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Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001.. _logging-cookbook:
2
3================
4Logging Cookbook
5================
6
7:Author: Vinay Sajip <vinay_sajip at red-dove dot com>
8
Georg Brandl375aec22011-01-15 17:03:02 +00009This page contains a number of recipes related to logging, which have been found
10useful in the past.
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +000011
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +000012.. currentmodule:: logging
13
14Using logging in multiple modules
15---------------------------------
16
Vinay Sajip1397ce12010-12-24 12:03:48 +000017Multiple calls to ``logging.getLogger('someLogger')`` return a reference to the
18same logger object. This is true not only within the same module, but also
19across modules as long as it is in the same Python interpreter process. It is
20true for references to the same object; additionally, application code can
21define and configure a parent logger in one module and create (but not
22configure) a child logger in a separate module, and all logger calls to the
23child will pass up to the parent. Here is a main module::
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +000024
25 import logging
26 import auxiliary_module
27
28 # create logger with 'spam_application'
29 logger = logging.getLogger('spam_application')
30 logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
31 # create file handler which logs even debug messages
32 fh = logging.FileHandler('spam.log')
33 fh.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
34 # create console handler with a higher log level
35 ch = logging.StreamHandler()
36 ch.setLevel(logging.ERROR)
37 # create formatter and add it to the handlers
38 formatter = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s')
39 fh.setFormatter(formatter)
40 ch.setFormatter(formatter)
41 # add the handlers to the logger
42 logger.addHandler(fh)
43 logger.addHandler(ch)
44
45 logger.info('creating an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary')
46 a = auxiliary_module.Auxiliary()
47 logger.info('created an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary')
48 logger.info('calling auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something')
49 a.do_something()
50 logger.info('finished auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something')
51 logger.info('calling auxiliary_module.some_function()')
52 auxiliary_module.some_function()
53 logger.info('done with auxiliary_module.some_function()')
54
55Here is the auxiliary module::
56
57 import logging
58
59 # create logger
60 module_logger = logging.getLogger('spam_application.auxiliary')
61
62 class Auxiliary:
63 def __init__(self):
64 self.logger = logging.getLogger('spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary')
65 self.logger.info('creating an instance of Auxiliary')
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +030066
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +000067 def do_something(self):
68 self.logger.info('doing something')
69 a = 1 + 1
70 self.logger.info('done doing something')
71
72 def some_function():
73 module_logger.info('received a call to "some_function"')
74
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +030075The output looks like this:
76
77.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +000078
79 2005-03-23 23:47:11,663 - spam_application - INFO -
80 creating an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary
81 2005-03-23 23:47:11,665 - spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary - INFO -
82 creating an instance of Auxiliary
83 2005-03-23 23:47:11,665 - spam_application - INFO -
84 created an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary
85 2005-03-23 23:47:11,668 - spam_application - INFO -
86 calling auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something
87 2005-03-23 23:47:11,668 - spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary - INFO -
88 doing something
89 2005-03-23 23:47:11,669 - spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary - INFO -
90 done doing something
91 2005-03-23 23:47:11,670 - spam_application - INFO -
92 finished auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something
93 2005-03-23 23:47:11,671 - spam_application - INFO -
94 calling auxiliary_module.some_function()
95 2005-03-23 23:47:11,672 - spam_application.auxiliary - INFO -
96 received a call to 'some_function'
97 2005-03-23 23:47:11,673 - spam_application - INFO -
98 done with auxiliary_module.some_function()
99
Vinay Sajipe10d3702016-02-20 19:02:46 +0000100Logging from multiple threads
101-----------------------------
102
103Logging from multiple threads requires no special effort. The following example
Berker Peksag563c9492016-03-20 12:50:56 +0200104shows logging from the main (initial) thread and another thread::
Vinay Sajipe10d3702016-02-20 19:02:46 +0000105
106 import logging
107 import threading
108 import time
109
110 def worker(arg):
111 while not arg['stop']:
112 logging.debug('Hi from myfunc')
113 time.sleep(0.5)
114
115 def main():
116 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG, format='%(relativeCreated)6d %(threadName)s %(message)s')
117 info = {'stop': False}
118 thread = threading.Thread(target=worker, args=(info,))
119 thread.start()
120 while True:
121 try:
122 logging.debug('Hello from main')
123 time.sleep(0.75)
124 except KeyboardInterrupt:
125 info['stop'] = True
126 break
127 thread.join()
128
129 if __name__ == '__main__':
130 main()
131
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +0300132When run, the script should print something like the following:
133
134.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipe10d3702016-02-20 19:02:46 +0000135
136 0 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
137 3 MainThread Hello from main
138 505 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
139 755 MainThread Hello from main
140 1007 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
141 1507 MainThread Hello from main
142 1508 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
143 2010 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
144 2258 MainThread Hello from main
145 2512 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
146 3009 MainThread Hello from main
147 3013 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
148 3515 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
149 3761 MainThread Hello from main
150 4017 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
151 4513 MainThread Hello from main
152 4518 Thread-1 Hi from myfunc
153
154This shows the logging output interspersed as one might expect. This approach
155works for more threads than shown here, of course.
156
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000157Multiple handlers and formatters
158--------------------------------
159
Vinay Sajip67f39772013-08-17 00:39:42 +0100160Loggers are plain Python objects. The :meth:`~Logger.addHandler` method has no
161minimum or maximum quota for the number of handlers you may add. Sometimes it
162will be beneficial for an application to log all messages of all severities to a
163text file while simultaneously logging errors or above to the console. To set
164this up, simply configure the appropriate handlers. The logging calls in the
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000165application code will remain unchanged. Here is a slight modification to the
166previous simple module-based configuration example::
167
168 import logging
169
170 logger = logging.getLogger('simple_example')
171 logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
172 # create file handler which logs even debug messages
173 fh = logging.FileHandler('spam.log')
174 fh.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
175 # create console handler with a higher log level
176 ch = logging.StreamHandler()
177 ch.setLevel(logging.ERROR)
178 # create formatter and add it to the handlers
179 formatter = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s')
180 ch.setFormatter(formatter)
181 fh.setFormatter(formatter)
182 # add the handlers to logger
183 logger.addHandler(ch)
184 logger.addHandler(fh)
185
186 # 'application' code
187 logger.debug('debug message')
188 logger.info('info message')
189 logger.warn('warn message')
190 logger.error('error message')
191 logger.critical('critical message')
192
193Notice that the 'application' code does not care about multiple handlers. All
194that changed was the addition and configuration of a new handler named *fh*.
195
196The ability to create new handlers with higher- or lower-severity filters can be
197very helpful when writing and testing an application. Instead of using many
198``print`` statements for debugging, use ``logger.debug``: Unlike the print
199statements, which you will have to delete or comment out later, the logger.debug
200statements can remain intact in the source code and remain dormant until you
201need them again. At that time, the only change that needs to happen is to
202modify the severity level of the logger and/or handler to debug.
203
204.. _multiple-destinations:
205
206Logging to multiple destinations
207--------------------------------
208
209Let's say you want to log to console and file with different message formats and
210in differing circumstances. Say you want to log messages with levels of DEBUG
211and higher to file, and those messages at level INFO and higher to the console.
212Let's also assume that the file should contain timestamps, but the console
213messages should not. Here's how you can achieve this::
214
215 import logging
216
217 # set up logging to file - see previous section for more details
218 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,
219 format='%(asctime)s %(name)-12s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s',
220 datefmt='%m-%d %H:%M',
221 filename='/temp/myapp.log',
222 filemode='w')
223 # define a Handler which writes INFO messages or higher to the sys.stderr
224 console = logging.StreamHandler()
225 console.setLevel(logging.INFO)
226 # set a format which is simpler for console use
227 formatter = logging.Formatter('%(name)-12s: %(levelname)-8s %(message)s')
228 # tell the handler to use this format
229 console.setFormatter(formatter)
230 # add the handler to the root logger
231 logging.getLogger('').addHandler(console)
232
233 # Now, we can log to the root logger, or any other logger. First the root...
234 logging.info('Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.')
235
236 # Now, define a couple of other loggers which might represent areas in your
237 # application:
238
239 logger1 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area1')
240 logger2 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area2')
241
242 logger1.debug('Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.')
243 logger1.info('How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.')
244 logger2.warning('Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.')
245 logger2.error('The five boxing wizards jump quickly.')
246
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +0300247When you run this, on the console you will see
248
249.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000250
251 root : INFO Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.
252 myapp.area1 : INFO How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.
253 myapp.area2 : WARNING Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.
254 myapp.area2 : ERROR The five boxing wizards jump quickly.
255
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +0300256and in the file you will see something like
257
258.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000259
260 10-22 22:19 root INFO Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.
261 10-22 22:19 myapp.area1 DEBUG Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.
262 10-22 22:19 myapp.area1 INFO How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.
263 10-22 22:19 myapp.area2 WARNING Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.
264 10-22 22:19 myapp.area2 ERROR The five boxing wizards jump quickly.
265
266As you can see, the DEBUG message only shows up in the file. The other messages
267are sent to both destinations.
268
269This example uses console and file handlers, but you can use any number and
270combination of handlers you choose.
271
272
273Configuration server example
274----------------------------
275
276Here is an example of a module using the logging configuration server::
277
278 import logging
279 import logging.config
280 import time
281 import os
282
283 # read initial config file
284 logging.config.fileConfig('logging.conf')
285
286 # create and start listener on port 9999
287 t = logging.config.listen(9999)
288 t.start()
289
290 logger = logging.getLogger('simpleExample')
291
292 try:
293 # loop through logging calls to see the difference
294 # new configurations make, until Ctrl+C is pressed
295 while True:
296 logger.debug('debug message')
297 logger.info('info message')
298 logger.warn('warn message')
299 logger.error('error message')
300 logger.critical('critical message')
301 time.sleep(5)
302 except KeyboardInterrupt:
303 # cleanup
304 logging.config.stopListening()
305 t.join()
306
307And here is a script that takes a filename and sends that file to the server,
308properly preceded with the binary-encoded length, as the new logging
309configuration::
310
311 #!/usr/bin/env python
312 import socket, sys, struct
313
Vinay Sajip689b68a2010-12-22 15:04:15 +0000314 with open(sys.argv[1], 'rb') as f:
315 data_to_send = f.read()
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000316
317 HOST = 'localhost'
318 PORT = 9999
319 s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
320 print('connecting...')
321 s.connect((HOST, PORT))
322 print('sending config...')
323 s.send(struct.pack('>L', len(data_to_send)))
324 s.send(data_to_send)
325 s.close()
326 print('complete')
327
328
329Dealing with handlers that block
330--------------------------------
331
332.. currentmodule:: logging.handlers
333
334Sometimes you have to get your logging handlers to do their work without
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +0000335blocking the thread you're logging from. This is common in Web applications,
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000336though of course it also occurs in other scenarios.
337
338A common culprit which demonstrates sluggish behaviour is the
339:class:`SMTPHandler`: sending emails can take a long time, for a
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +0000340number of reasons outside the developer's control (for example, a poorly
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000341performing mail or network infrastructure). But almost any network-based
342handler can block: Even a :class:`SocketHandler` operation may do a
343DNS query under the hood which is too slow (and this query can be deep in the
344socket library code, below the Python layer, and outside your control).
345
346One solution is to use a two-part approach. For the first part, attach only a
347:class:`QueueHandler` to those loggers which are accessed from
348performance-critical threads. They simply write to their queue, which can be
349sized to a large enough capacity or initialized with no upper bound to their
350size. The write to the queue will typically be accepted quickly, though you
Georg Brandl375aec22011-01-15 17:03:02 +0000351will probably need to catch the :exc:`queue.Full` exception as a precaution
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000352in your code. If you are a library developer who has performance-critical
353threads in their code, be sure to document this (together with a suggestion to
354attach only ``QueueHandlers`` to your loggers) for the benefit of other
355developers who will use your code.
356
357The second part of the solution is :class:`QueueListener`, which has been
358designed as the counterpart to :class:`QueueHandler`. A
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +0000359:class:`QueueListener` is very simple: it's passed a queue and some handlers,
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000360and it fires up an internal thread which listens to its queue for LogRecords
361sent from ``QueueHandlers`` (or any other source of ``LogRecords``, for that
362matter). The ``LogRecords`` are removed from the queue and passed to the
363handlers for processing.
364
365The advantage of having a separate :class:`QueueListener` class is that you
366can use the same instance to service multiple ``QueueHandlers``. This is more
367resource-friendly than, say, having threaded versions of the existing handler
368classes, which would eat up one thread per handler for no particular benefit.
