=True): |
| self.logger = logger |
| self.level = level |
| self.handler = handler |
| self.close = close |
| |
| def __enter__(self): |
| if self.level is not None: |
| self.old_level = self.logger.level |
| self.logger.setLevel(self.level) |
| if self.handler: |
| self.logger.addHandler(self.handler) |
| |
| def __exit__(self, et, ev, tb): |
| if self.level is not None: |
| self.logger.setLevel(self.old_level) |
| if self.handler: |
| self.logger.removeHandler(self.handler) |
| if self.handler and self.close: |
| self.handler.close() |
| # implicit return of None => don't swallow exceptions |
| |
| If you specify a level value, the logger's level is set to that value in the |
| scope of the with block covered by the context manager. If you specify a |
| handler, it is added to the logger on entry to the block and removed on exit |
| from the block. You can also ask the manager to close the handler for you on |
| block exit - you could do this if you don't need the handler any more. |
| |
| To illustrate how it works, we can add the following block of code to the |
| above:: |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| logger = logging.getLogger('foo') |
| logger.addHandler(logging.StreamHandler()) |
| logger.setLevel(logging.INFO) |
| logger.info('1. This should appear just once on stderr.') |
| logger.debug('2. This should not appear.') |
| with LoggingContext(logger, level=logging.DEBUG): |
| logger.debug('3. This should appear once on stderr.') |
| logger.debug('4. This should not appear.') |
| h = logging.StreamHandler(sys.stdout) |
| with LoggingContext(logger, level=logging.DEBUG, handler=h, close=True): |
| logger.debug('5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout.') |
| logger.info('6. This should appear just once on stderr.') |
| logger.debug('7. This should not appear.') |
| |
| We initially set the logger's level to ``INFO``, so message #1 appears and |
| message #2 doesn't. We then change the level to ``DEBUG`` temporarily in the |
| following ``with`` block, and so message #3 appears. After the block exits, the |
| logger's level is restored to ``INFO`` and so message #4 doesn't appear. In the |
| next ``with`` block, we set the level to ``DEBUG`` again but also add a handler |
| writing to ``sys.stdout``. Thus, message #5 appears twice on the console (once |
| via ``stderr`` and once via ``stdout``). After the ``with`` statement's |
| completion, the status is as it was before so message #6 appears (like message |
| #1) whereas message #7 doesn't (just like message #2). |
| |
| If we run the resulting script, the result is as follows: |
| |
| .. code-block:: shell-session |
| |
| $ python logctx.py |
| 1. This should appear just once on stderr. |
| 3. This should appear once on stderr. |
| 5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout. |
| 5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout. |
| 6. This should appear just once on stderr. |
| |
| If we run it again, but pipe ``stderr`` to ``/dev/null``, we see the following, |
| which is the only message written to ``stdout``: |
| |
| .. code-block:: shell-session |
| |
| $ python logctx.py 2>/dev/null |
| 5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout. |
| |
| Once again, but piping ``stdout`` to ``/dev/null``, we get: |
| |
| .. code-block:: shell-session |
| |
| $ python logctx.py >/dev/null |
| 1. This should appear just once on stderr. |
| 3. This should appear once on stderr. |
| 5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout. |
| 6. This should appear just once on stderr. |
| |
| In this case, the message #5 printed to ``stdout`` doesn't appear, as expected. |
| |
| Of course, the approach described here can be generalised, for example to attach |
| logging filters temporarily. Note that the above code works in Python 2 as well |
| as Python 3. |