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Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001:mod:`logging` --- Logging facility for Python
2==============================================
3
4.. module:: logging
5 :synopsis: Flexible error logging system for applications.
6
7
8.. moduleauthor:: Vinay Sajip <vinay_sajip@red-dove.com>
9.. sectionauthor:: Vinay Sajip <vinay_sajip@red-dove.com>
10
11
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000012.. index:: pair: Errors; logging
13
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000014This module defines functions and classes which implement a flexible error
15logging system for applications.
16
17Logging is performed by calling methods on instances of the :class:`Logger`
18class (hereafter called :dfn:`loggers`). Each instance has a name, and they are
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +000019conceptually arranged in a namespace hierarchy using dots (periods) as
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000020separators. For example, a logger named "scan" is the parent of loggers
21"scan.text", "scan.html" and "scan.pdf". Logger names can be anything you want,
22and indicate the area of an application in which a logged message originates.
23
24Logged messages also have levels of importance associated with them. The default
25levels provided are :const:`DEBUG`, :const:`INFO`, :const:`WARNING`,
26:const:`ERROR` and :const:`CRITICAL`. As a convenience, you indicate the
27importance of a logged message by calling an appropriate method of
28:class:`Logger`. The methods are :meth:`debug`, :meth:`info`, :meth:`warning`,
29:meth:`error` and :meth:`critical`, which mirror the default levels. You are not
30constrained to use these levels: you can specify your own and use a more general
31:class:`Logger` method, :meth:`log`, which takes an explicit level argument.
32
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +000033
34Logging tutorial
35----------------
36
37The key benefit of having the logging API provided by a standard library module
38is that all Python modules can participate in logging, so your application log
39can include messages from third-party modules.
40
41It is, of course, possible to log messages with different verbosity levels or to
42different destinations. Support for writing log messages to files, HTTP
43GET/POST locations, email via SMTP, generic sockets, or OS-specific logging
Christian Heimesc3f30c42008-02-22 16:37:40 +000044mechanisms are all supported by the standard module. You can also create your
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +000045own log destination class if you have special requirements not met by any of the
46built-in classes.
47
48Simple examples
49^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
50
51.. sectionauthor:: Doug Hellmann
52.. (see <http://blog.doughellmann.com/2007/05/pymotw-logging.html>)
53
54Most applications are probably going to want to log to a file, so let's start
55with that case. Using the :func:`basicConfig` function, we can set up the
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +000056default handler so that debug messages are written to a file (in the example,
57we assume that you have the appropriate permissions to create a file called
58*example.log* in the current directory)::
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +000059
60 import logging
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +000061 LOG_FILENAME = 'example.log'
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +000062 logging.basicConfig(filename=LOG_FILENAME,level=logging.DEBUG)
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +000063
64 logging.debug('This message should go to the log file')
65
66And now if we open the file and look at what we have, we should find the log
67message::
68
69 DEBUG:root:This message should go to the log file
70
71If you run the script repeatedly, the additional log messages are appended to
Eric Smith5c01a8d2009-06-04 18:20:51 +000072the file. To create a new file each time, you can pass a *filemode* argument to
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +000073:func:`basicConfig` with a value of ``'w'``. Rather than managing the file size
74yourself, though, it is simpler to use a :class:`RotatingFileHandler`::
75
76 import glob
77 import logging
78 import logging.handlers
79
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +000080 LOG_FILENAME = 'logging_rotatingfile_example.out'
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +000081
82 # Set up a specific logger with our desired output level
83 my_logger = logging.getLogger('MyLogger')
84 my_logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
85
86 # Add the log message handler to the logger
87 handler = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler(
88 LOG_FILENAME, maxBytes=20, backupCount=5)
89
90 my_logger.addHandler(handler)
91
92 # Log some messages
93 for i in range(20):
94 my_logger.debug('i = %d' % i)
95
96 # See what files are created
97 logfiles = glob.glob('%s*' % LOG_FILENAME)
98
99 for filename in logfiles:
Georg Brandlf6945182008-02-01 11:56:49 +0000100 print(filename)
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000101
102The result should be 6 separate files, each with part of the log history for the
103application::
104
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000105 logging_rotatingfile_example.out
106 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.1
107 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.2
108 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.3
109 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.4
110 logging_rotatingfile_example.out.5
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000111
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000112The most current file is always :file:`logging_rotatingfile_example.out`,
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000113and each time it reaches the size limit it is renamed with the suffix
114``.1``. Each of the existing backup files is renamed to increment the suffix
Eric Smith5c01a8d2009-06-04 18:20:51 +0000115(``.1`` becomes ``.2``, etc.) and the ``.6`` file is erased.
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000116
117Obviously this example sets the log length much much too small as an extreme
118example. You would want to set *maxBytes* to an appropriate value.
119
120Another useful feature of the logging API is the ability to produce different
121messages at different log levels. This allows you to instrument your code with
122debug messages, for example, but turning the log level down so that those debug
123messages are not written for your production system. The default levels are
Vinay Sajipb6d065f2009-10-28 23:28:16 +0000124``NOTSET``, ``DEBUG``, ``INFO``, ``WARNING``, ``ERROR`` and ``CRITICAL``.
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000125
126The logger, handler, and log message call each specify a level. The log message
127is only emitted if the handler and logger are configured to emit messages of
128that level or lower. For example, if a message is ``CRITICAL``, and the logger
129is set to ``ERROR``, the message is emitted. If a message is a ``WARNING``, and
130the logger is set to produce only ``ERROR``\s, the message is not emitted::
131
132 import logging
133 import sys
134
135 LEVELS = {'debug': logging.DEBUG,
136 'info': logging.INFO,
137 'warning': logging.WARNING,
138 'error': logging.ERROR,
139 'critical': logging.CRITICAL}
140
141 if len(sys.argv) > 1:
142 level_name = sys.argv[1]
143 level = LEVELS.get(level_name, logging.NOTSET)
144 logging.basicConfig(level=level)
145
146 logging.debug('This is a debug message')
147 logging.info('This is an info message')
148 logging.warning('This is a warning message')
149 logging.error('This is an error message')
150 logging.critical('This is a critical error message')
151
152Run the script with an argument like 'debug' or 'warning' to see which messages
153show up at different levels::
154
155 $ python logging_level_example.py debug
156 DEBUG:root:This is a debug message
157 INFO:root:This is an info message
158 WARNING:root:This is a warning message
159 ERROR:root:This is an error message
160 CRITICAL:root:This is a critical error message
161
162 $ python logging_level_example.py info
163 INFO:root:This is an info message
164 WARNING:root:This is a warning message
165 ERROR:root:This is an error message
166 CRITICAL:root:This is a critical error message
167
168You will notice that these log messages all have ``root`` embedded in them. The
169logging module supports a hierarchy of loggers with different names. An easy
170way to tell where a specific log message comes from is to use a separate logger
171object for each of your modules. Each new logger "inherits" the configuration
172of its parent, and log messages sent to a logger include the name of that
173logger. Optionally, each logger can be configured differently, so that messages
174from different modules are handled in different ways. Let's look at a simple
175example of how to log from different modules so it is easy to trace the source
176of the message::
177
178 import logging
179
180 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.WARNING)
181
182 logger1 = logging.getLogger('package1.module1')
183 logger2 = logging.getLogger('package2.module2')
184
185 logger1.warning('This message comes from one module')
186 logger2.warning('And this message comes from another module')
187
188And the output::
189
190 $ python logging_modules_example.py
191 WARNING:package1.module1:This message comes from one module
192 WARNING:package2.module2:And this message comes from another module
193
194There are many more options for configuring logging, including different log
195message formatting options, having messages delivered to multiple destinations,
196and changing the configuration of a long-running application on the fly using a
197socket interface. All of these options are covered in depth in the library
198module documentation.