369
370An example of using these two classes follows (imports omitted)::
371
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +0300372 que = queue.Queue(-1) # no limit on size
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000373 queue_handler = QueueHandler(que)
374 handler = logging.StreamHandler()
375 listener = QueueListener(que, handler)
376 root = logging.getLogger()
377 root.addHandler(queue_handler)
378 formatter = logging.Formatter('%(threadName)s: %(message)s')
379 handler.setFormatter(formatter)
380 listener.start()
381 # The log output will display the thread which generated
382 # the event (the main thread) rather than the internal
383 # thread which monitors the internal queue. This is what
384 # you want to happen.
385 root.warning('Look out!')
386 listener.stop()
387
Martin Panter1050d2d2016-07-26 11:18:21 +0200388which, when run, will produce:
389
390.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000391
392 MainThread: Look out!
393
Vinay Sajip365701a2015-02-09 19:49:00 +0000394.. versionchanged:: 3.5
395 Prior to Python 3.5, the :class:`QueueListener` always passed every message
396 received from the queue to every handler it was initialized with. (This was
397 because it was assumed that level filtering was all done on the other side,
398 where the queue is filled.) From 3.5 onwards, this behaviour can be changed
399 by passing a keyword argument ``respect_handler_level=True`` to the
400 listener's constructor. When this is done, the listener compares the level
401 of each message with the handler's level, and only passes a message to a
402 handler if it's appropriate to do so.
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000403
404.. _network-logging:
405
406Sending and receiving logging events across a network
407-----------------------------------------------------
408
409Let's say you want to send logging events across a network, and handle them at
410the receiving end. A simple way of doing this is attaching a
411:class:`SocketHandler` instance to the root logger at the sending end::
412
413 import logging, logging.handlers
414
415 rootLogger = logging.getLogger('')
416 rootLogger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
417 socketHandler = logging.handlers.SocketHandler('localhost',
418 logging.handlers.DEFAULT_TCP_LOGGING_PORT)
419 # don't bother with a formatter, since a socket handler sends the event as
420 # an unformatted pickle
421 rootLogger.addHandler(socketHandler)
422
423 # Now, we can log to the root logger, or any other logger. First the root...
424 logging.info('Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.')
425
426 # Now, define a couple of other loggers which might represent areas in your
427 # application:
428
429 logger1 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area1')
430 logger2 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area2')
431
432 logger1.debug('Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.')
433 logger1.info('How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.')
434 logger2.warning('Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.')
435 logger2.error('The five boxing wizards jump quickly.')
436
437At the receiving end, you can set up a receiver using the :mod:`socketserver`
438module. Here is a basic working example::
439
440 import pickle
441 import logging
442 import logging.handlers
443 import socketserver
444 import struct
445
446
447 class LogRecordStreamHandler(socketserver.StreamRequestHandler):
448 """Handler for a streaming logging request.
449
450 This basically logs the record using whatever logging policy is
451 configured locally.
452 """
453
454 def handle(self):
455 """
456 Handle multiple requests - each expected to be a 4-byte length,
457 followed by the LogRecord in pickle format. Logs the record
458 according to whatever policy is configured locally.
459 """
460 while True:
461 chunk = self.connection.recv(4)
462 if len(chunk) < 4:
463 break
464 slen = struct.unpack('>L', chunk)[0]
465 chunk = self.connection.recv(slen)
466 while len(chunk) < slen:
467 chunk = chunk + self.connection.recv(slen - len(chunk))
468 obj = self.unPickle(chunk)
469 record = logging.makeLogRecord(obj)
470 self.handleLogRecord(record)
471
472 def unPickle(self, data):
473 return pickle.loads(data)
474
475 def handleLogRecord(self, record):
476 # if a name is specified, we use the named logger rather than the one
477 # implied by the record.
478 if self.server.logname is not None:
479 name = self.server.logname
480 else:
481 name = record.name
482 logger = logging.getLogger(name)
483 # N.B. EVERY record gets logged. This is because Logger.handle
484 # is normally called AFTER logger-level filtering. If you want
485 # to do filtering, do it at the client end to save wasting
486 # cycles and network bandwidth!
487 logger.handle(record)
488
489 class LogRecordSocketReceiver(socketserver.ThreadingTCPServer):
490 """
491 Simple TCP socket-based logging receiver suitable for testing.
492 """
493
Raymond Hettinger4ab532b2014-03-28 16:39:25 -0700494 allow_reuse_address = True
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000495
496 def __init__(self, host='localhost',
497 port=logging.handlers.DEFAULT_TCP_LOGGING_PORT,
498 handler=LogRecordStreamHandler):
499 socketserver.ThreadingTCPServer.__init__(self, (host, port), handler)
500 self.abort = 0
501 self.timeout = 1
502 self.logname = None
503
504 def serve_until_stopped(self):
505 import select
506 abort = 0
507 while not abort:
508 rd, wr, ex = select.select([self.socket.fileno()],
509 [], [],
510 self.timeout)
511 if rd:
512 self.handle_request()
513 abort = self.abort
514
515 def main():
516 logging.basicConfig(
517 format='%(relativeCreated)5d %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s')
518 tcpserver = LogRecordSocketReceiver()
519 print('About to start TCP server...')
520 tcpserver.serve_until_stopped()
521
522 if __name__ == '__main__':
523 main()
524
525First run the server, and then the client. On the client side, nothing is
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +0300526printed on the console; on the server side, you should see something like:
527
528.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000529
530 About to start TCP server...
531 59 root INFO Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.
532 59 myapp.area1 DEBUG Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.
533 69 myapp.area1 INFO How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.
534 69 myapp.area2 WARNING Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.
535 69 myapp.area2 ERROR The five boxing wizards jump quickly.
536
537Note that there are some security issues with pickle in some scenarios. If
538these affect you, you can use an alternative serialization scheme by overriding
Vinay Sajip67f39772013-08-17 00:39:42 +0100539the :meth:`~handlers.SocketHandler.makePickle` method and implementing your
540alternative there, as well as adapting the above script to use your alternative
541serialization.
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000542
543
544.. _context-info:
545
546Adding contextual information to your logging output
547----------------------------------------------------
548
549Sometimes you want logging output to contain contextual information in
550addition to the parameters passed to the logging call. For example, in a
551networked application, it may be desirable to log client-specific information
552in the log (e.g. remote client's username, or IP address). Although you could
553use the *extra* parameter to achieve this, it's not always convenient to pass
554the information in this way. While it might be tempting to create
555:class:`Logger` instances on a per-connection basis, this is not a good idea
556because these instances are not garbage collected. While this is not a problem
557in practice, when the number of :class:`Logger` instances is dependent on the
558level of granularity you want to use in logging an application, it could
559be hard to manage if the number of :class:`Logger` instances becomes
560effectively unbounded.
561
562
563Using LoggerAdapters to impart contextual information
564^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
565
566An easy way in which you can pass contextual information to be output along
567with logging event information is to use the :class:`LoggerAdapter` class.
568This class is designed to look like a :class:`Logger`, so that you can call
569:meth:`debug`, :meth:`info`, :meth:`warning`, :meth:`error`,
570:meth:`exception`, :meth:`critical` and :meth:`log`. These methods have the
571same signatures as their counterparts in :class:`Logger`, so you can use the
572two types of instances interchangeably.
573
574When you create an instance of :class:`LoggerAdapter`, you pass it a
575:class:`Logger` instance and a dict-like object which contains your contextual
576information. When you call one of the logging methods on an instance of
577:class:`LoggerAdapter`, it delegates the call to the underlying instance of
578:class:`Logger` passed to its constructor, and arranges to pass the contextual
579information in the delegated call. Here's a snippet from the code of
580:class:`LoggerAdapter`::
581
582 def debug(self, msg, *args, **kwargs):
583 """
584 Delegate a debug call to the underlying logger, after adding
585 contextual information from this adapter instance.
586 """
587 msg, kwargs = self.process(msg, kwargs)
588 self.logger.debug(msg, *args, **kwargs)
589
Vinay Sajip67f39772013-08-17 00:39:42 +0100590The :meth:`~LoggerAdapter.process` method of :class:`LoggerAdapter` is where the
591contextual information is added to the logging output. It's passed the message
592and keyword arguments of the logging call, and it passes back (potentially)
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000593modified versions of these to use in the call to the underlying logger. The
594default implementation of this method leaves the message alone, but inserts
595an 'extra' key in the keyword argument whose value is the dict-like object
596passed to the constructor. Of course, if you had passed an 'extra' keyword
597argument in the call to the adapter, it will be silently overwritten.
598
599The advantage of using 'extra' is that the values in the dict-like object are
600merged into the :class:`LogRecord` instance's __dict__, allowing you to use
601customized strings with your :class:`Formatter` instances which know about
602the keys of the dict-like object. If you need a different method, e.g. if you
603want to prepend or append the contextual information to the message string,
Vinay Sajip67f39772013-08-17 00:39:42 +0100604you just need to subclass :class:`LoggerAdapter` and override
605:meth:`~LoggerAdapter.process` to do what you need. Here is a simple example::
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000606
Vinay Sajipa92fbe62013-07-24 17:52:01 +0100607 class CustomAdapter(logging.LoggerAdapter):
608 """
609 This example adapter expects the passed in dict-like object to have a
610 'connid' key, whose value in brackets is prepended to the log message.
611 """
612 def process(self, msg, kwargs):
613 return '[%s] %s' % (self.extra['connid'], msg), kwargs
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000614
Vinay Sajipa92fbe62013-07-24 17:52:01 +0100615which you can use like this::
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000616
Vinay Sajipa92fbe62013-07-24 17:52:01 +0100617 logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
618 adapter = CustomAdapter(logger, {'connid': some_conn_id})
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000619
Vinay Sajipa92fbe62013-07-24 17:52:01 +0100620Then any events that you log to the adapter will have the value of
621``some_conn_id`` prepended to the log messages.
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000622
Vinay Sajipa92fbe62013-07-24 17:52:01 +0100623Using objects other than dicts to pass contextual information
624~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000625
Vinay Sajipa92fbe62013-07-24 17:52:01 +0100626You don't need to pass an actual dict to a :class:`LoggerAdapter` - you could
627pass an instance of a class which implements ``__getitem__`` and ``__iter__`` so
628that it looks like a dict to logging. This would be useful if you want to
629generate values dynamically (whereas the values in a dict would be constant).
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000630
631
632.. _filters-contextual:
633
634Using Filters to impart contextual information
635^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
636
637You can also add contextual information to log output using a user-defined
638:class:`Filter`. ``Filter`` instances are allowed to modify the ``LogRecords``
639passed to them, including adding additional attributes which can then be output
640using a suitable format string, or if needed a custom :class:`Formatter`.
641
642For example in a web application, the request being processed (or at least,
643the interesting parts of it) can be stored in a threadlocal
644(:class:`threading.local`) variable, and then accessed from a ``Filter`` to
645add, say, information from the request - say, the remote IP address and remote
646user's username - to the ``LogRecord``, using the attribute names 'ip' and
647'user' as in the ``LoggerAdapter`` example above. In that case, the same format
648string can be used to get similar output to that shown above. Here's an example
649script::
650
651 import logging
652 from random import choice
653
654 class ContextFilter(logging.Filter):
655 """
656 This is a filter which injects contextual information into the log.
657
658 Rather than use actual contextual information, we just use random
659 data in this demo.
660 """
661
662 USERS = ['jim', 'fred', 'sheila']
663 IPS = ['123.231.231.123', '127.0.0.1', '192.168.0.1']
664
665 def filter(self, record):
666
667 record.ip = choice(ContextFilter.IPS)
668 record.user = choice(ContextFilter.USERS)
669 return True
670
671 if __name__ == '__main__':
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +0300672 levels = (logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, logging.ERROR, logging.CRITICAL)
673 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,
674 format='%(asctime)-15s %(name)-5s %(levelname)-8s IP: %(ip)-15s User: %(user)-8s %(message)s')
675 a1 = logging.getLogger('a.b.c')
676 a2 = logging.getLogger('d.e.f')
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000677
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +0300678 f = ContextFilter()
679 a1.addFilter(f)
680 a2.addFilter(f)
681 a1.debug('A debug message')
682 a1.info('An info message with %s', 'some parameters')
683 for x in range(10):
684 lvl = choice(levels)
685 lvlname = logging.getLevelName(lvl)
686 a2.log(lvl, 'A message at %s level with %d %s', lvlname, 2, 'parameters')
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000687
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +0300688which, when run, produces something like:
689
690.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000691
692 2010-09-06 22:38:15,292 a.b.c DEBUG IP: 123.231.231.123 User: fred A debug message
693 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 a.b.c INFO IP: 192.168.0.1 User: sheila An info message with some parameters
694 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
695 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
696 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
697 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
698 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
699 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
700 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
701 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
702 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
703 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
704
705
706.. _multiple-processes:
707
708Logging to a single file from multiple processes
709------------------------------------------------
710
711Although logging is thread-safe, and logging to a single file from multiple
712threads in a single process *is* supported, logging to a single file from
713*multiple processes* is *not* supported, because there is no standard way to
714serialize access to a single file across multiple processes in Python. If you
715need to log to a single file from multiple processes, one way of doing this is
Vinay Sajip67f39772013-08-17 00:39:42 +0100716to have all the processes log to a :class:`~handlers.SocketHandler`, and have a
717separate process which implements a socket server which reads from the socket
718and logs to file. (If you prefer, you can dedicate one thread in one of the
719existing processes to perform this function.)