199
200Loggers
201^^^^^^^
202
203The logging library takes a modular approach and offers the several categories
204of components: loggers, handlers, filters, and formatters. Loggers expose the
205interface that application code directly uses. Handlers send the log records to
206the appropriate destination. Filters provide a finer grained facility for
207determining which log records to send on to a handler. Formatters specify the
208layout of the resultant log record.
209
210:class:`Logger` objects have a threefold job. First, they expose several
211methods to application code so that applications can log messages at runtime.
212Second, logger objects determine which log messages to act upon based upon
213severity (the default filtering facility) or filter objects. Third, logger
214objects pass along relevant log messages to all interested log handlers.
215
216The most widely used methods on logger objects fall into two categories:
217configuration and message sending.
218
219* :meth:`Logger.setLevel` specifies the lowest-severity log message a logger
220 will handle, where debug is the lowest built-in severity level and critical is
221 the highest built-in severity. For example, if the severity level is info,
222 the logger will handle only info, warning, error, and critical messages and
223 will ignore debug messages.
224
225* :meth:`Logger.addFilter` and :meth:`Logger.removeFilter` add and remove filter
226 objects from the logger object. This tutorial does not address filters.
227
228With the logger object configured, the following methods create log messages:
229
230* :meth:`Logger.debug`, :meth:`Logger.info`, :meth:`Logger.warning`,
231 :meth:`Logger.error`, and :meth:`Logger.critical` all create log records with
232 a message and a level that corresponds to their respective method names. The
233 message is actually a format string, which may contain the standard string
234 substitution syntax of :const:`%s`, :const:`%d`, :const:`%f`, and so on. The
235 rest of their arguments is a list of objects that correspond with the
236 substitution fields in the message. With regard to :const:`**kwargs`, the
237 logging methods care only about a keyword of :const:`exc_info` and use it to
238 determine whether to log exception information.
239
240* :meth:`Logger.exception` creates a log message similar to
241 :meth:`Logger.error`. The difference is that :meth:`Logger.exception` dumps a
242 stack trace along with it. Call this method only from an exception handler.
243
244* :meth:`Logger.log` takes a log level as an explicit argument. This is a
245 little more verbose for logging messages than using the log level convenience
246 methods listed above, but this is how to log at custom log levels.
247
Christian Heimesdcca98d2008-02-25 13:19:43 +0000248:func:`getLogger` returns a reference to a logger instance with the specified
Vinay Sajipc15dfd62010-07-06 15:08:55 +0000249name if it is provided, or ``root`` if not. The names are period-separated
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000250hierarchical structures. Multiple calls to :func:`getLogger` with the same name
251will return a reference to the same logger object. Loggers that are further
252down in the hierarchical list are children of loggers higher up in the list.
253For example, given a logger with a name of ``foo``, loggers with names of
Benjamin Peterson22005fc2010-04-11 16:25:06 +0000254``foo.bar``, ``foo.bar.baz``, and ``foo.bam`` are all descendants of ``foo``.
255Child loggers propagate messages up to the handlers associated with their
256ancestor loggers. Because of this, it is unnecessary to define and configure
257handlers for all the loggers an application uses. It is sufficient to
258configure handlers for a top-level logger and create child loggers as needed.
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000259
260
261Handlers
262^^^^^^^^
263
264:class:`Handler` objects are responsible for dispatching the appropriate log
265messages (based on the log messages' severity) to the handler's specified
266destination. Logger objects can add zero or more handler objects to themselves
267with an :func:`addHandler` method. As an example scenario, an application may
268want to send all log messages to a log file, all log messages of error or higher
269to stdout, and all messages of critical to an email address. This scenario
Christian Heimesc3f30c42008-02-22 16:37:40 +0000270requires three individual handlers where each handler is responsible for sending
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000271messages of a specific severity to a specific location.
272
273The standard library includes quite a few handler types; this tutorial uses only
274:class:`StreamHandler` and :class:`FileHandler` in its examples.
275
276There are very few methods in a handler for application developers to concern
277themselves with. The only handler methods that seem relevant for application
278developers who are using the built-in handler objects (that is, not creating
279custom handlers) are the following configuration methods:
280
281* The :meth:`Handler.setLevel` method, just as in logger objects, specifies the
282 lowest severity that will be dispatched to the appropriate destination. Why
283 are there two :func:`setLevel` methods? The level set in the logger
284 determines which severity of messages it will pass to its handlers. The level
285 set in each handler determines which messages that handler will send on.
Benjamin Peterson22005fc2010-04-11 16:25:06 +0000286
287* :func:`setFormatter` selects a Formatter object for this handler to use.
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000288
289* :func:`addFilter` and :func:`removeFilter` respectively configure and
290 deconfigure filter objects on handlers.
291
Benjamin Peterson22005fc2010-04-11 16:25:06 +0000292Application code should not directly instantiate and use instances of
293:class:`Handler`. Instead, the :class:`Handler` class is a base class that
294defines the interface that all handlers should have and establishes some
295default behavior that child classes can use (or override).
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000296
297
298Formatters
299^^^^^^^^^^
300
301Formatter objects configure the final order, structure, and contents of the log
Christian Heimesdcca98d2008-02-25 13:19:43 +0000302message. Unlike the base :class:`logging.Handler` class, application code may
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000303instantiate formatter classes, although you could likely subclass the formatter
Vinay Sajipa39c5712010-10-25 13:57:39 +0000304if your application needs special behavior. The constructor takes three
305optional arguments -- a message format string, a date format string and a style
306indicator.
307
308.. method:: logging.Formatter.__init__(fmt=None, datefmt=None, style='%')
309
310If there is no message format string, the default is to use the
311raw message. If there is no date format string, the default date format is::
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000312
313 %Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S
314
Vinay Sajipa39c5712010-10-25 13:57:39 +0000315with the milliseconds tacked on at the end. The ``style`` is one of `%`, '{'
316or '$'. If one of these is not specified, then '%' will be used.
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000317
Vinay Sajipa39c5712010-10-25 13:57:39 +0000318If the ``style`` is '%', the message format string uses
319``%(<dictionary key>)s`` styled string substitution; the possible keys are
320documented in :ref:`formatter-objects`. If the style is '{', the message format
321string is assumed to be compatible with :meth:`str.format` (using keyword
322arguments), while if the style is '$' then the message format string should
323conform to what is expected by :meth:`string.Template.substitute`.
324
325.. versionchanged:: 3.2
326 Added the ``style`` parameter.
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000327
328The following message format string will log the time in a human-readable
329format, the severity of the message, and the contents of the message, in that
330order::
331
332 "%(asctime)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s"
333
Vinay Sajip40d9a4e2010-08-30 18:10:03 +0000334Formatters use a user-configurable function to convert the creation time of a
335record to a tuple. By default, :func:`time.localtime` is used; to change this
336for a particular formatter instance, set the ``converter`` attribute of the
337instance to a function with the same signature as :func:`time.localtime` or
338:func:`time.gmtime`. To change it for all formatters, for example if you want
339all logging times to be shown in GMT, set the ``converter`` attribute in the
340Formatter class (to ``time.gmtime`` for GMT display).
341
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000342
343Configuring Logging
344^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
345
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000346Programmers can configure logging in three ways:
347
3481. Creating loggers, handlers, and formatters explicitly using Python
349 code that calls the configuration methods listed above.
3502. Creating a logging config file and reading it using the :func:`fileConfig`
351 function.
3523. Creating a dictionary of configuration information and passing it
353 to the :func:`dictConfig` function.
354
355The following example configures a very simple logger, a console
356handler, and a simple formatter using Python code::
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000357
358 import logging
359
360 # create logger
361 logger = logging.getLogger("simple_example")
362 logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000363
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000364 # create console handler and set level to debug
365 ch = logging.StreamHandler()
366 ch.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000367
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000368 # create formatter
369 formatter = logging.Formatter("%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s")
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000370
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000371 # add formatter to ch
372 ch.setFormatter(formatter)
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000373
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000374 # add ch to logger
375 logger.addHandler(ch)
376
377 # "application" code
378 logger.debug("debug message")
379 logger.info("info message")
380 logger.warn("warn message")
381 logger.error("error message")
382 logger.critical("critical message")
383
384Running this module from the command line produces the following output::
385
386 $ python simple_logging_module.py
387 2005-03-19 15:10:26,618 - simple_example - DEBUG - debug message
388 2005-03-19 15:10:26,620 - simple_example - INFO - info message
389 2005-03-19 15:10:26,695 - simple_example - WARNING - warn message
390 2005-03-19 15:10:26,697 - simple_example - ERROR - error message
391 2005-03-19 15:10:26,773 - simple_example - CRITICAL - critical message
392
393The following Python module creates a logger, handler, and formatter nearly
394identical to those in the example listed above, with the only difference being
395the names of the objects::
396
397 import logging
398 import logging.config
399
400 logging.config.fileConfig("logging.conf")
401
402 # create logger
403 logger = logging.getLogger("simpleExample")
404
405 # "application" code
406 logger.debug("debug message")
407 logger.info("info message")
408 logger.warn("warn message")
409 logger.error("error message")
410 logger.critical("critical message")
411
412Here is the logging.conf file::
413
414 [loggers]
415 keys=root,simpleExample
416
417 [handlers]
418 keys=consoleHandler
419
420 [formatters]
421 keys=simpleFormatter
422
423 [logger_root]
424 level=DEBUG
425 handlers=consoleHandler
426
427 [logger_simpleExample]
428 level=DEBUG
429 handlers=consoleHandler
430 qualname=simpleExample
431 propagate=0
432
433 [handler_consoleHandler]
434 class=StreamHandler
435 level=DEBUG
436 formatter=simpleFormatter
437 args=(sys.stdout,)
438
439 [formatter_simpleFormatter]
440 format=%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s
441 datefmt=
442
443The output is nearly identical to that of the non-config-file-based example::
444
445 $ python simple_logging_config.py
446 2005-03-19 15:38:55,977 - simpleExample - DEBUG - debug message
447 2005-03-19 15:38:55,979 - simpleExample - INFO - info message
448 2005-03-19 15:38:56,054 - simpleExample - WARNING - warn message
449 2005-03-19 15:38:56,055 - simpleExample - ERROR - error message
450 2005-03-19 15:38:56,130 - simpleExample - CRITICAL - critical message
451
452You can see that the config file approach has a few advantages over the Python
453code approach, mainly separation of configuration and code and the ability of
454noncoders to easily modify the logging properties.
455
Benjamin Peterson9451a1c2010-03-13 22:30:34 +0000456Note that the class names referenced in config files need to be either relative
457to the logging module, or absolute values which can be resolved using normal
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +0000458import mechanisms. Thus, you could use either
459:class:`handlers.WatchedFileHandler` (relative to the logging module) or
460``mypackage.mymodule.MyHandler`` (for a class defined in package ``mypackage``
461and module ``mymodule``, where ``mypackage`` is available on the Python import
462path).
Benjamin Peterson9451a1c2010-03-13 22:30:34 +0000463
Benjamin Peterson56894b52010-06-28 00:16:12 +0000464In Python 3.2, a new means of configuring logging has been introduced, using
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000465dictionaries to hold configuration information. This provides a superset of the
466functionality of the config-file-based approach outlined above, and is the
467recommended configuration method for new applications and deployments. Because
468a Python dictionary is used to hold configuration information, and since you
469can populate that dictionary using different means, you have more options for
470configuration. For example, you can use a configuration file in JSON format,
471or, if you have access to YAML processing functionality, a file in YAML
472format, to populate the configuration dictionary. Or, of course, you can
473construct the dictionary in Python code, receive it in pickled form over a
474socket, or use whatever approach makes sense for your application.
475
476Here's an example of the same configuration as above, in YAML format for
477the new dictionary-based approach::
478
479 version: 1
480 formatters:
481 simple:
482 format: format=%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s
483 handlers:
484 console:
485 class: logging.StreamHandler
486 level: DEBUG
487 formatter: simple
488 stream: ext://sys.stdout
489 loggers:
490 simpleExample:
491 level: DEBUG
492 handlers: [console]
493 propagate: no
494 root:
495 level: DEBUG
496 handlers: [console]
497
498For more information about logging using a dictionary, see
499:ref:`logging-config-api`.
500
Vinay Sajip26a2d5e2009-01-10 13:37:26 +0000501.. _library-config:
Vinay Sajip30bf1222009-01-10 19:23:34 +0000502
Benjamin Peterson3e4f0552008-09-02 00:31:15 +0000503Configuring Logging for a Library
504^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
505
506When developing a library which uses logging, some consideration needs to be
507given to its configuration. If the using application does not use logging, and
508library code makes logging calls, then a one-off message "No handlers could be
509found for logger X.Y.Z" is printed to the console. This message is intended
510to catch mistakes in logging configuration, but will confuse an application
511developer who is not aware of logging by the library.
512
513In addition to documenting how a library uses logging, a good way to configure
514library logging so that it does not cause a spurious message is to add a
515handler which does nothing. This avoids the message being printed, since a
516handler will be found: it just doesn't produce any output. If the library user
517configures logging for application use, presumably that configuration will add
518some handlers, and if levels are suitably configured then logging calls made
519in library code will send output to those handlers, as normal.
520
521A do-nothing handler can be simply defined as follows::
522
523 import logging
524
525 class NullHandler(logging.Handler):
526 def emit(self, record):
527 pass
528
529An instance of this handler should be added to the top-level logger of the
530logging namespace used by the library. If all logging by a library *foo* is
531done using loggers with names matching "foo.x.y", then the code::
532
533 import logging
534
535 h = NullHandler()
536 logging.getLogger("foo").addHandler(h)
537
538should have the desired effect. If an organisation produces a number of
539libraries, then the logger name specified can be "orgname.foo" rather than
540just "foo".
541
Vinay Sajip76ca3b42010-09-27 13:53:47 +0000542**PLEASE NOTE:** It is strongly advised that you *do not add any handlers other
543than* :class:`NullHandler` *to your library's loggers*. This is because the
544configuration of handlers is the prerogative of the application developer who
545uses your library. The application developer knows their target audience and
546what handlers are most appropriate for their application: if you add handlers
547"under the hood", you might well interfere with their ability to carry out
548unit tests and deliver logs which suit their requirements.
549
Georg Brandlf9734072008-12-07 15:30:06 +0000550.. versionadded:: 3.1
Vinay Sajip4039aff2010-09-11 10:25:28 +0000551
Vinay Sajip76ca3b42010-09-27 13:53:47 +0000552The :class:`NullHandler` class was not present in previous versions, but is
553now included, so that it need not be defined in library code.
Georg Brandlf9734072008-12-07 15:30:06 +0000554
555
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +0000556
557Logging Levels
558--------------
559
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000560The numeric values of logging levels are given in the following table. These are
561primarily of interest if you want to define your own levels, and need them to
562have specific values relative to the predefined levels. If you define a level
563with the same numeric value, it overwrites the predefined value; the predefined
564name is lost.
565
566+--------------+---------------+
567| Level | Numeric value |
568+==============+===============+
569| ``CRITICAL`` | 50 |
570+--------------+---------------+
571| ``ERROR`` | 40 |
572+--------------+---------------+
573| ``WARNING`` | 30 |
574+--------------+---------------+
575| ``INFO`` | 20 |
576+--------------+---------------+
577| ``DEBUG`` | 10 |
578+--------------+---------------+
579| ``NOTSET`` | 0 |
580+--------------+---------------+
581
582Levels can also be associated with loggers, being set either by the developer or
583through loading a saved logging configuration. When a logging method is called
584on a logger, the logger compares its own level with the level associated with
585the method call. If the logger's level is higher than the method call's, no
586logging message is actually generated. This is the basic mechanism controlling
587the verbosity of logging output.