720:ref:`This section <network-logging>` documents this approach in more detail and
721includes a working socket receiver which can be used as a starting point for you
722to adapt in your own applications.
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000723
724If you are using a recent version of Python which includes the
725:mod:`multiprocessing` module, you could write your own handler which uses the
Vinay Sajip67f39772013-08-17 00:39:42 +0100726:class:`~multiprocessing.Lock` class from this module to serialize access to the
727file from your processes. The existing :class:`FileHandler` and subclasses do
728not make use of :mod:`multiprocessing` at present, though they may do so in the
729future. Note that at present, the :mod:`multiprocessing` module does not provide
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000730working lock functionality on all platforms (see
Georg Brandle73778c2014-10-29 08:36:35 +0100731https://bugs.python.org/issue3770).
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000732
733.. currentmodule:: logging.handlers
734
735Alternatively, you can use a ``Queue`` and a :class:`QueueHandler` to send
736all logging events to one of the processes in your multi-process application.
737The following example script demonstrates how you can do this; in the example
738a separate listener process listens for events sent by other processes and logs
739them according to its own logging configuration. Although the example only
740demonstrates one way of doing it (for example, you may want to use a listener
Georg Brandl7a0afd32011-02-07 15:44:27 +0000741thread rather than a separate listener process -- the implementation would be
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000742analogous) it does allow for completely different logging configurations for
743the listener and the other processes in your application, and can be used as
744the basis for code meeting your own specific requirements::
745
746 # You'll need these imports in your own code
747 import logging
748 import logging.handlers
749 import multiprocessing
750
751 # Next two import lines for this demo only
752 from random import choice, random
753 import time
754
755 #
756 # Because you'll want to define the logging configurations for listener and workers, the
757 # listener and worker process functions take a configurer parameter which is a callable
758 # for configuring logging for that process. These functions are also passed the queue,
759 # which they use for communication.
760 #
761 # In practice, you can configure the listener however you want, but note that in this
762 # simple example, the listener does not apply level or filter logic to received records.
Georg Brandl7a0afd32011-02-07 15:44:27 +0000763 # In practice, you would probably want to do this logic in the worker processes, to avoid
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000764 # sending events which would be filtered out between processes.
765 #
766 # The size of the rotated files is made small so you can see the results easily.
767 def listener_configurer():
768 root = logging.getLogger()
Raymond Hettingerb34705f2011-06-26 15:29:06 +0200769 h = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler('mptest.log', 'a', 300, 10)
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000770 f = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s %(processName)-10s %(name)s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s')
771 h.setFormatter(f)
772 root.addHandler(h)
773
774 # This is the listener process top-level loop: wait for logging events
775 # (LogRecords)on the queue and handle them, quit when you get a None for a
776 # LogRecord.
777 def listener_process(queue, configurer):
778 configurer()
779 while True:
780 try:
781 record = queue.get()
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +0300782 if record is None: # We send this as a sentinel to tell the listener to quit.
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000783 break
784 logger = logging.getLogger(record.name)
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +0300785 logger.handle(record) # No level or filter logic applied - just do it!
Andrew Svetlov47395612012-11-02 22:07:26 +0200786 except Exception:
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000787 import sys, traceback
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +0000788 print('Whoops! Problem:', file=sys.stderr)
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000789 traceback.print_exc(file=sys.stderr)
790
791 # Arrays used for random selections in this demo
792
793 LEVELS = [logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING,
794 logging.ERROR, logging.CRITICAL]
795
796 LOGGERS = ['a.b.c', 'd.e.f']
797
798 MESSAGES = [
799 'Random message #1',
800 'Random message #2',
801 'Random message #3',
802 ]
803
804 # The worker configuration is done at the start of the worker process run.
805 # Note that on Windows you can't rely on fork semantics, so each process
806 # will run the logging configuration code when it starts.
807 def worker_configurer(queue):
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +0300808 h = logging.handlers.QueueHandler(queue) # Just the one handler needed
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000809 root = logging.getLogger()
810 root.addHandler(h)
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +0300811 # send all messages, for demo; no other level or filter logic applied.
812 root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000813
814 # This is the worker process top-level loop, which just logs ten events with
815 # random intervening delays before terminating.
816 # The print messages are just so you know it's doing something!
817 def worker_process(queue, configurer):
818 configurer(queue)
819 name = multiprocessing.current_process().name
820 print('Worker started: %s' % name)
821 for i in range(10):
822 time.sleep(random())
823 logger = logging.getLogger(choice(LOGGERS))
824 level = choice(LEVELS)
825 message = choice(MESSAGES)
826 logger.log(level, message)
827 print('Worker finished: %s' % name)
828
829 # Here's where the demo gets orchestrated. Create the queue, create and start
830 # the listener, create ten workers and start them, wait for them to finish,
831 # then send a None to the queue to tell the listener to finish.
832 def main():
833 queue = multiprocessing.Queue(-1)
834 listener = multiprocessing.Process(target=listener_process,
835 args=(queue, listener_configurer))
836 listener.start()
837 workers = []
838 for i in range(10):
839 worker = multiprocessing.Process(target=worker_process,
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +0300840 args=(queue, worker_configurer))
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000841 workers.append(worker)
842 worker.start()
843 for w in workers:
844 w.join()
845 queue.put_nowait(None)
846 listener.join()
847
848 if __name__ == '__main__':
849 main()
850
Vinay Sajipe6f1e432010-12-26 18:47:51 +0000851A variant of the above script keeps the logging in the main process, in a
852separate thread::
853
854 import logging
855 import logging.config
856 import logging.handlers
857 from multiprocessing import Process, Queue
858 import random
859 import threading
860 import time
861
862 def logger_thread(q):
863 while True:
864 record = q.get()
865 if record is None:
866 break
867 logger = logging.getLogger(record.name)
868 logger.handle(record)
869
870
871 def worker_process(q):
872 qh = logging.handlers.QueueHandler(q)
873 root = logging.getLogger()
874 root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
875 root.addHandler(qh)
876 levels = [logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, logging.ERROR,
877 logging.CRITICAL]
878 loggers = ['foo', 'foo.bar', 'foo.bar.baz',
879 'spam', 'spam.ham', 'spam.ham.eggs']
880 for i in range(100):
881 lvl = random.choice(levels)
882 logger = logging.getLogger(random.choice(loggers))
883 logger.log(lvl, 'Message no. %d', i)
884
885 if __name__ == '__main__':
886 q = Queue()
887 d = {
888 'version': 1,
889 'formatters': {
890 'detailed': {
891 'class': 'logging.Formatter',
892 'format': '%(asctime)s %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(processName)-10s %(message)s'
893 }
894 },
895 'handlers': {
896 'console': {
897 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
898 'level': 'INFO',
899 },
900 'file': {
901 'class': 'logging.FileHandler',
902 'filename': 'mplog.log',
903 'mode': 'w',
904 'formatter': 'detailed',
905 },
906 'foofile': {
907 'class': 'logging.FileHandler',
908 'filename': 'mplog-foo.log',
909 'mode': 'w',
910 'formatter': 'detailed',
911 },
912 'errors': {
913 'class': 'logging.FileHandler',
914 'filename': 'mplog-errors.log',
915 'mode': 'w',
916 'level': 'ERROR',
917 'formatter': 'detailed',
918 },
919 },
920 'loggers': {
921 'foo': {
Serhiy Storchakaf47036c2013-12-24 11:04:36 +0200922 'handlers': ['foofile']
Vinay Sajipe6f1e432010-12-26 18:47:51 +0000923 }
924 },
925 'root': {
926 'level': 'DEBUG',
927 'handlers': ['console', 'file', 'errors']
928 },
929 }
930 workers = []
931 for i in range(5):
932 wp = Process(target=worker_process, name='worker %d' % (i + 1), args=(q,))
933 workers.append(wp)
934 wp.start()
935 logging.config.dictConfig(d)
936 lp = threading.Thread(target=logger_thread, args=(q,))
937 lp.start()
938 # At this point, the main process could do some useful work of its own
939 # Once it's done that, it can wait for the workers to terminate...
940 for wp in workers:
941 wp.join()
942 # And now tell the logging thread to finish up, too
943 q.put(None)
944 lp.join()
945
946This variant shows how you can e.g. apply configuration for particular loggers
947- e.g. the ``foo`` logger has a special handler which stores all events in the
948``foo`` subsystem in a file ``mplog-foo.log``. This will be used by the logging
949machinery in the main process (even though the logging events are generated in
950the worker processes) to direct the messages to the appropriate destinations.
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000951
952Using file rotation
953-------------------
954
955.. sectionauthor:: Doug Hellmann, Vinay Sajip (changes)
jimmy4f29f3c2017-12-13 13:37:51 +0100956.. (see <https://pymotw.com/3/logging/>)
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000957
958Sometimes you want to let a log file grow to a certain size, then open a new
959file and log to that. You may want to keep a certain number of these files, and
960when that many files have been created, rotate the files so that the number of
Georg Brandl7a0afd32011-02-07 15:44:27 +0000961files and the size of the files both remain bounded. For this usage pattern, the
Vinay Sajip67f39772013-08-17 00:39:42 +0100962logging package provides a :class:`~handlers.RotatingFileHandler`::
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000963
964 import glob
965 import logging
966 import logging.handlers
967
968 LOG_FILENAME = 'logging_rotatingfile_example.out'
969
970 # Set up a specific logger with our desired output level
971 my_logger = logging.getLogger('MyLogger')
972 my_logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
973
974 # Add the log message handler to the logger
975 handler = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler(
976 LOG_FILENAME, maxBytes=20, backupCount=5)
977
978 my_logger.addHandler(handler)
979
980 # Log some messages
981 for i in range(20):
982 my_logger.debug('i = %d' % i)
983
984 # See what files are created
985 logfiles = glob.glob('%s*' % LOG_FILENAME)
986
987 for filename in logfiles:
988 print(filename)
989
990The result should be 6 separate files, each with part of the log history for the
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +0300991application:
992
993.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +0000994
995 logging_rotatingfile_example.out
996 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.1
997 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.2
998 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.3
999 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.4
1000 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.5
1001
1002The most current file is always :file:`logging_rotatingfile_example.out`,
1003and each time it reaches the size limit it is renamed with the suffix
1004``.1``. Each of the existing backup files is renamed to increment the suffix
1005(``.1`` becomes ``.2``, etc.) and the ``.6`` file is erased.
1006
Ezio Melottie130a522011-10-19 10:58:56 +03001007Obviously this example sets the log length much too small as an extreme
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001008example. You would want to set *maxBytes* to an appropriate value.
1009
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001010.. _format-styles:
1011
1012Use of alternative formatting styles
1013------------------------------------
1014
1015When logging was added to the Python standard library, the only way of
1016formatting messages with variable content was to use the %-formatting
1017method. Since then, Python has gained two new formatting approaches:
Vinay Sajip39b83ac2012-02-28 08:05:23 +00001018:class:`string.Template` (added in Python 2.4) and :meth:`str.format`
1019(added in Python 2.6).