588
589Logging messages are encoded as instances of the :class:`LogRecord` class. When
590a logger decides to actually log an event, a :class:`LogRecord` instance is
591created from the logging message.
592
593Logging messages are subjected to a dispatch mechanism through the use of
594:dfn:`handlers`, which are instances of subclasses of the :class:`Handler`
595class. Handlers are responsible for ensuring that a logged message (in the form
596of a :class:`LogRecord`) ends up in a particular location (or set of locations)
597which is useful for the target audience for that message (such as end users,
598support desk staff, system administrators, developers). Handlers are passed
599:class:`LogRecord` instances intended for particular destinations. Each logger
600can have zero, one or more handlers associated with it (via the
601:meth:`addHandler` method of :class:`Logger`). In addition to any handlers
602directly associated with a logger, *all handlers associated with all ancestors
Benjamin Peterson22005fc2010-04-11 16:25:06 +0000603of the logger* are called to dispatch the message (unless the *propagate* flag
604for a logger is set to a false value, at which point the passing to ancestor
605handlers stops).
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000606
607Just as for loggers, handlers can have levels associated with them. A handler's
608level acts as a filter in the same way as a logger's level does. If a handler
609decides to actually dispatch an event, the :meth:`emit` method is used to send
610the message to its destination. Most user-defined subclasses of :class:`Handler`
611will need to override this :meth:`emit`.
612
Vinay Sajipc8c8c692010-09-17 10:09:04 +0000613.. _custom-levels:
614
615Custom Levels
616^^^^^^^^^^^^^
617
618Defining your own levels is possible, but should not be necessary, as the
619existing levels have been chosen on the basis of practical experience.
620However, if you are convinced that you need custom levels, great care should
621be exercised when doing this, and it is possibly *a very bad idea to define
622custom levels if you are developing a library*. That's because if multiple
623library authors all define their own custom levels, there is a chance that
624the logging output from such multiple libraries used together will be
625difficult for the using developer to control and/or interpret, because a
626given numeric value might mean different things for different libraries.
627
628
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000629Useful Handlers
630---------------
631
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000632In addition to the base :class:`Handler` class, many useful subclasses are
633provided:
634
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000635#. :class:`StreamHandler` instances send messages to streams (file-like
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000636 objects).
637
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000638#. :class:`FileHandler` instances send messages to disk files.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000639
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000640.. module:: logging.handlers
Vinay Sajip30bf1222009-01-10 19:23:34 +0000641
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000642#. :class:`BaseRotatingHandler` is the base class for handlers that
643 rotate log files at a certain point. It is not meant to be instantiated
644 directly. Instead, use :class:`RotatingFileHandler` or
645 :class:`TimedRotatingFileHandler`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000646
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000647#. :class:`RotatingFileHandler` instances send messages to disk
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000648 files, with support for maximum log file sizes and log file rotation.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000649
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000650#. :class:`TimedRotatingFileHandler` instances send messages to
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000651 disk files, rotating the log file at certain timed intervals.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000652
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000653#. :class:`SocketHandler` instances send messages to TCP/IP
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000654 sockets.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000655
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000656#. :class:`DatagramHandler` instances send messages to UDP
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000657 sockets.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000658
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000659#. :class:`SMTPHandler` instances send messages to a designated
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000660 email address.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000661
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000662#. :class:`SysLogHandler` instances send messages to a Unix
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000663 syslog daemon, possibly on a remote machine.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000664
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000665#. :class:`NTEventLogHandler` instances send messages to a
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000666 Windows NT/2000/XP event log.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000667
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000668#. :class:`MemoryHandler` instances send messages to a buffer
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000669 in memory, which is flushed whenever specific criteria are met.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000670
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000671#. :class:`HTTPHandler` instances send messages to an HTTP
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000672 server using either ``GET`` or ``POST`` semantics.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000673
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000674#. :class:`WatchedFileHandler` instances watch the file they are
675 logging to. If the file changes, it is closed and reopened using the file
676 name. This handler is only useful on Unix-like systems; Windows does not
677 support the underlying mechanism used.
Vinay Sajip30bf1222009-01-10 19:23:34 +0000678
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000679#. :class:`QueueHandler` instances send messages to a queue, such as
680 those implemented in the :mod:`queue` or :mod:`multiprocessing` modules.
681
Vinay Sajip30bf1222009-01-10 19:23:34 +0000682.. currentmodule:: logging
683
Georg Brandlf9734072008-12-07 15:30:06 +0000684#. :class:`NullHandler` instances do nothing with error messages. They are used
685 by library developers who want to use logging, but want to avoid the "No
686 handlers could be found for logger XXX" message which can be displayed if
Vinay Sajip26a2d5e2009-01-10 13:37:26 +0000687 the library user has not configured logging. See :ref:`library-config` for
688 more information.
Georg Brandlf9734072008-12-07 15:30:06 +0000689
690.. versionadded:: 3.1
691
692The :class:`NullHandler` class was not present in previous versions.
693
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +0000694.. versionadded:: 3.2
695
696The :class:`QueueHandler` class was not present in previous versions.
697
Vinay Sajipa17775f2008-12-30 07:32:59 +0000698The :class:`NullHandler`, :class:`StreamHandler` and :class:`FileHandler`
699classes are defined in the core logging package. The other handlers are
700defined in a sub- module, :mod:`logging.handlers`. (There is also another
701sub-module, :mod:`logging.config`, for configuration functionality.)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000702
703Logged messages are formatted for presentation through instances of the
704:class:`Formatter` class. They are initialized with a format string suitable for
705use with the % operator and a dictionary.
706
707For formatting multiple messages in a batch, instances of
708:class:`BufferingFormatter` can be used. In addition to the format string (which
709is applied to each message in the batch), there is provision for header and
710trailer format strings.
711
712When filtering based on logger level and/or handler level is not enough,
713instances of :class:`Filter` can be added to both :class:`Logger` and
714:class:`Handler` instances (through their :meth:`addFilter` method). Before
715deciding to process a message further, both loggers and handlers consult all
716their filters for permission. If any filter returns a false value, the message
717is not processed further.
718
719The basic :class:`Filter` functionality allows filtering by specific logger
720name. If this feature is used, messages sent to the named logger and its
721children are allowed through the filter, and all others dropped.
722
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +0000723Module-Level Functions
724----------------------
725
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000726In addition to the classes described above, there are a number of module- level
727functions.
728
729
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000730.. function:: getLogger(name=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000731
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000732 Return a logger with the specified name or, if name is ``None``, return a
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000733 logger which is the root logger of the hierarchy. If specified, the name is
734 typically a dot-separated hierarchical name like *"a"*, *"a.b"* or *"a.b.c.d"*.
735 Choice of these names is entirely up to the developer who is using logging.
736
737 All calls to this function with a given name return the same logger instance.
738 This means that logger instances never need to be passed between different parts
739 of an application.
740
741
742.. function:: getLoggerClass()
743
744 Return either the standard :class:`Logger` class, or the last class passed to
745 :func:`setLoggerClass`. This function may be called from within a new class
746 definition, to ensure that installing a customised :class:`Logger` class will
747 not undo customisations already applied by other code. For example::
748
749 class MyLogger(logging.getLoggerClass()):
750 # ... override behaviour here
751
752
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000753.. function:: debug(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000754
755 Logs a message with level :const:`DEBUG` on the root logger. The *msg* is the
756 message format string, and the *args* are the arguments which are merged into
757 *msg* using the string formatting operator. (Note that this means that you can
758 use keywords in the format string, together with a single dictionary argument.)