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001020
Vinay Sajip39b83ac2012-02-28 08:05:23 +00001021Logging (as of 3.2) provides improved support for these two additional
1022formatting styles. The :class:`Formatter` class been enhanced to take an
1023additional, optional keyword parameter named ``style``. This defaults to
1024``'%'``, but other possible values are ``'{'`` and ``'$'``, which correspond
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001025to the other two formatting styles. Backwards compatibility is maintained by
1026default (as you would expect), but by explicitly specifying a style parameter,
1027you get the ability to specify format strings which work with
1028:meth:`str.format` or :class:`string.Template`. Here's an example console
1029session to show the possibilities:
1030
1031.. code-block:: pycon
1032
1033 >>> import logging
1034 >>> root = logging.getLogger()
1035 >>> root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
1036 >>> handler = logging.StreamHandler()
1037 >>> bf = logging.Formatter('{asctime} {name} {levelname:8s} {message}',
1038 ... style='{')
1039 >>> handler.setFormatter(bf)
1040 >>> root.addHandler(handler)
1041 >>> logger = logging.getLogger('foo.bar')
1042 >>> logger.debug('This is a DEBUG message')
1043 2010-10-28 15:11:55,341 foo.bar DEBUG This is a DEBUG message
1044 >>> logger.critical('This is a CRITICAL message')
1045 2010-10-28 15:12:11,526 foo.bar CRITICAL This is a CRITICAL message
1046 >>> df = logging.Formatter('$asctime $name ${levelname} $message',
1047 ... style='$')
1048 >>> handler.setFormatter(df)
1049 >>> logger.debug('This is a DEBUG message')
1050 2010-10-28 15:13:06,924 foo.bar DEBUG This is a DEBUG message
1051 >>> logger.critical('This is a CRITICAL message')
1052 2010-10-28 15:13:11,494 foo.bar CRITICAL This is a CRITICAL message
1053 >>>
1054
1055Note that the formatting of logging messages for final output to logs is
1056completely independent of how an individual logging message is constructed.
1057That can still use %-formatting, as shown here::
1058
1059 >>> logger.error('This is an%s %s %s', 'other,', 'ERROR,', 'message')
1060 2010-10-28 15:19:29,833 foo.bar ERROR This is another, ERROR, message
1061 >>>
1062
1063Logging calls (``logger.debug()``, ``logger.info()`` etc.) only take
1064positional parameters for the actual logging message itself, with keyword
1065parameters used only for determining options for how to handle the actual
1066logging call (e.g. the ``exc_info`` keyword parameter to indicate that
1067traceback information should be logged, or the ``extra`` keyword parameter
1068to indicate additional contextual information to be added to the log). So
1069you cannot directly make logging calls using :meth:`str.format` or
1070:class:`string.Template` syntax, because internally the logging package
1071uses %-formatting to merge the format string and the variable arguments.
Brett Cannona3110a02017-08-18 10:00:31 -07001072There would be no changing this while preserving backward compatibility, since
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001073all logging calls which are out there in existing code will be using %-format
1074strings.
1075
1076There is, however, a way that you can use {}- and $- formatting to construct
1077your individual log messages. Recall that for a message you can use an
1078arbitrary object as a message format string, and that the logging package will
1079call ``str()`` on that object to get the actual format string. Consider the
1080following two classes::
1081
Ezio Melottiaf8838f2013-03-11 09:30:21 +02001082 class BraceMessage:
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001083 def __init__(self, fmt, *args, **kwargs):
1084 self.fmt = fmt
1085 self.args = args
1086 self.kwargs = kwargs
1087
1088 def __str__(self):
1089 return self.fmt.format(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
1090
Ezio Melottiaf8838f2013-03-11 09:30:21 +02001091 class DollarMessage:
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001092 def __init__(self, fmt, **kwargs):
1093 self.fmt = fmt
1094 self.kwargs = kwargs
1095
1096 def __str__(self):
1097 from string import Template
1098 return Template(self.fmt).substitute(**self.kwargs)
1099
1100Either of these can be used in place of a format string, to allow {}- or
1101$-formatting to be used to build the actual "message" part which appears in the
1102formatted log output in place of "%(message)s" or "{message}" or "$message".
1103It's a little unwieldy to use the class names whenever you want to log
1104something, but it's quite palatable if you use an alias such as __ (double
Serhiy Storchaka29b0a262016-12-04 10:20:55 +02001105underscore --- not to be confused with _, the single underscore used as a
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001106synonym/alias for :func:`gettext.gettext` or its brethren).
1107
1108The above classes are not included in Python, though they're easy enough to
1109copy and paste into your own code. They can be used as follows (assuming that
1110they're declared in a module called ``wherever``):
1111
1112.. code-block:: pycon
1113
1114 >>> from wherever import BraceMessage as __
Vinay Sajip39b83ac2012-02-28 08:05:23 +00001115 >>> print(__('Message with {0} {name}', 2, name='placeholders'))
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001116 Message with 2 placeholders
1117 >>> class Point: pass
1118 ...
1119 >>> p = Point()
1120 >>> p.x = 0.5
1121 >>> p.y = 0.5
1122 >>> print(__('Message with coordinates: ({point.x:.2f}, {point.y:.2f})',
1123 ... point=p))
1124 Message with coordinates: (0.50, 0.50)
1125 >>> from wherever import DollarMessage as __
1126 >>> print(__('Message with $num $what', num=2, what='placeholders'))
1127 Message with 2 placeholders
1128 >>>
1129
Vinay Sajip39b83ac2012-02-28 08:05:23 +00001130While the above examples use ``print()`` to show how the formatting works, you
1131would of course use ``logger.debug()`` or similar to actually log using this
1132approach.
1133
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001134One thing to note is that you pay no significant performance penalty with this
1135approach: the actual formatting happens not when you make the logging call, but
1136when (and if) the logged message is actually about to be output to a log by a
1137handler. So the only slightly unusual thing which might trip you up is that the
1138parentheses go around the format string and the arguments, not just the format
1139string. That's because the __ notation is just syntax sugar for a constructor
1140call to one of the XXXMessage classes.
1141
Vinay Sajip8028a5c2013-03-30 11:56:18 +00001142If you prefer, you can use a :class:`LoggerAdapter` to achieve a similar effect
1143to the above, as in the following example::
1144
1145 import logging
1146
1147 class Message(object):
1148 def __init__(self, fmt, args):
1149 self.fmt = fmt
1150 self.args = args
1151
1152 def __str__(self):
1153 return self.fmt.format(*self.args)
1154
1155 class StyleAdapter(logging.LoggerAdapter):
1156 def __init__(self, logger, extra=None):
1157 super(StyleAdapter, self).__init__(logger, extra or {})
1158
1159 def log(self, level, msg, *args, **kwargs):
1160 if self.isEnabledFor(level):
1161 msg, kwargs = self.process(msg, kwargs)
1162 self.logger._log(level, Message(msg, args), (), **kwargs)
1163
1164 logger = StyleAdapter(logging.getLogger(__name__))
1165
1166 def main():
1167 logger.debug('Hello, {}', 'world!')
1168
1169 if __name__ == '__main__':
1170 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)
1171 main()
1172
1173The above script should log the message ``Hello, world!`` when run with
1174Python 3.2 or later.
1175
Vinay Sajip6b883a22012-02-27 11:02:45 +00001176
Vinay Sajip982f5342012-02-27 11:56:29 +00001177.. currentmodule:: logging
1178
Georg Brandle9983862012-02-28 08:21:40 +01001179.. _custom-logrecord:
Vinay Sajip982f5342012-02-27 11:56:29 +00001180
Vinay Sajip9c10d6b2013-11-15 20:58:13 +00001181Customizing ``LogRecord``
Vinay Sajip982f5342012-02-27 11:56:29 +00001182-------------------------
1183
1184Every logging event is represented by a :class:`LogRecord` instance.
1185When an event is logged and not filtered out by a logger's level, a
1186:class:`LogRecord` is created, populated with information about the event and
1187then passed to the handlers for that logger (and its ancestors, up to and
1188including the logger where further propagation up the hierarchy is disabled).
1189Before Python 3.2, there were only two places where this creation was done:
1190
1191* :meth:`Logger.makeRecord`, which is called in the normal process of
1192 logging an event. This invoked :class:`LogRecord` directly to create an
1193 instance.
1194* :func:`makeLogRecord`, which is called with a dictionary containing
1195 attributes to be added to the LogRecord. This is typically invoked when a
1196 suitable dictionary has been received over the network (e.g. in pickle form
1197 via a :class:`~handlers.SocketHandler`, or in JSON form via an
1198 :class:`~handlers.HTTPHandler`).
1199
1200This has usually meant that if you need to do anything special with a
1201:class:`LogRecord`, you've had to do one of the following.
1202
1203* Create your own :class:`Logger` subclass, which overrides
1204 :meth:`Logger.makeRecord`, and set it using :func:`~logging.setLoggerClass`
1205 before any loggers that you care about are instantiated.
1206* Add a :class:`Filter` to a logger or handler, which does the
1207 necessary special manipulation you need when its
1208 :meth:`~Filter.filter` method is called.
1209
1210The first approach would be a little unwieldy in the scenario where (say)
1211several different libraries wanted to do different things. Each would attempt
1212to set its own :class:`Logger` subclass, and the one which did this last would
1213win.
1214
1215The second approach works reasonably well for many cases, but does not allow
1216you to e.g. use a specialized subclass of :class:`LogRecord`. Library
1217developers can set a suitable filter on their loggers, but they would have to
1218remember to do this every time they introduced a new logger (which they would
Georg Brandle9983862012-02-28 08:21:40 +01001219do simply by adding new packages or modules and doing ::
Vinay Sajip982f5342012-02-27 11:56:29 +00001220
1221 logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
1222
1223at module level). It's probably one too many things to think about. Developers
1224could also add the filter to a :class:`~logging.NullHandler` attached to their
1225top-level logger, but this would not be invoked if an application developer
Serhiy Storchaka29b0a262016-12-04 10:20:55 +02001226attached a handler to a lower-level library logger --- so output from that
Vinay Sajip982f5342012-02-27 11:56:29 +00001227handler would not reflect the intentions of the library developer.
1228
1229In Python 3.2 and later, :class:`~logging.LogRecord` creation is done through a
1230factory, which you can specify. The factory is just a callable you can set with
1231:func:`~logging.setLogRecordFactory`, and interrogate with
1232:func:`~logging.getLogRecordFactory`. The factory is invoked with the same
1233signature as the :class:`~logging.LogRecord` constructor, as :class:`LogRecord`
1234is the default setting for the factory.
1235
1236This approach allows a custom factory to control all aspects of LogRecord
1237creation. For example, you could return a subclass, or just add some additional
1238attributes to the record once created, using a pattern similar to this::
1239
1240 old_factory = logging.getLogRecordFactory()
1241
1242 def record_factory(*args, **kwargs):
1243 record = old_factory(*args, **kwargs)
1244 record.custom_attribute = 0xdecafbad
1245 return record
1246
1247 logging.setLogRecordFactory(record_factory)
1248
1249This pattern allows different libraries to chain factories together, and as
1250long as they don't overwrite each other's attributes or unintentionally
1251overwrite the attributes provided as standard, there should be no surprises.
1252However, it should be borne in mind that each link in the chain adds run-time
1253overhead to all logging operations, and the technique should only be used when
1254the use of a :class:`Filter` does not provide the desired result.
1255
1256
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001257.. _zeromq-handlers:
1258
Vinay Sajip7d101292010-12-26 21:22:33 +00001259Subclassing QueueHandler - a ZeroMQ example
1260-------------------------------------------
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001261
1262You can use a :class:`QueueHandler` subclass to send messages to other kinds
1263of queues, for example a ZeroMQ 'publish' socket. In the example below,the
1264socket is created separately and passed to the handler (as its 'queue')::
1265
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +03001266 import zmq # using pyzmq, the Python binding for ZeroMQ
1267 import json # for serializing records portably
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001268
1269 ctx = zmq.Context()
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +03001270 sock = zmq.Socket(ctx, zmq.PUB) # or zmq.PUSH, or other suitable value
1271 sock.bind('tcp://*:5556') # or wherever
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001272
1273 class ZeroMQSocketHandler(QueueHandler):
1274 def enqueue(self, record):
Pablo Galindo586c0502017-09-07 21:53:13 +01001275 self.queue.send_json(record.__dict__)
1276
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001277
1278 handler = ZeroMQSocketHandler(sock)
1279
1280
1281Of course there are other ways of organizing this, for example passing in the
1282data needed by the handler to create the socket::
1283
1284 class ZeroMQSocketHandler(QueueHandler):
1285 def __init__(self, uri, socktype=zmq.PUB, ctx=None):
1286 self.ctx = ctx or zmq.Context()
1287 socket = zmq.Socket(self.ctx, socktype)
1288 socket.bind(uri)
Pablo Galindo586c0502017-09-07 21:53:13 +01001289 super().__init__(socket)
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001290
1291 def enqueue(self, record):
Pablo Galindo586c0502017-09-07 21:53:13 +01001292 self.queue.send_json(record.__dict__)
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001293
1294 def close(self):
1295 self.queue.close()
1296
1297
Vinay Sajip7d101292010-12-26 21:22:33 +00001298Subclassing QueueListener - a ZeroMQ example
1299--------------------------------------------
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001300
1301You can also subclass :class:`QueueListener` to get messages from other kinds
1302of queues, for example a ZeroMQ 'subscribe' socket. Here's an example::
1303
1304 class ZeroMQSocketListener(QueueListener):
1305 def __init__(self, uri, *handlers, **kwargs):
1306 self.ctx = kwargs.get('ctx') or zmq.Context()
1307 socket = zmq.Socket(self.ctx, zmq.SUB)
Pablo Galindo586c0502017-09-07 21:53:13 +01001308 socket.setsockopt_string(zmq.SUBSCRIBE, '') # subscribe to everything
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001309 socket.connect(uri)
Pablo Galindo586c0502017-09-07 21:53:13 +01001310 super().__init__(socket, *handlers, **kwargs)
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001311
1312 def dequeue(self):
Pablo Galindo586c0502017-09-07 21:53:13 +01001313 msg = self.queue.recv_json()
1314 return logging.makeLogRecord(msg)
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001315
1316
Vinay Sajip7d101292010-12-26 21:22:33 +00001317.. seealso::
Vinay Sajipc63619b2010-12-19 12:56:57 +00001318
Vinay Sajip7d101292010-12-26 21:22:33 +00001319 Module :mod:`logging`
1320 API reference for the logging module.
1321
1322 Module :mod:`logging.config`
1323 Configuration API for the logging module.
1324
1325 Module :mod:`logging.handlers`
1326 Useful handlers included with the logging module.
1327
1328 :ref:`A basic logging tutorial <logging-basic-tutorial>`
1329
1330 :ref:`A more advanced logging tutorial <logging-advanced-tutorial>`
Vinay Sajip631a7e22011-11-23 14:27:54 +00001331
1332
1333An example dictionary-based configuration
1334-----------------------------------------
1335
1336Below is an example of a logging configuration dictionary - it's taken from
Serhiy Storchaka90be7332016-04-11 12:18:56 +03001337the `documentation on the Django project <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/topics/logging/#configuring-logging>`_.
Vinay Sajip67f39772013-08-17 00:39:42 +01001338This dictionary is passed to :func:`~config.dictConfig` to put the configuration into effect::
Vinay Sajip631a7e22011-11-23 14:27:54 +00001339
1340 LOGGING = {
1341 'version': 1,
1342 'disable_existing_loggers': True,
1343 'formatters': {
1344 'verbose': {
1345 'format': '%(levelname)s %(asctime)s %(module)s %(process)d %(thread)d %(message)s'
1346 },
1347 'simple': {
1348 'format': '%(levelname)s %(message)s'
1349 },
1350 },
1351 'filters': {
1352 'special': {
1353 '()': 'project.logging.SpecialFilter',
1354 'foo': 'bar',
1355 }
1356 },
1357 'handlers': {
1358 'null': {
1359 'level':'DEBUG',
1360 'class':'django.utils.log.NullHandler',
1361 },
1362 'console':{
1363 'level':'DEBUG',
1364 'class':'logging.StreamHandler',
1365 'formatter': 'simple'
1366 },
1367 'mail_admins': {
1368 'level': 'ERROR',
1369 'class': 'django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler',
1370 'filters': ['special']
1371 }
1372 },
1373 'loggers': {
1374 'django': {
1375 'handlers':['null'],
1376 'propagate': True,
1377 'level':'INFO',
1378 },
1379 'django.request': {
1380 'handlers': ['mail_admins'],
1381 'level': 'ERROR',
1382 'propagate': False,
1383 },
1384 'myproject.custom': {
1385 'handlers': ['console', 'mail_admins'],
1386 'level': 'INFO',
1387 'filters': ['special']
1388 }
1389 }
1390 }
1391
1392For more information about this configuration, you can see the `relevant
Serhiy Storchaka90be7332016-04-11 12:18:56 +03001393section <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/topics/logging/#configuring-logging>`_
Vinay Sajip631a7e22011-11-23 14:27:54 +00001394of the Django documentation.
Vinay Sajip23b94d02012-01-04 12:02:26 +00001395
1396.. _cookbook-rotator-namer:
1397
Vinay Sajip9c10d6b2013-11-15 20:58:13 +00001398Using a rotator and namer to customize log rotation processing
Vinay Sajip23b94d02012-01-04 12:02:26 +00001399--------------------------------------------------------------
1400
1401An example of how you can define a namer and rotator is given in the following
1402snippet, which shows zlib-based compression of the log file::
1403
1404 def namer(name):
1405 return name + ".gz"
1406
1407 def rotator(source, dest):
1408 with open(source, "rb") as sf:
1409 data = sf.read()
1410 compressed = zlib.compress(data, 9)
1411 with open(dest, "wb") as df:
1412 df.write(compressed)
1413 os.remove(source)
1414
1415 rh = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler(...)
1416 rh.rotator = rotator
1417 rh.namer = namer
1418
Ezio Melotti226231c2012-01-18 05:40:00 +02001419These are not "true" .gz files, as they are bare compressed data, with no
1420"container" such as youd find in an actual gzip file. This snippet is just
Vinay Sajip23b94d02012-01-04 12:02:26 +00001421for illustration purposes.
1422
Vinay Sajip0292fa92012-04-08 01:49:12 +01001423A more elaborate multiprocessing example
1424----------------------------------------
1425
1426The following working example shows how logging can be used with multiprocessing
1427using configuration files. The configurations are fairly simple, but serve to
1428illustrate how more complex ones could be implemented in a real multiprocessing
1429scenario.
1430
1431In the example, the main process spawns a listener process and some worker
1432processes. Each of the main process, the listener and the workers have three
1433separate configurations (the workers all share the same configuration). We can
1434see logging in the main process, how the workers log to a QueueHandler and how
1435the listener implements a QueueListener and a more complex logging
1436configuration, and arranges to dispatch events received via the queue to the
1437handlers specified in the configuration. Note that these configurations are
1438purely illustrative, but you should be able to adapt this example to your own
1439scenario.
1440
1441Here's the script - the docstrings and the comments hopefully explain how it
1442works::
1443
1444 import logging
1445 import logging.config
1446 import logging.handlers
1447 from multiprocessing import Process, Queue, Event, current_process
1448 import os
1449 import random
1450 import time
1451
Ezio Melottiaf8838f2013-03-11 09:30:21 +02001452 class MyHandler:
Vinay Sajip0292fa92012-04-08 01:49:12 +01001453 """
1454 A simple handler for logging events. It runs in the listener process and
1455 dispatches events to loggers based on the name in the received record,
1456 which then get dispatched, by the logging system, to the handlers
Vinay Sajip838e6382012-04-09 19:46:24 +01001457 configured for those loggers.
Vinay Sajip0292fa92012-04-08 01:49:12 +01001458 """
1459 def handle(self, record):
1460 logger = logging.getLogger(record.name)
1461 # The process name is transformed just to show that it's the listener
1462 # doing the logging to files and console
1463 record.processName = '%s (for %s)' % (current_process().name, record.processName)
1464 logger.handle(record)
1465
1466 def listener_process(q, stop_event, config):
1467 """
1468 This could be done in the main process, but is just done in a separate
1469 process for illustrative purposes.
1470
1471 This initialises logging according to the specified configuration,
1472 starts the listener and waits for the main process to signal completion
1473 via the event. The listener is then stopped, and the process exits.
1474 """
1475 logging.config.dictConfig(config)
1476 listener = logging.handlers.QueueListener(q, MyHandler())
1477 listener.start()
1478 if os.name == 'posix':
1479 # On POSIX, the setup logger will have been configured in the
1480 # parent process, but should have been disabled following the
1481 # dictConfig call.
1482 # On Windows, since fork isn't used, the setup logger won't
1483 # exist in the child, so it would be created and the message
1484 # would appear - hence the "if posix" clause.
1485 logger = logging.getLogger('setup')
1486 logger.critical('Should not appear, because of disabled logger ...')
1487 stop_event.wait()
1488 listener.stop()
1489
1490 def worker_process(config):
1491 """
1492 A number of these are spawned for the purpose of illustration. In
Berker Peksag315e1042015-05-19 01:36:55 +03001493 practice, they could be a heterogeneous bunch of processes rather than
Vinay Sajip0292fa92012-04-08 01:49:12 +01001494 ones which are identical to each other.
1495
1496 This initialises logging according to the specified configuration,
1497 and logs a hundred messages with random levels to randomly selected
1498 loggers.
1499
1500 A small sleep is added to allow other processes a chance to run. This
1501 is not strictly needed, but it mixes the output from the different
1502 processes a bit more than if it's left out.
1503 """
1504 logging.config.dictConfig(config)
1505 levels = [logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, logging.ERROR,
1506 logging.CRITICAL]
1507 loggers = ['foo', 'foo.bar', 'foo.bar.baz',
1508 'spam', 'spam.ham', 'spam.ham.eggs']
1509 if os.name == 'posix':
1510 # On POSIX, the setup logger will have been configured in the
1511 # parent process, but should have been disabled following the
1512 # dictConfig call.
1513 # On Windows, since fork isn't used, the setup logger won't
1514 # exist in the child, so it would be created and the message
1515 # would appear - hence the "if posix" clause.
1516 logger = logging.getLogger('setup')
1517 logger.critical('Should not appear, because of disabled logger ...')
1518 for i in range(100):
1519 lvl = random.choice(levels)
1520 logger = logging.getLogger(random.choice(loggers))
1521 logger.log(lvl, 'Message no. %d', i)
1522 time.sleep(0.01)
1523
1524 def main():
1525 q = Queue()
1526 # The main process gets a simple configuration which prints to the console.
1527 config_initial = {
1528 'version': 1,
1529 'formatters': {
1530 'detailed': {
1531 'class': 'logging.Formatter',
1532 'format': '%(asctime)s %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(processName)-10s %(message)s'
1533 }
1534 },
1535 'handlers': {
1536 'console': {
1537 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
1538 'level': 'INFO',
1539 },
1540 },
1541 'root': {
1542 'level': 'DEBUG',
1543 'handlers': ['console']
1544 },
1545 }
1546 # The worker process configuration is just a QueueHandler attached to the
1547 # root logger, which allows all messages to be sent to the queue.
1548 # We disable existing loggers to disable the "setup" logger used in the
1549 # parent process. This is needed on POSIX because the logger will
1550 # be there in the child following a fork().
1551 config_worker = {
1552 'version': 1,
1553 'disable_existing_loggers': True,
1554 'handlers': {
1555 'queue': {
1556 'class': 'logging.handlers.QueueHandler',
1557 'queue': q,
1558 },
1559 },
1560 'root': {
1561 'level': 'DEBUG',
1562 'handlers': ['queue']
1563 },
1564 }
1565 # The listener process configuration shows that the full flexibility of
1566 # logging configuration is available to dispatch events to handlers however
1567 # you want.
1568 # We disable existing loggers to disable the "setup" logger used in the
1569 # parent process. This is needed on POSIX because the logger will
1570 # be there in the child following a fork().
1571 config_listener = {
1572 'version': 1,
1573 'disable_existing_loggers': True,
1574 'formatters': {
1575 'detailed': {
1576 'class': 'logging.Formatter',
1577 'format': '%(asctime)s %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(processName)-10s %(message)s'
1578 },
1579 'simple': {
1580 'class': 'logging.Formatter',
1581 'format': '%(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(processName)-10s %(message)s'
1582 }
1583 },
1584 'handlers': {
1585 'console': {
1586 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
1587 'level': 'INFO',
1588 'formatter': 'simple',
1589 },
1590 'file': {
1591 'class': 'logging.FileHandler',
1592 'filename': 'mplog.log',
1593 'mode': 'w',
1594 'formatter': 'detailed',
1595 },
1596 'foofile': {
1597 'class': 'logging.FileHandler',
1598 'filename': 'mplog-foo.log',
1599 'mode': 'w',
1600 'formatter': 'detailed',
1601 },
1602 'errors': {
1603 'class': 'logging.FileHandler',
1604 'filename': 'mplog-errors.log',
1605 'mode': 'w',
1606 'level': 'ERROR',
1607 'formatter': 'detailed',
1608 },
1609 },
1610 'loggers': {
1611 'foo': {
Serhiy Storchakaf47036c2013-12-24 11:04:36 +02001612 'handlers': ['foofile']
Vinay Sajip0292fa92012-04-08 01:49:12 +01001613 }
1614 },
1615 'root': {
1616 'level': 'DEBUG',
1617 'handlers': ['console', 'file', 'errors']
1618 },
1619 }
1620 # Log some initial events, just to show that logging in the parent works
1621 # normally.
1622 logging.config.dictConfig(config_initial)
1623 logger = logging.getLogger('setup')
1624 logger.info('About to create workers ...')
1625 workers = []
1626 for i in range(5):
1627 wp = Process(target=worker_process, name='worker %d' % (i + 1),
1628 args=(config_worker,))
1629 workers.append(wp)
1630 wp.start()
1631 logger.info('Started worker: %s', wp.name)
1632 logger.info('About to create listener ...')