759
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +0000760 There are three keyword arguments in *kwargs* which are inspected: *exc_info*
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000761 which, if it does not evaluate as false, causes exception information to be
762 added to the logging message. If an exception tuple (in the format returned by
763 :func:`sys.exc_info`) is provided, it is used; otherwise, :func:`sys.exc_info`
764 is called to get the exception information.
765
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +0000766 The second optional keyword argument is *stack_info*, which defaults to
767 False. If specified as True, stack information is added to the logging
768 message, including the actual logging call. Note that this is not the same
769 stack information as that displayed through specifying *exc_info*: The
770 former is stack frames from the bottom of the stack up to the logging call
771 in the current thread, whereas the latter is information about stack frames
772 which have been unwound, following an exception, while searching for
773 exception handlers.
774
775 You can specify *stack_info* independently of *exc_info*, e.g. to just show
776 how you got to a certain point in your code, even when no exceptions were
777 raised. The stack frames are printed following a header line which says::
778
779 Stack (most recent call last):
780
781 This mimics the `Traceback (most recent call last):` which is used when
782 displaying exception frames.
783
784 The third optional keyword argument is *extra* which can be used to pass a
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000785 dictionary which is used to populate the __dict__ of the LogRecord created for
786 the logging event with user-defined attributes. These custom attributes can then
787 be used as you like. For example, they could be incorporated into logged
788 messages. For example::
789
790 FORMAT = "%(asctime)-15s %(clientip)s %(user)-8s %(message)s"
791 logging.basicConfig(format=FORMAT)
792 d = {'clientip': '192.168.0.1', 'user': 'fbloggs'}
793 logging.warning("Protocol problem: %s", "connection reset", extra=d)
794
Vinay Sajip4039aff2010-09-11 10:25:28 +0000795 would print something like::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000796
797 2006-02-08 22:20:02,165 192.168.0.1 fbloggs Protocol problem: connection reset
798
799 The keys in the dictionary passed in *extra* should not clash with the keys used
800 by the logging system. (See the :class:`Formatter` documentation for more
801 information on which keys are used by the logging system.)
802
803 If you choose to use these attributes in logged messages, you need to exercise
804 some care. In the above example, for instance, the :class:`Formatter` has been
805 set up with a format string which expects 'clientip' and 'user' in the attribute
806 dictionary of the LogRecord. If these are missing, the message will not be
807 logged because a string formatting exception will occur. So in this case, you
808 always need to pass the *extra* dictionary with these keys.
809
810 While this might be annoying, this feature is intended for use in specialized
811 circumstances, such as multi-threaded servers where the same code executes in
812 many contexts, and interesting conditions which arise are dependent on this
813 context (such as remote client IP address and authenticated user name, in the
814 above example). In such circumstances, it is likely that specialized
815 :class:`Formatter`\ s would be used with particular :class:`Handler`\ s.
816
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +0000817 .. versionadded:: 3.2
818 The *stack_info* parameter was added.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000819
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000820.. function:: info(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000821
822 Logs a message with level :const:`INFO` on the root logger. The arguments are
823 interpreted as for :func:`debug`.
824
825
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000826.. function:: warning(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000827
828 Logs a message with level :const:`WARNING` on the root logger. The arguments are
829 interpreted as for :func:`debug`.
830
831
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000832.. function:: error(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000833
834 Logs a message with level :const:`ERROR` on the root logger. The arguments are
835 interpreted as for :func:`debug`.
836
837
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000838.. function:: critical(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000839
840 Logs a message with level :const:`CRITICAL` on the root logger. The arguments
841 are interpreted as for :func:`debug`.
842
843
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000844.. function:: exception(msg, *args)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000845
846 Logs a message with level :const:`ERROR` on the root logger. The arguments are
847 interpreted as for :func:`debug`. Exception info is added to the logging
848 message. This function should only be called from an exception handler.
849
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000850.. function:: log(level, msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000851
852 Logs a message with level *level* on the root logger. The other arguments are
853 interpreted as for :func:`debug`.
854
Vinay Sajipc8c8c692010-09-17 10:09:04 +0000855 PLEASE NOTE: The above module-level functions which delegate to the root
856 logger should *not* be used in threads, in versions of Python earlier than
857 2.7.1 and 3.2, unless at least one handler has been added to the root
858 logger *before* the threads are started. These convenience functions call
859 :func:`basicConfig` to ensure that at least one handler is available; in
860 earlier versions of Python, this can (under rare circumstances) lead to
861 handlers being added multiple times to the root logger, which can in turn
862 lead to multiple messages for the same event.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000863
864.. function:: disable(lvl)
865
866 Provides an overriding level *lvl* for all loggers which takes precedence over
867 the logger's own level. When the need arises to temporarily throttle logging
Benjamin Peterson886af962010-03-21 23:13:07 +0000868 output down across the whole application, this function can be useful. Its
869 effect is to disable all logging calls of severity *lvl* and below, so that
870 if you call it with a value of INFO, then all INFO and DEBUG events would be
871 discarded, whereas those of severity WARNING and above would be processed
872 according to the logger's effective level.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000873
874
875.. function:: addLevelName(lvl, levelName)
876
877 Associates level *lvl* with text *levelName* in an internal dictionary, which is
878 used to map numeric levels to a textual representation, for example when a
879 :class:`Formatter` formats a message. This function can also be used to define
880 your own levels. The only constraints are that all levels used must be
881 registered using this function, levels should be positive integers and they
882 should increase in increasing order of severity.
883
Vinay Sajipc8c8c692010-09-17 10:09:04 +0000884 NOTE: If you are thinking of defining your own levels, please see the section
885 on :ref:`custom-levels`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000886
887.. function:: getLevelName(lvl)
888
889 Returns the textual representation of logging level *lvl*. If the level is one
890 of the predefined levels :const:`CRITICAL`, :const:`ERROR`, :const:`WARNING`,
891 :const:`INFO` or :const:`DEBUG` then you get the corresponding string. If you
892 have associated levels with names using :func:`addLevelName` then the name you
893 have associated with *lvl* is returned. If a numeric value corresponding to one
894 of the defined levels is passed in, the corresponding string representation is
895 returned. Otherwise, the string "Level %s" % lvl is returned.
896
897
898.. function:: makeLogRecord(attrdict)
899
900 Creates and returns a new :class:`LogRecord` instance whose attributes are
901 defined by *attrdict*. This function is useful for taking a pickled
902 :class:`LogRecord` attribute dictionary, sent over a socket, and reconstituting
903 it as a :class:`LogRecord` instance at the receiving end.
904
905
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +0000906.. function:: basicConfig(**kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000907
908 Does basic configuration for the logging system by creating a
909 :class:`StreamHandler` with a default :class:`Formatter` and adding it to the
Vinay Sajipcbabd7e2009-10-10 20:32:36 +0000910 root logger. The functions :func:`debug`, :func:`info`, :func:`warning`,
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000911 :func:`error` and :func:`critical` will call :func:`basicConfig` automatically
912 if no handlers are defined for the root logger.
913
Vinay Sajipcbabd7e2009-10-10 20:32:36 +0000914 This function does nothing if the root logger already has handlers
915 configured for it.
916
Vinay Sajipc8c8c692010-09-17 10:09:04 +0000917 PLEASE NOTE: This function should be called from the main thread
918 before other threads are started. In versions of Python prior to
919 2.7.1 and 3.2, if this function is called from multiple threads,
920 it is possible (in rare circumstances) that a handler will be added
921 to the root logger more than once, leading to unexpected results
922 such as messages being duplicated in the log.
923
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000924 The following keyword arguments are supported.