1633 stop_event = Event()
1634 lp = Process(target=listener_process, name='listener',
1635 args=(q, stop_event, config_listener))
1636 lp.start()
1637 logger.info('Started listener')
1638 # We now hang around for the workers to finish their work.
1639 for wp in workers:
1640 wp.join()
1641 # Workers all done, listening can now stop.
1642 # Logging in the parent still works normally.
1643 logger.info('Telling listener to stop ...')
1644 stop_event.set()
1645 lp.join()
1646 logger.info('All done.')
1647
1648 if __name__ == '__main__':
1649 main()
1650
Vinay Sajipb00e8f12012-04-16 15:28:50 +01001651
1652Inserting a BOM into messages sent to a SysLogHandler
1653-----------------------------------------------------
1654
Serhiy Storchaka6dff0202016-05-07 10:49:07 +03001655`RFC 5424 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5424>`_ requires that a
Vinay Sajipb00e8f12012-04-16 15:28:50 +01001656Unicode message be sent to a syslog daemon as a set of bytes which have the
1657following structure: an optional pure-ASCII component, followed by a UTF-8 Byte
1658Order Mark (BOM), followed by Unicode encoded using UTF-8. (See the `relevant
Serhiy Storchaka6dff0202016-05-07 10:49:07 +03001659section of the specification <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5424#section-6>`_.)
Vinay Sajipb00e8f12012-04-16 15:28:50 +01001660
Vinay Sajip62930e12012-04-17 00:40:48 +01001661In Python 3.1, code was added to
Vinay Sajipb00e8f12012-04-16 15:28:50 +01001662:class:`~logging.handlers.SysLogHandler` to insert a BOM into the message, but
1663unfortunately, it was implemented incorrectly, with the BOM appearing at the
1664beginning of the message and hence not allowing any pure-ASCII component to
1665appear before it.
1666
1667As this behaviour is broken, the incorrect BOM insertion code is being removed
Vinay Sajip62930e12012-04-17 00:40:48 +01001668from Python 3.2.4 and later. However, it is not being replaced, and if you
Vinay Sajipa58d6682012-07-27 10:54:10 +01001669want to produce RFC 5424-compliant messages which include a BOM, an optional
Vinay Sajipb00e8f12012-04-16 15:28:50 +01001670pure-ASCII sequence before it and arbitrary Unicode after it, encoded using
1671UTF-8, then you need to do the following:
1672
1673#. Attach a :class:`~logging.Formatter` instance to your
1674 :class:`~logging.handlers.SysLogHandler` instance, with a format string
1675 such as::
1676
Vinay Sajip59b9a792012-04-16 15:46:18 +01001677 'ASCII section\ufeffUnicode section'
Vinay Sajipb00e8f12012-04-16 15:28:50 +01001678
Georg Brandld50fe722013-03-23 16:00:41 +01001679 The Unicode code point U+FEFF, when encoded using UTF-8, will be
Vinay Sajip59b9a792012-04-16 15:46:18 +01001680 encoded as a UTF-8 BOM -- the byte-string ``b'\xef\xbb\xbf'``.
Vinay Sajipb00e8f12012-04-16 15:28:50 +01001681
1682#. Replace the ASCII section with whatever placeholders you like, but make sure
1683 that the data that appears in there after substitution is always ASCII (that
1684 way, it will remain unchanged after UTF-8 encoding).
1685
1686#. Replace the Unicode section with whatever placeholders you like; if the data
Vinay Sajipa58d6682012-07-27 10:54:10 +01001687 which appears there after substitution contains characters outside the ASCII
1688 range, that's fine -- it will be encoded using UTF-8.
Vinay Sajipb00e8f12012-04-16 15:28:50 +01001689
Vinay Sajip59b9a792012-04-16 15:46:18 +01001690The formatted message *will* be encoded using UTF-8 encoding by
1691``SysLogHandler``. If you follow the above rules, you should be able to produce
Vinay Sajipb00e8f12012-04-16 15:28:50 +01001692RFC 5424-compliant messages. If you don't, logging may not complain, but your
1693messages will not be RFC 5424-compliant, and your syslog daemon may complain.
1694
Vinay Sajip4b88d6c2013-01-22 15:57:39 +00001695
1696Implementing structured logging
1697-------------------------------
1698
1699Although most logging messages are intended for reading by humans, and thus not
delirious-lettuce3378b202017-05-19 14:37:57 -06001700readily machine-parseable, there might be circumstances where you want to output
Vinay Sajip4b88d6c2013-01-22 15:57:39 +00001701messages in a structured format which *is* capable of being parsed by a program
Vinay Sajip3d9e9722013-01-23 09:31:19 +00001702(without needing complex regular expressions to parse the log message). This is
Vinay Sajip4b88d6c2013-01-22 15:57:39 +00001703straightforward to achieve using the logging package. There are a number of
1704ways in which this could be achieved, but the following is a simple approach
1705which uses JSON to serialise the event in a machine-parseable manner::
1706
1707 import json
1708 import logging
1709
1710 class StructuredMessage(object):
1711 def __init__(self, message, **kwargs):
1712 self.message = message
1713 self.kwargs = kwargs
1714
1715 def __str__(self):
1716 return '%s >>> %s' % (self.message, json.dumps(self.kwargs))
1717
1718 _ = StructuredMessage # optional, to improve readability
1719
1720 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO, format='%(message)s')
1721 logging.info(_('message 1', foo='bar', bar='baz', num=123, fnum=123.456))
1722
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +03001723If the above script is run, it prints:
1724
1725.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajip4b88d6c2013-01-22 15:57:39 +00001726
1727 message 1 >>> {"fnum": 123.456, "num": 123, "bar": "baz", "foo": "bar"}
1728
Vinay Sajip3d9e9722013-01-23 09:31:19 +00001729Note that the order of items might be different according to the version of
1730Python used.
1731
Vinay Sajip4b88d6c2013-01-22 15:57:39 +00001732If you need more specialised processing, you can use a custom JSON encoder,
1733as in the following complete example::
1734
1735 from __future__ import unicode_literals
1736
1737 import json
1738 import logging
1739
Vinay Sajip3d9e9722013-01-23 09:31:19 +00001740 # This next bit is to ensure the script runs unchanged on 2.x and 3.x
Vinay Sajip4b88d6c2013-01-22 15:57:39 +00001741 try:
1742 unicode
1743 except NameError:
1744 unicode = str
1745
1746 class Encoder(json.JSONEncoder):
1747 def default(self, o):
1748 if isinstance(o, set):
1749 return tuple(o)
1750 elif isinstance(o, unicode):
1751 return o.encode('unicode_escape').decode('ascii')
1752 return super(Encoder, self).default(o)
1753
1754 class StructuredMessage(object):
1755 def __init__(self, message, **kwargs):
1756 self.message = message
1757 self.kwargs = kwargs
1758
1759 def __str__(self):
1760 s = Encoder().encode(self.kwargs)
1761 return '%s >>> %s' % (self.message, s)
1762
Vinay Sajip3d9e9722013-01-23 09:31:19 +00001763 _ = StructuredMessage # optional, to improve readability
Vinay Sajip4b88d6c2013-01-22 15:57:39 +00001764
1765 def main():
1766 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO, format='%(message)s')
Raymond Hettingerdf1b6992014-11-09 15:56:33 -08001767 logging.info(_('message 1', set_value={1, 2, 3}, snowman='\u2603'))
Vinay Sajip4b88d6c2013-01-22 15:57:39 +00001768
1769 if __name__ == '__main__':
1770 main()
1771
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +03001772When the above script is run, it prints:
1773
1774.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajip4b88d6c2013-01-22 15:57:39 +00001775
1776 message 1 >>> {"snowman": "\u2603", "set_value": [1, 2, 3]}
1777
Vinay Sajip3d9e9722013-01-23 09:31:19 +00001778Note that the order of items might be different according to the version of
1779Python used.
1780
Vinay Sajip554f22f2014-02-03 11:51:45 +00001781
1782.. _custom-handlers:
1783
Vinay Sajip2c1adcb2013-11-05 10:02:21 +00001784.. currentmodule:: logging.config
1785
Vinay Sajip9c10d6b2013-11-15 20:58:13 +00001786Customizing handlers with :func:`dictConfig`
Vinay Sajip2c1adcb2013-11-05 10:02:21 +00001787--------------------------------------------
1788
Vinay Sajip9c10d6b2013-11-15 20:58:13 +00001789There are times when you want to customize logging handlers in particular ways,
Vinay Sajip2c1adcb2013-11-05 10:02:21 +00001790and if you use :func:`dictConfig` you may be able to do this without
1791subclassing. As an example, consider that you may want to set the ownership of a
1792log file. On POSIX, this is easily done using :func:`shutil.chown`, but the file
Vinay Sajip9c10d6b2013-11-15 20:58:13 +00001793handlers in the stdlib don't offer built-in support. You can customize handler
Vinay Sajip2c1adcb2013-11-05 10:02:21 +00001794creation using a plain function such as::
1795
1796 def owned_file_handler(filename, mode='a', encoding=None, owner=None):
1797 if owner:
1798 if not os.path.exists(filename):
1799 open(filename, 'a').close()
1800 shutil.chown(filename, *owner)
1801 return logging.FileHandler(filename, mode, encoding)
1802
1803You can then specify, in a logging configuration passed to :func:`dictConfig`,
1804that a logging handler be created by calling this function::
1805
1806 LOGGING = {
1807 'version': 1,
1808 'disable_existing_loggers': False,
1809 'formatters': {
1810 'default': {
1811 'format': '%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(name)s %(message)s'
1812 },
1813 },
1814 'handlers': {
1815 'file':{
1816 # The values below are popped from this dictionary and
1817 # used to create the handler, set the handler's level and
1818 # its formatter.
1819 '()': owned_file_handler,
1820 'level':'DEBUG',
1821 'formatter': 'default',
1822 # The values below are passed to the handler creator callable
1823 # as keyword arguments.
1824 'owner': ['pulse', 'pulse'],
1825 'filename': 'chowntest.log',
1826 'mode': 'w',
1827 'encoding': 'utf-8',
1828 },
1829 },
1830 'root': {
1831 'handlers': ['file'],
1832 'level': 'DEBUG',
1833 },
1834 }
1835
1836In this example I am setting the ownership using the ``pulse`` user and group,
1837just for the purposes of illustration. Putting it together into a working
1838script, ``chowntest.py``::
1839
1840 import logging, logging.config, os, shutil
1841
1842 def owned_file_handler(filename, mode='a', encoding=None, owner=None):
1843 if owner:
1844 if not os.path.exists(filename):
1845 open(filename, 'a').close()
1846 shutil.chown(filename, *owner)
1847 return logging.FileHandler(filename, mode, encoding)
1848
1849 LOGGING = {
1850 'version': 1,
1851 'disable_existing_loggers': False,
1852 'formatters': {
1853 'default': {
1854 'format': '%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(name)s %(message)s'
1855 },
1856 },
1857 'handlers': {
1858 'file':{
1859 # The values below are popped from this dictionary and
1860 # used to create the handler, set the handler's level and
1861 # its formatter.
1862 '()': owned_file_handler,
1863 'level':'DEBUG',
1864 'formatter': 'default',
1865 # The values below are passed to the handler creator callable
1866 # as keyword arguments.
1867 'owner': ['pulse', 'pulse'],
1868 'filename': 'chowntest.log',
1869 'mode': 'w',
1870 'encoding': 'utf-8',
1871 },
1872 },
1873 'root': {
1874 'handlers': ['file'],
1875 'level': 'DEBUG',
1876 },
1877 }
1878
1879 logging.config.dictConfig(LOGGING)
1880 logger = logging.getLogger('mylogger')
1881 logger.debug('A debug message')
1882
Martin Panter1050d2d2016-07-26 11:18:21 +02001883To run this, you will probably need to run as ``root``:
1884
1885.. code-block:: shell-session
Vinay Sajip2c1adcb2013-11-05 10:02:21 +00001886
1887 $ sudo python3.3 chowntest.py
1888 $ cat chowntest.log
1889 2013-11-05 09:34:51,128 DEBUG mylogger A debug message
1890 $ ls -l chowntest.log
1891 -rw-r--r-- 1 pulse pulse 55 2013-11-05 09:34 chowntest.log
1892
1893Note that this example uses Python 3.3 because that's where :func:`shutil.chown`
1894makes an appearance. This approach should work with any Python version that
1895supports :func:`dictConfig` - namely, Python 2.7, 3.2 or later. With pre-3.3
1896versions, you would need to implement the actual ownership change using e.g.
1897:func:`os.chown`.