925
926 +--------------+---------------------------------------------+
927 | Format | Description |
928 +==============+=============================================+
929 | ``filename`` | Specifies that a FileHandler be created, |
930 | | using the specified filename, rather than a |
931 | | StreamHandler. |
932 +--------------+---------------------------------------------+
933 | ``filemode`` | Specifies the mode to open the file, if |
934 | | filename is specified (if filemode is |
935 | | unspecified, it defaults to 'a'). |
936 +--------------+---------------------------------------------+
937 | ``format`` | Use the specified format string for the |
938 | | handler. |
939 +--------------+---------------------------------------------+
940 | ``datefmt`` | Use the specified date/time format. |
941 +--------------+---------------------------------------------+
Vinay Sajipc5b27302010-10-31 14:59:16 +0000942 | ``style`` | If ``format`` is specified, use this style |
943 | | for the format string. One of '%', '{' or |
944 | | '$' for %-formatting, :meth:`str.format` or |
945 | | :class:`string.Template` respectively, and |
946 | | defaulting to '%' if not specified. |
947 +--------------+---------------------------------------------+
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000948 | ``level`` | Set the root logger level to the specified |
949 | | level. |
950 +--------------+---------------------------------------------+
951 | ``stream`` | Use the specified stream to initialize the |
952 | | StreamHandler. Note that this argument is |
953 | | incompatible with 'filename' - if both are |
954 | | present, 'stream' is ignored. |
955 +--------------+---------------------------------------------+
956
Vinay Sajipc5b27302010-10-31 14:59:16 +0000957 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
958 The ``style`` argument was added.
959
960
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000961.. function:: shutdown()
962
963 Informs the logging system to perform an orderly shutdown by flushing and
Christian Heimesb186d002008-03-18 15:15:01 +0000964 closing all handlers. This should be called at application exit and no
965 further use of the logging system should be made after this call.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000966
967
968.. function:: setLoggerClass(klass)
969
970 Tells the logging system to use the class *klass* when instantiating a logger.
971 The class should define :meth:`__init__` such that only a name argument is
972 required, and the :meth:`__init__` should call :meth:`Logger.__init__`. This
973 function is typically called before any loggers are instantiated by applications
974 which need to use custom logger behavior.
975
976
977.. seealso::
978
979 :pep:`282` - A Logging System
980 The proposal which described this feature for inclusion in the Python standard
981 library.
982
Christian Heimes255f53b2007-12-08 15:33:56 +0000983 `Original Python logging package <http://www.red-dove.com/python_logging.html>`_
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000984 This is the original source for the :mod:`logging` package. The version of the
985 package available from this site is suitable for use with Python 1.5.2, 2.1.x
986 and 2.2.x, which do not include the :mod:`logging` package in the standard
987 library.
988
Vinay Sajip4039aff2010-09-11 10:25:28 +0000989.. _logger:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000990
991Logger Objects
992--------------
993
994Loggers have the following attributes and methods. Note that Loggers are never
995instantiated directly, but always through the module-level function
996``logging.getLogger(name)``.
997
Vinay Sajip0258ce82010-09-22 20:34:53 +0000998.. class:: Logger
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000999
1000.. attribute:: Logger.propagate
1001
1002 If this evaluates to false, logging messages are not passed by this logger or by
Benjamin Peterson22005fc2010-04-11 16:25:06 +00001003 its child loggers to the handlers of higher level (ancestor) loggers. The
1004 constructor sets this attribute to 1.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001005
1006
1007.. method:: Logger.setLevel(lvl)
1008
1009 Sets the threshold for this logger to *lvl*. Logging messages which are less
1010 severe than *lvl* will be ignored. When a logger is created, the level is set to
1011 :const:`NOTSET` (which causes all messages to be processed when the logger is
1012 the root logger, or delegation to the parent when the logger is a non-root
1013 logger). Note that the root logger is created with level :const:`WARNING`.
1014
1015 The term "delegation to the parent" means that if a logger has a level of
1016 NOTSET, its chain of ancestor loggers is traversed until either an ancestor with
1017 a level other than NOTSET is found, or the root is reached.
1018
1019 If an ancestor is found with a level other than NOTSET, then that ancestor's
1020 level is treated as the effective level of the logger where the ancestor search
1021 began, and is used to determine how a logging event is handled.
1022
1023 If the root is reached, and it has a level of NOTSET, then all messages will be
1024 processed. Otherwise, the root's level will be used as the effective level.
1025
1026
1027.. method:: Logger.isEnabledFor(lvl)
1028
1029 Indicates if a message of severity *lvl* would be processed by this logger.
1030 This method checks first the module-level level set by
1031 ``logging.disable(lvl)`` and then the logger's effective level as determined
1032 by :meth:`getEffectiveLevel`.
1033
1034
1035.. method:: Logger.getEffectiveLevel()
1036
1037 Indicates the effective level for this logger. If a value other than
1038 :const:`NOTSET` has been set using :meth:`setLevel`, it is returned. Otherwise,
1039 the hierarchy is traversed towards the root until a value other than
1040 :const:`NOTSET` is found, and that value is returned.
1041
1042
Benjamin Peterson22005fc2010-04-11 16:25:06 +00001043.. method:: Logger.getChild(suffix)
1044
1045 Returns a logger which is a descendant to this logger, as determined by the suffix.
1046 Thus, ``logging.getLogger('abc').getChild('def.ghi')`` would return the same
1047 logger as would be returned by ``logging.getLogger('abc.def.ghi')``. This is a
1048 convenience method, useful when the parent logger is named using e.g. ``__name__``
1049 rather than a literal string.
1050
1051 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1052
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +00001053
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00001054.. method:: Logger.debug(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001055
1056 Logs a message with level :const:`DEBUG` on this logger. The *msg* is the
1057 message format string, and the *args* are the arguments which are merged into
1058 *msg* using the string formatting operator. (Note that this means that you can
1059 use keywords in the format string, together with a single dictionary argument.)
1060
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00001061 There are three keyword arguments in *kwargs* which are inspected: *exc_info*
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001062 which, if it does not evaluate as false, causes exception information to be
1063 added to the logging message. If an exception tuple (in the format returned by
1064 :func:`sys.exc_info`) is provided, it is used; otherwise, :func:`sys.exc_info`
1065 is called to get the exception information.
1066
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00001067 The second optional keyword argument is *stack_info*, which defaults to
1068 False. If specified as True, stack information is added to the logging
1069 message, including the actual logging call. Note that this is not the same
1070 stack information as that displayed through specifying *exc_info*: The
1071 former is stack frames from the bottom of the stack up to the logging call
1072 in the current thread, whereas the latter is information about stack frames
1073 which have been unwound, following an exception, while searching for
1074 exception handlers.
1075
1076 You can specify *stack_info* independently of *exc_info*, e.g. to just show
1077 how you got to a certain point in your code, even when no exceptions were
1078 raised. The stack frames are printed following a header line which says::
1079
1080 Stack (most recent call last):
1081
1082 This mimics the `Traceback (most recent call last):` which is used when
1083 displaying exception frames.
1084
1085 The third keyword argument is *extra* which can be used to pass a
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001086 dictionary which is used to populate the __dict__ of the LogRecord created for
1087 the logging event with user-defined attributes. These custom attributes can then
1088 be used as you like. For example, they could be incorporated into logged
1089 messages. For example::
1090
1091 FORMAT = "%(asctime)-15s %(clientip)s %(user)-8s %(message)s"
1092 logging.basicConfig(format=FORMAT)
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001093 d = { 'clientip' : '192.168.0.1', 'user' : 'fbloggs' }
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001094 logger = logging.getLogger("tcpserver")
1095 logger.warning("Protocol problem: %s", "connection reset", extra=d)
1096
1097 would print something like ::
1098
1099 2006-02-08 22:20:02,165 192.168.0.1 fbloggs Protocol problem: connection reset
1100
1101 The keys in the dictionary passed in *extra* should not clash with the keys used
1102 by the logging system. (See the :class:`Formatter` documentation for more
1103 information on which keys are used by the logging system.)