1898
1899In practice, the handler-creating function may be in a utility module somewhere
1900in your project. Instead of the line in the configuration::
1901
1902 '()': owned_file_handler,
1903
1904you could use e.g.::
1905
1906 '()': 'ext://project.util.owned_file_handler',
1907
1908where ``project.util`` can be replaced with the actual name of the package
1909where the function resides. In the above working script, using
1910``'ext://__main__.owned_file_handler'`` should work. Here, the actual callable
1911is resolved by :func:`dictConfig` from the ``ext://`` specification.
1912
1913This example hopefully also points the way to how you could implement other
1914types of file change - e.g. setting specific POSIX permission bits - in the
1915same way, using :func:`os.chmod`.
1916
1917Of course, the approach could also be extended to types of handler other than a
1918:class:`~logging.FileHandler` - for example, one of the rotating file handlers,
1919or a different type of handler altogether.
1920
Vinay Sajipcbefe3b2014-01-15 15:09:05 +00001921
1922.. currentmodule:: logging
1923
1924.. _formatting-styles:
1925
1926Using particular formatting styles throughout your application
1927--------------------------------------------------------------
1928
1929In Python 3.2, the :class:`~logging.Formatter` gained a ``style`` keyword
1930parameter which, while defaulting to ``%`` for backward compatibility, allowed
1931the specification of ``{`` or ``$`` to support the formatting approaches
1932supported by :meth:`str.format` and :class:`string.Template`. Note that this
1933governs the formatting of logging messages for final output to logs, and is
1934completely orthogonal to how an individual logging message is constructed.
1935
1936Logging calls (:meth:`~Logger.debug`, :meth:`~Logger.info` etc.) only take
1937positional parameters for the actual logging message itself, with keyword
1938parameters used only for determining options for how to handle the logging call
1939(e.g. the ``exc_info`` keyword parameter to indicate that traceback information
1940should be logged, or the ``extra`` keyword parameter to indicate additional
1941contextual information to be added to the log). So you cannot directly make
1942logging calls using :meth:`str.format` or :class:`string.Template` syntax,
1943because internally the logging package uses %-formatting to merge the format
1944string and the variable arguments. There would no changing this while preserving
1945backward compatibility, since all logging calls which are out there in existing
1946code will be using %-format strings.
1947
1948There have been suggestions to associate format styles with specific loggers,
1949but that approach also runs into backward compatibility problems because any
1950existing code could be using a given logger name and using %-formatting.
1951
1952For logging to work interoperably between any third-party libraries and your
1953code, decisions about formatting need to be made at the level of the
1954individual logging call. This opens up a couple of ways in which alternative
1955formatting styles can be accommodated.
1956
1957
1958Using LogRecord factories
1959^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1960
1961In Python 3.2, along with the :class:`~logging.Formatter` changes mentioned
1962above, the logging package gained the ability to allow users to set their own
1963:class:`LogRecord` subclasses, using the :func:`setLogRecordFactory` function.
1964You can use this to set your own subclass of :class:`LogRecord`, which does the
1965Right Thing by overriding the :meth:`~LogRecord.getMessage` method. The base
1966class implementation of this method is where the ``msg % args`` formatting
1967happens, and where you can substitute your alternate formatting; however, you
1968should be careful to support all formatting styles and allow %-formatting as
1969the default, to ensure interoperability with other code. Care should also be
1970taken to call ``str(self.msg)``, just as the base implementation does.
1971
1972Refer to the reference documentation on :func:`setLogRecordFactory` and
1973:class:`LogRecord` for more information.
1974
1975
1976Using custom message objects
1977^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1978
1979There is another, perhaps simpler way that you can use {}- and $- formatting to
1980construct your individual log messages. You may recall (from
1981:ref:`arbitrary-object-messages`) that when logging you can use an arbitrary
1982object as a message format string, and that the logging package will call
1983:func:`str` on that object to get the actual format string. Consider the
1984following two classes::
1985
1986 class BraceMessage(object):
1987 def __init__(self, fmt, *args, **kwargs):
1988 self.fmt = fmt
1989 self.args = args
1990 self.kwargs = kwargs
1991
1992 def __str__(self):
1993 return self.fmt.format(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
1994
1995 class DollarMessage(object):
1996 def __init__(self, fmt, **kwargs):
1997 self.fmt = fmt
1998 self.kwargs = kwargs
1999
2000 def __str__(self):
2001 from string import Template
2002 return Template(self.fmt).substitute(**self.kwargs)
2003
2004Either of these can be used in place of a format string, to allow {}- or
2005$-formatting to be used to build the actual "message" part which appears in the
2006formatted log output in place of “%(message)s or “{message}” or $message”.
2007If you find it a little unwieldy to use the class names whenever you want to log
2008something, you can make it more palatable if you use an alias such as ``M`` or
2009``_`` for the message (or perhaps ``__``, if you are using ``_`` for
2010localization).
2011
Vinay Sajipeb14dec2014-01-17 18:36:02 +00002012Examples of this approach are given below. Firstly, formatting with
2013:meth:`str.format`::
2014
2015 >>> __ = BraceMessage
2016 >>> print(__('Message with {0} {1}', 2, 'placeholders'))
2017 Message with 2 placeholders
2018 >>> class Point: pass
2019 ...
2020 >>> p = Point()
2021 >>> p.x = 0.5
2022 >>> p.y = 0.5
2023 >>> print(__('Message with coordinates: ({point.x:.2f}, {point.y:.2f})', point=p))
2024 Message with coordinates: (0.50, 0.50)
2025
2026Secondly, formatting with :class:`string.Template`::
2027
2028 >>> __ = DollarMessage
2029 >>> print(__('Message with $num $what', num=2, what='placeholders'))
2030 Message with 2 placeholders
2031 >>>
2032
2033One thing to note is that you pay no significant performance penalty with this
2034approach: the actual formatting happens not when you make the logging call, but
2035when (and if) the logged message is actually about to be output to a log by a
2036handler. So the only slightly unusual thing which might trip you up is that the
2037parentheses go around the format string and the arguments, not just the format
2038string. Thats because the __ notation is just syntax sugar for a constructor
2039call to one of the ``XXXMessage`` classes shown above.
Vinay Sajip554f22f2014-02-03 11:51:45 +00002040
2041
2042.. _filters-dictconfig:
2043
2044.. currentmodule:: logging.config
2045
2046Configuring filters with :func:`dictConfig`
2047-------------------------------------------
2048
2049You *can* configure filters using :func:`~logging.config.dictConfig`, though it
2050might not be obvious at first glance how to do it (hence this recipe). Since
2051:class:`~logging.Filter` is the only filter class included in the standard
2052library, and it is unlikely to cater to many requirements (it's only there as a
2053base class), you will typically need to define your own :class:`~logging.Filter`
2054subclass with an overridden :meth:`~logging.Filter.filter` method. To do this,
2055specify the ``()`` key in the configuration dictionary for the filter,
2056specifying a callable which will be used to create the filter (a class is the
2057most obvious, but you can provide any callable which returns a
2058:class:`~logging.Filter` instance). Here is a complete example::
2059
2060 import logging
2061 import logging.config
2062 import sys
2063
2064 class MyFilter(logging.Filter):
2065 def __init__(self, param=None):
2066 self.param = param
2067
2068 def filter(self, record):
2069 if self.param is None:
2070 allow = True
2071 else:
2072 allow = self.param not in record.msg
2073 if allow:
2074 record.msg = 'changed: ' + record.msg
2075 return allow
2076
2077 LOGGING = {
2078 'version': 1,
2079 'filters': {
2080 'myfilter': {
2081 '()': MyFilter,
2082 'param': 'noshow',
2083 }
2084 },
2085 'handlers': {
2086 'console': {
2087 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
2088 'filters': ['myfilter']
2089 }
2090 },
2091 'root': {
2092 'level': 'DEBUG',
2093 'handlers': ['console']
2094 },
2095 }
2096
2097 if __name__ == '__main__':
2098 logging.config.dictConfig(LOGGING)
2099 logging.debug('hello')
2100 logging.debug('hello - noshow')
2101
2102This example shows how you can pass configuration data to the callable which
2103constructs the instance, in the form of keyword parameters. When run, the above
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +03002104script will print:
2105
2106.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajip554f22f2014-02-03 11:51:45 +00002107
2108 changed: hello
2109
2110which shows that the filter is working as configured.
2111
2112A couple of extra points to note:
2113
2114* If you can't refer to the callable directly in the configuration (e.g. if it
2115 lives in a different module, and you can't import it directly where the
2116 configuration dictionary is), you can use the form ``ext://...`` as described
2117 in :ref:`logging-config-dict-externalobj`. For example, you could have used
2118 the text ``'ext://__main__.MyFilter'`` instead of ``MyFilter`` in the above
2119 example.
2120
2121* As well as for filters, this technique can also be used to configure custom
2122 handlers and formatters. See :ref:`logging-config-dict-userdef` for more
2123 information on how logging supports using user-defined objects in its
2124 configuration, and see the other cookbook recipe :ref:`custom-handlers` above.
2125
Vinay Sajipdb071642015-01-28 07:32:38 +00002126
2127.. _custom-format-exception:
2128
2129Customized exception formatting
2130-------------------------------
2131
2132There might be times when you want to do customized exception formatting - for
2133argument's sake, let's say you want exactly one line per logged event, even
2134when exception information is present. You can do this with a custom formatter
2135class, as shown in the following example::
2136
2137 import logging
2138
2139 class OneLineExceptionFormatter(logging.Formatter):
2140 def formatException(self, exc_info):
2141 """
2142 Format an exception so that it prints on a single line.
2143 """
2144 result = super(OneLineExceptionFormatter, self).formatException(exc_info)
Serhiy Storchakadba90392016-05-10 12:01:23 +03002145 return repr(result) # or format into one line however you want to
Vinay Sajipdb071642015-01-28 07:32:38 +00002146
2147 def format(self, record):
2148 s = super(OneLineExceptionFormatter, self).format(record)
2149 if record.exc_text:
2150 s = s.replace('\n', '') + '|'
2151 return s
2152
2153 def configure_logging():
2154 fh = logging.FileHandler('output.txt', 'w')
2155 f = OneLineExceptionFormatter('%(asctime)s|%(levelname)s|%(message)s|',
2156 '%d/%m/%Y %H:%M:%S')
2157 fh.setFormatter(f)
2158 root = logging.getLogger()
2159 root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
2160 root.addHandler(fh)
2161
2162 def main():
2163 configure_logging()
2164 logging.info('Sample message')
2165 try:
2166 x = 1 / 0
2167 except ZeroDivisionError as e:
2168 logging.exception('ZeroDivisionError: %s', e)
2169
2170 if __name__ == '__main__':
2171 main()
2172
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +03002173When run, this produces a file with exactly two lines:
2174
2175.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipdb071642015-01-28 07:32:38 +00002176
2177 28/01/2015 07:21:23|INFO|Sample message|
2178 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'|
2179
2180While the above treatment is simplistic, it points the way to how exception
2181information can be formatted to your liking. The :mod:`traceback` module may be
2182helpful for more specialized needs.
Vinay Sajipf046dfe2015-02-01 15:17:34 +00002183
2184.. _spoken-messages:
2185
2186Speaking logging messages
2187-------------------------
2188
2189There might be situations when it is desirable to have logging messages rendered
Martin Panter8f137832017-01-14 08:24:20 +00002190in an audible rather than a visible format. This is easy to do if you have
2191text-to-speech (TTS) functionality available in your system, even if it doesn't have
Vinay Sajipf046dfe2015-02-01 15:17:34 +00002192a Python binding. Most TTS systems have a command line program you can run, and
2193this can be invoked from a handler using :mod:`subprocess`. It's assumed here
2194that TTS command line programs won't expect to interact with users or take a
2195long time to complete, and that the frequency of logged messages will be not so
2196high as to swamp the user with messages, and that it's acceptable to have the
2197messages spoken one at a time rather than concurrently, The example implementation
2198below waits for one message to be spoken before the next is processed, and this
2199might cause other handlers to be kept waiting. Here is a short example showing
2200the approach, which assumes that the ``espeak`` TTS package is available::
2201
2202 import logging
2203 import subprocess
2204 import sys
2205
2206 class TTSHandler(logging.Handler):
2207 def emit(self, record):
2208 msg = self.format(record)
2209 # Speak slowly in a female English voice
2210 cmd = ['espeak', '-s150', '-ven+f3', msg]
2211 p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
2212 stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
2213 # wait for the program to finish
2214 p.communicate()
2215
2216 def configure_logging():
2217 h = TTSHandler()
2218 root = logging.getLogger()
2219 root.addHandler(h)
2220 # the default formatter just returns the message
2221 root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
2222
2223 def main():
2224 logging.info('Hello')
2225 logging.debug('Goodbye')
2226
2227 if __name__ == '__main__':
2228 configure_logging()
2229 sys.exit(main())
2230
2231When run, this script should say "Hello" and then "Goodbye" in a female voice.