1104
1105 If you choose to use these attributes in logged messages, you need to exercise
1106 some care. In the above example, for instance, the :class:`Formatter` has been
1107 set up with a format string which expects 'clientip' and 'user' in the attribute
1108 dictionary of the LogRecord. If these are missing, the message will not be
1109 logged because a string formatting exception will occur. So in this case, you
1110 always need to pass the *extra* dictionary with these keys.
1111
1112 While this might be annoying, this feature is intended for use in specialized
1113 circumstances, such as multi-threaded servers where the same code executes in
1114 many contexts, and interesting conditions which arise are dependent on this
1115 context (such as remote client IP address and authenticated user name, in the
1116 above example). In such circumstances, it is likely that specialized
1117 :class:`Formatter`\ s would be used with particular :class:`Handler`\ s.
1118
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00001119 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1120 The *stack_info* parameter was added.
1121
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001122
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00001123.. method:: Logger.info(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001124
1125 Logs a message with level :const:`INFO` on this logger. The arguments are
1126 interpreted as for :meth:`debug`.
1127
1128
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00001129.. method:: Logger.warning(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001130
1131 Logs a message with level :const:`WARNING` on this logger. The arguments are
1132 interpreted as for :meth:`debug`.
1133
1134
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00001135.. method:: Logger.error(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001136
1137 Logs a message with level :const:`ERROR` on this logger. The arguments are
1138 interpreted as for :meth:`debug`.
1139
1140
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00001141.. method:: Logger.critical(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001142
1143 Logs a message with level :const:`CRITICAL` on this logger. The arguments are
1144 interpreted as for :meth:`debug`.
1145
1146
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00001147.. method:: Logger.log(lvl, msg, *args, **kwargs)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001148
1149 Logs a message with integer level *lvl* on this logger. The other arguments are
1150 interpreted as for :meth:`debug`.
1151
1152
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00001153.. method:: Logger.exception(msg, *args)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001154
1155 Logs a message with level :const:`ERROR` on this logger. The arguments are
1156 interpreted as for :meth:`debug`. Exception info is added to the logging
1157 message. This method should only be called from an exception handler.
1158
1159
1160.. method:: Logger.addFilter(filt)
1161
1162 Adds the specified filter *filt* to this logger.
1163
1164
1165.. method:: Logger.removeFilter(filt)
1166
1167 Removes the specified filter *filt* from this logger.
1168
1169
1170.. method:: Logger.filter(record)
1171
1172 Applies this logger's filters to the record and returns a true value if the
1173 record is to be processed.
1174
1175
1176.. method:: Logger.addHandler(hdlr)
1177
1178 Adds the specified handler *hdlr* to this logger.
1179
1180
1181.. method:: Logger.removeHandler(hdlr)
1182
1183 Removes the specified handler *hdlr* from this logger.
1184
1185
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00001186.. method:: Logger.findCaller(stack_info=False)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001187
1188 Finds the caller's source filename and line number. Returns the filename, line
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00001189 number, function name and stack information as a 4-element tuple. The stack
1190 information is returned as *None* unless *stack_info* is *True*.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001191
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001192
1193.. method:: Logger.handle(record)
1194
1195 Handles a record by passing it to all handlers associated with this logger and
1196 its ancestors (until a false value of *propagate* is found). This method is used
1197 for unpickled records received from a socket, as well as those created locally.
Georg Brandl502d9a52009-07-26 15:02:41 +00001198 Logger-level filtering is applied using :meth:`~Logger.filter`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001199
1200
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00001201.. method:: Logger.makeRecord(name, lvl, fn, lno, msg, args, exc_info, func=None, extra=None, sinfo=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001202
1203 This is a factory method which can be overridden in subclasses to create
1204 specialized :class:`LogRecord` instances.
1205
Vinay Sajip83eadd12010-09-20 10:31:18 +00001206.. method:: Logger.hasHandlers()
1207
1208 Checks to see if this logger has any handlers configured. This is done by
1209 looking for handlers in this logger and its parents in the logger hierarchy.
1210 Returns True if a handler was found, else False. The method stops searching
1211 up the hierarchy whenever a logger with the "propagate" attribute set to
1212 False is found - that will be the last logger which is checked for the
1213 existence of handlers.
1214
1215.. versionadded:: 3.2
1216
1217The :meth:`hasHandlers` method was not present in previous versions.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001218
1219.. _minimal-example:
1220
1221Basic example
1222-------------
1223
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001224The :mod:`logging` package provides a lot of flexibility, and its configuration
1225can appear daunting. This section demonstrates that simple use of the logging
1226package is possible.
1227
1228The simplest example shows logging to the console::
1229
1230 import logging
1231
1232 logging.debug('A debug message')
1233 logging.info('Some information')
1234 logging.warning('A shot across the bows')
1235
1236If you run the above script, you'll see this::
1237
1238 WARNING:root:A shot across the bows
1239
1240Because no particular logger was specified, the system used the root logger. The
1241debug and info messages didn't appear because by default, the root logger is
1242configured to only handle messages with a severity of WARNING or above. The
1243message format is also a configuration default, as is the output destination of
1244the messages - ``sys.stderr``. The severity level, the message format and
1245destination can be easily changed, as shown in the example below::
1246
1247 import logging
1248
1249 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,
1250 format='%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(message)s',
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001251 filename='myapp.log',
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001252 filemode='w')
1253 logging.debug('A debug message')
1254 logging.info('Some information')
1255 logging.warning('A shot across the bows')
1256
1257The :meth:`basicConfig` method is used to change the configuration defaults,
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00001258which results in output (written to ``myapp.log``) which should look
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001259something like the following::
1260
1261 2004-07-02 13:00:08,743 DEBUG A debug message
1262 2004-07-02 13:00:08,743 INFO Some information
1263 2004-07-02 13:00:08,743 WARNING A shot across the bows
1264
1265This time, all messages with a severity of DEBUG or above were handled, and the
1266format of the messages was also changed, and output went to the specified file
1267rather than the console.
1268
Georg Brandl81ac1ce2007-08-31 17:17:17 +00001269.. XXX logging should probably be updated for new string formatting!
Georg Brandl4b491312007-08-31 09:22:56 +00001270
1271Formatting uses the old Python string formatting - see section
1272:ref:`old-string-formatting`. The format string takes the following common
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001273specifiers. For a complete list of specifiers, consult the :class:`Formatter`
1274documentation.
1275
1276+-------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
1277| Format | Description |
1278+===================+===============================================+
1279| ``%(name)s`` | Name of the logger (logging channel). |
1280+-------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
1281| ``%(levelname)s`` | Text logging level for the message |
1282| | (``'DEBUG'``, ``'INFO'``, ``'WARNING'``, |
1283| | ``'ERROR'``, ``'CRITICAL'``). |
1284+-------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
1285| ``%(asctime)s`` | Human-readable time when the |
1286| | :class:`LogRecord` was created. By default |
1287| | this is of the form "2003-07-08 16:49:45,896" |
1288| | (the numbers after the comma are millisecond |
1289| | portion of the time). |
1290+-------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
1291| ``%(message)s`` | The logged message. |
1292+-------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
1293
1294To change the date/time format, you can pass an additional keyword parameter,
1295*datefmt*, as in the following::
1296
1297 import logging
1298
1299 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,
1300 format='%(asctime)s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s',
1301 datefmt='%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S',
1302 filename='/temp/myapp.log',
1303 filemode='w')
1304 logging.debug('A debug message')
1305 logging.info('Some information')
1306 logging.warning('A shot across the bows')
1307
1308which would result in output like ::
1309
1310 Fri, 02 Jul 2004 13:06:18 DEBUG A debug message
1311 Fri, 02 Jul 2004 13:06:18 INFO Some information
1312 Fri, 02 Jul 2004 13:06:18 WARNING A shot across the bows
1313
1314The date format string follows the requirements of :func:`strftime` - see the
1315documentation for the :mod:`time` module.