2232
2233The above approach can, of course, be adapted to other TTS systems and even
2234other systems altogether which can process messages via external programs run
2235from a command line.
2236
Vinay Sajipff1f3d92015-10-10 00:52:35 +01002237
2238.. _buffered-logging:
2239
2240Buffering logging messages and outputting them conditionally
2241------------------------------------------------------------
2242
2243There might be situations where you want to log messages in a temporary area
2244and only output them if a certain condition occurs. For example, you may want to
2245start logging debug events in a function, and if the function completes without
2246errors, you don't want to clutter the log with the collected debug information,
2247but if there is an error, you want all the debug information to be output as well
2248as the error.
2249
2250Here is an example which shows how you could do this using a decorator for your
2251functions where you want logging to behave this way. It makes use of the
2252:class:`logging.handlers.MemoryHandler`, which allows buffering of logged events
2253until some condition occurs, at which point the buffered events are ``flushed``
2254- passed to another handler (the ``target`` handler) for processing. By default,
2255the ``MemoryHandler`` flushed when its buffer gets filled up or an event whose
2256level is greater than or equal to a specified threshold is seen. You can use this
2257recipe with a more specialised subclass of ``MemoryHandler`` if you want custom
2258flushing behavior.
2259
2260The example script has a simple function, ``foo``, which just cycles through
2261all the logging levels, writing to ``sys.stderr`` to say what level it's about
Martin Panterf05641642016-05-08 13:48:10 +00002262to log at, and then actually logging a message at that level. You can pass a
Vinay Sajipff1f3d92015-10-10 00:52:35 +01002263parameter to ``foo`` which, if true, will log at ERROR and CRITICAL levels -
2264otherwise, it only logs at DEBUG, INFO and WARNING levels.
2265
2266The script just arranges to decorate ``foo`` with a decorator which will do the
2267conditional logging that's required. The decorator takes a logger as a parameter
2268and attaches a memory handler for the duration of the call to the decorated
2269function. The decorator can be additionally parameterised using a target handler,
2270a level at which flushing should occur, and a capacity for the buffer. These
2271default to a :class:`~logging.StreamHandler` which writes to ``sys.stderr``,
2272``logging.ERROR`` and ``100`` respectively.
2273
2274Here's the script::
2275
2276 import logging
2277 from logging.handlers import MemoryHandler
2278 import sys
2279
2280 logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
2281 logger.addHandler(logging.NullHandler())
2282
2283 def log_if_errors(logger, target_handler=None, flush_level=None, capacity=None):
2284 if target_handler is None:
2285 target_handler = logging.StreamHandler()
2286 if flush_level is None:
2287 flush_level = logging.ERROR
2288 if capacity is None:
2289 capacity = 100
2290 handler = MemoryHandler(capacity, flushLevel=flush_level, target=target_handler)
2291
2292 def decorator(fn):
2293 def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
2294 logger.addHandler(handler)
2295 try:
2296 return fn(*args, **kwargs)
2297 except Exception:
2298 logger.exception('call failed')
2299 raise
2300 finally:
2301 super(MemoryHandler, handler).flush()
2302 logger.removeHandler(handler)
2303 return wrapper
2304
2305 return decorator
2306
2307 def write_line(s):
2308 sys.stderr.write('%s\n' % s)
2309
2310 def foo(fail=False):
2311 write_line('about to log at DEBUG ...')
2312 logger.debug('Actually logged at DEBUG')
2313 write_line('about to log at INFO ...')
2314 logger.info('Actually logged at INFO')
2315 write_line('about to log at WARNING ...')
2316 logger.warning('Actually logged at WARNING')
2317 if fail:
2318 write_line('about to log at ERROR ...')
2319 logger.error('Actually logged at ERROR')
2320 write_line('about to log at CRITICAL ...')
2321 logger.critical('Actually logged at CRITICAL')
2322 return fail
2323
2324 decorated_foo = log_if_errors(logger)(foo)
2325
2326 if __name__ == '__main__':
2327 logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
2328 write_line('Calling undecorated foo with False')
2329 assert not foo(False)
2330 write_line('Calling undecorated foo with True')
2331 assert foo(True)
2332 write_line('Calling decorated foo with False')
2333 assert not decorated_foo(False)
2334 write_line('Calling decorated foo with True')
2335 assert decorated_foo(True)
2336
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +03002337When this script is run, the following output should be observed:
2338
2339.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajipff1f3d92015-10-10 00:52:35 +01002340
2341 Calling undecorated foo with False
2342 about to log at DEBUG ...
2343 about to log at INFO ...
2344 about to log at WARNING ...
2345 Calling undecorated foo with True
2346 about to log at DEBUG ...
2347 about to log at INFO ...
2348 about to log at WARNING ...
2349 about to log at ERROR ...
2350 about to log at CRITICAL ...
2351 Calling decorated foo with False
2352 about to log at DEBUG ...
2353 about to log at INFO ...
2354 about to log at WARNING ...
2355 Calling decorated foo with True
2356 about to log at DEBUG ...
2357 about to log at INFO ...
2358 about to log at WARNING ...
2359 about to log at ERROR ...
2360 Actually logged at DEBUG
2361 Actually logged at INFO
2362 Actually logged at WARNING
2363 Actually logged at ERROR
2364 about to log at CRITICAL ...
2365 Actually logged at CRITICAL
2366
2367As you can see, actual logging output only occurs when an event is logged whose
2368severity is ERROR or greater, but in that case, any previous events at lower
2369severities are also logged.
2370
2371You can of course use the conventional means of decoration::
2372
2373 @log_if_errors(logger)
2374 def foo(fail=False):
2375 ...
Vinay Sajip4de9dae2015-10-17 13:58:19 +01002376
2377
2378.. _utc-formatting:
2379
2380Formatting times using UTC (GMT) via configuration
2381--------------------------------------------------
2382
2383Sometimes you want to format times using UTC, which can be done using a class
2384such as `UTCFormatter`, shown below::
2385
2386 import logging
2387 import time
2388
2389 class UTCFormatter(logging.Formatter):
2390 converter = time.gmtime
2391
Berker Peksagf84499a2015-10-20 03:41:38 +03002392and you can then use the ``UTCFormatter`` in your code instead of
Vinay Sajip4de9dae2015-10-17 13:58:19 +01002393:class:`~logging.Formatter`. If you want to do that via configuration, you can
2394use the :func:`~logging.config.dictConfig` API with an approach illustrated by
2395the following complete example::
2396
2397 import logging
2398 import logging.config
2399 import time
2400
2401 class UTCFormatter(logging.Formatter):
2402 converter = time.gmtime
2403
2404 LOGGING = {
2405 'version': 1,
2406 'disable_existing_loggers': False,
2407 'formatters': {
2408 'utc': {
2409 '()': UTCFormatter,
2410 'format': '%(asctime)s %(message)s',
2411 },
2412 'local': {
2413 'format': '%(asctime)s %(message)s',
2414 }
2415 },
2416 'handlers': {
2417 'console1': {
2418 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
2419 'formatter': 'utc',
2420 },
2421 'console2': {
2422 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
2423 'formatter': 'local',
2424 },
2425 },
2426 'root': {
2427 'handlers': ['console1', 'console2'],
2428 }
2429 }
2430
2431 if __name__ == '__main__':
2432 logging.config.dictConfig(LOGGING)
2433 logging.warning('The local time is %s', time.asctime())
2434
Serhiy Storchaka46936d52018-04-08 19:18:04 +03002435When this script is run, it should print something like:
2436
2437.. code-block:: none
Vinay Sajip4de9dae2015-10-17 13:58:19 +01002438
2439 2015-10-17 12:53:29,501 The local time is Sat Oct 17 13:53:29 2015
2440 2015-10-17 13:53:29,501 The local time is Sat Oct 17 13:53:29 2015
2441
2442showing how the time is formatted both as local time and UTC, one for each
2443handler.
Vinay Sajipd93a6012016-04-01 23:13:01 +01002444
2445
2446.. _context-manager:
2447
2448Using a context manager for selective logging
2449---------------------------------------------
2450
2451There are times when it would be useful to temporarily change the logging
2452configuration and revert it back after doing something. For this, a context
2453manager is the most obvious way of saving and restoring the logging context.
2454Here is a simple example of such a context manager, which allows you to
2455optionally change the logging level and add a logging handler purely in the
2456scope of the context manager::
2457
2458 import logging
2459 import sys
2460
2461 class LoggingContext(object):
2462 def __init__(self, logger, level=None, handler=None, close=True):
2463 self.logger = logger
2464 self.level = level
2465 self.handler = handler
2466 self.close = close
2467
2468 def __enter__(self):
2469 if self.level is not None:
2470 self.old_level = self.logger.level
2471 self.logger.setLevel(self.level)
2472 if self.handler:
2473 self.logger.addHandler(self.handler)
2474
2475 def __exit__(self, et, ev, tb):
2476 if self.level is not None:
2477 self.logger.setLevel(self.old_level)
2478 if self.handler:
2479 self.logger.removeHandler(self.handler)
2480 if self.handler and self.close:
2481 self.handler.close()
2482 # implicit return of None => don't swallow exceptions
2483
2484If you specify a level value, the logger's level is set to that value in the
2485scope of the with block covered by the context manager. If you specify a
2486handler, it is added to the logger on entry to the block and removed on exit
2487from the block. You can also ask the manager to close the handler for you on
2488block exit - you could do this if you don't need the handler any more.
2489
2490To illustrate how it works, we can add the following block of code to the
2491above::
2492
2493 if __name__ == '__main__':
2494 logger = logging.getLogger('foo')
2495 logger.addHandler(logging.StreamHandler())
2496 logger.setLevel(logging.INFO)
2497 logger.info('1. This should appear just once on stderr.')
2498 logger.debug('2. This should not appear.')
2499 with LoggingContext(logger, level=logging.DEBUG):
2500 logger.debug('3. This should appear once on stderr.')
2501 logger.debug('4. This should not appear.')
2502 h = logging.StreamHandler(sys.stdout)
2503 with LoggingContext(logger, level=logging.DEBUG, handler=h, close=True):
2504 logger.debug('5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout.')
2505 logger.info('6. This should appear just once on stderr.')
2506 logger.debug('7. This should not appear.')
2507
2508We initially set the logger's level to ``INFO``, so message #1 appears and
2509message #2 doesn't. We then change the level to ``DEBUG`` temporarily in the
2510following ``with`` block, and so message #3 appears. After the block exits, the
2511logger's level is restored to ``INFO`` and so message #4 doesn't appear. In the
2512next ``with`` block, we set the level to ``DEBUG`` again but also add a handler
2513writing to ``sys.stdout``. Thus, message #5 appears twice on the console (once
2514via ``stderr`` and once via ``stdout``). After the ``with`` statement's
2515completion, the status is as it was before so message #6 appears (like message
2516#1) whereas message #7 doesn't (just like message #2).
2517
Martin Panter1050d2d2016-07-26 11:18:21 +02002518If we run the resulting script, the result is as follows:
2519
2520.. code-block:: shell-session
Vinay Sajipd93a6012016-04-01 23:13:01 +01002521
2522 $ python logctx.py
2523 1. This should appear just once on stderr.
2524 3. This should appear once on stderr.
2525 5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout.
2526 5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout.
2527 6. This should appear just once on stderr.
2528
2529If we run it again, but pipe ``stderr`` to ``/dev/null``, we see the following,
Martin Panter1050d2d2016-07-26 11:18:21 +02002530which is the only message written to ``stdout``:
2531
2532.. code-block:: shell-session
Vinay Sajipd93a6012016-04-01 23:13:01 +01002533
2534 $ python logctx.py 2>/dev/null
2535 5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout.
2536
Martin Panter1050d2d2016-07-26 11:18:21 +02002537Once again, but piping ``stdout`` to ``/dev/null``, we get:
2538
2539.. code-block:: shell-session
Vinay Sajipd93a6012016-04-01 23:13:01 +01002540
2541 $ python logctx.py >/dev/null
2542 1. This should appear just once on stderr.
2543 3. This should appear once on stderr.
2544 5. This should appear twice - once on stderr and once on stdout.
2545 6. This should appear just once on stderr.
2546
2547In this case, the message #5 printed to ``stdout`` doesn't appear, as expected.
2548
2549Of course, the approach described here can be generalised, for example to attach
2550logging filters temporarily. Note that the above code works in Python 2 as well
2551as Python 3.