1316
1317If, instead of sending logging output to the console or a file, you'd rather use
1318a file-like object which you have created separately, you can pass it to
1319:func:`basicConfig` using the *stream* keyword argument. Note that if both
1320*stream* and *filename* keyword arguments are passed, the *stream* argument is
1321ignored.
1322
1323Of course, you can put variable information in your output. To do this, simply
1324have the message be a format string and pass in additional arguments containing
1325the variable information, as in the following example::
1326
1327 import logging
1328
1329 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,
1330 format='%(asctime)s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s',
1331 datefmt='%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S',
1332 filename='/temp/myapp.log',
1333 filemode='w')
1334 logging.error('Pack my box with %d dozen %s', 5, 'liquor jugs')
1335
1336which would result in ::
1337
1338 Wed, 21 Jul 2004 15:35:16 ERROR Pack my box with 5 dozen liquor jugs
1339
1340
1341.. _multiple-destinations:
1342
1343Logging to multiple destinations
1344--------------------------------
1345
1346Let's say you want to log to console and file with different message formats and
1347in differing circumstances. Say you want to log messages with levels of DEBUG
1348and higher to file, and those messages at level INFO and higher to the console.
1349Let's also assume that the file should contain timestamps, but the console
1350messages should not. Here's how you can achieve this::
1351
1352 import logging
1353
1354 # set up logging to file - see previous section for more details
1355 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,
1356 format='%(asctime)s %(name)-12s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s',
1357 datefmt='%m-%d %H:%M',
1358 filename='/temp/myapp.log',
1359 filemode='w')
1360 # define a Handler which writes INFO messages or higher to the sys.stderr
1361 console = logging.StreamHandler()
1362 console.setLevel(logging.INFO)
1363 # set a format which is simpler for console use
1364 formatter = logging.Formatter('%(name)-12s: %(levelname)-8s %(message)s')
1365 # tell the handler to use this format
1366 console.setFormatter(formatter)
1367 # add the handler to the root logger
1368 logging.getLogger('').addHandler(console)
1369
1370 # Now, we can log to the root logger, or any other logger. First the root...
1371 logging.info('Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.')
1372
1373 # Now, define a couple of other loggers which might represent areas in your
1374 # application:
1375
1376 logger1 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area1')
1377 logger2 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area2')
1378
1379 logger1.debug('Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.')
1380 logger1.info('How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.')
1381 logger2.warning('Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.')
1382 logger2.error('The five boxing wizards jump quickly.')
1383
1384When you run this, on the console you will see ::
1385
1386 root : INFO Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.
1387 myapp.area1 : INFO How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.
1388 myapp.area2 : WARNING Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.
1389 myapp.area2 : ERROR The five boxing wizards jump quickly.
1390
1391and in the file you will see something like ::
1392
1393 10-22 22:19 root INFO Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.
1394 10-22 22:19 myapp.area1 DEBUG Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.
1395 10-22 22:19 myapp.area1 INFO How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.
1396 10-22 22:19 myapp.area2 WARNING Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.
1397 10-22 22:19 myapp.area2 ERROR The five boxing wizards jump quickly.
1398
1399As you can see, the DEBUG message only shows up in the file. The other messages
1400are sent to both destinations.
1401
1402This example uses console and file handlers, but you can use any number and
1403combination of handlers you choose.
1404
Vinay Sajip3ee22ec2009-08-20 22:05:10 +00001405.. _logging-exceptions:
1406
1407Exceptions raised during logging
1408--------------------------------
1409
1410The logging package is designed to swallow exceptions which occur while logging
1411in production. This is so that errors which occur while handling logging events
1412- such as logging misconfiguration, network or other similar errors - do not
1413cause the application using logging to terminate prematurely.
1414
1415:class:`SystemExit` and :class:`KeyboardInterrupt` exceptions are never
1416swallowed. Other exceptions which occur during the :meth:`emit` method of a
1417:class:`Handler` subclass are passed to its :meth:`handleError` method.
1418
1419The default implementation of :meth:`handleError` in :class:`Handler` checks
Georg Brandlef871f62010-03-12 10:06:40 +00001420to see if a module-level variable, :data:`raiseExceptions`, is set. If set, a
1421traceback is printed to :data:`sys.stderr`. If not set, the exception is swallowed.
Vinay Sajip3ee22ec2009-08-20 22:05:10 +00001422
Georg Brandlef871f62010-03-12 10:06:40 +00001423**Note:** The default value of :data:`raiseExceptions` is ``True``. This is because
Vinay Sajip3ee22ec2009-08-20 22:05:10 +00001424during development, you typically want to be notified of any exceptions that
Georg Brandlef871f62010-03-12 10:06:40 +00001425occur. It's advised that you set :data:`raiseExceptions` to ``False`` for production
Vinay Sajip3ee22ec2009-08-20 22:05:10 +00001426usage.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001427
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +00001428.. _context-info:
1429
1430Adding contextual information to your logging output
1431----------------------------------------------------
1432
1433Sometimes you want logging output to contain contextual information in
1434addition to the parameters passed to the logging call. For example, in a
1435networked application, it may be desirable to log client-specific information
1436in the log (e.g. remote client's username, or IP address). Although you could
1437use the *extra* parameter to achieve this, it's not always convenient to pass
1438the information in this way. While it might be tempting to create
1439:class:`Logger` instances on a per-connection basis, this is not a good idea
1440because these instances are not garbage collected. While this is not a problem
1441in practice, when the number of :class:`Logger` instances is dependent on the
1442level of granularity you want to use in logging an application, it could
1443be hard to manage if the number of :class:`Logger` instances becomes
1444effectively unbounded.
1445
Vinay Sajipc31be632010-09-06 22:18:20 +00001446
1447Using LoggerAdapters to impart contextual information
1448^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1449
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00001450An easy way in which you can pass contextual information to be output along
1451with logging event information is to use the :class:`LoggerAdapter` class.
1452This class is designed to look like a :class:`Logger`, so that you can call
1453:meth:`debug`, :meth:`info`, :meth:`warning`, :meth:`error`,
1454:meth:`exception`, :meth:`critical` and :meth:`log`. These methods have the
1455same signatures as their counterparts in :class:`Logger`, so you can use the
1456two types of instances interchangeably.
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +00001457
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00001458When you create an instance of :class:`LoggerAdapter`, you pass it a
1459:class:`Logger` instance and a dict-like object which contains your contextual
1460information. When you call one of the logging methods on an instance of
1461:class:`LoggerAdapter`, it delegates the call to the underlying instance of
1462:class:`Logger` passed to its constructor, and arranges to pass the contextual
1463information in the delegated call. Here's a snippet from the code of
1464:class:`LoggerAdapter`::
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +00001465
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00001466 def debug(self, msg, *args, **kwargs):
1467 """
1468 Delegate a debug call to the underlying logger, after adding
1469 contextual information from this adapter instance.
1470 """
1471 msg, kwargs = self.process(msg, kwargs)
1472 self.logger.debug(msg, *args, **kwargs)
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +00001473
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00001474The :meth:`process` method of :class:`LoggerAdapter` is where the contextual
1475information is added to the logging output. It's passed the message and
1476keyword arguments of the logging call, and it passes back (potentially)
1477modified versions of these to use in the call to the underlying logger. The
1478default implementation of this method leaves the message alone, but inserts
1479an "extra" key in the keyword argument whose value is the dict-like object
1480passed to the constructor. Of course, if you had passed an "extra" keyword
1481argument in the call to the adapter, it will be silently overwritten.
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +00001482
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00001483The advantage of using "extra" is that the values in the dict-like object are
1484merged into the :class:`LogRecord` instance's __dict__, allowing you to use
1485customized strings with your :class:`Formatter` instances which know about
1486the keys of the dict-like object. If you need a different method, e.g. if you
1487want to prepend or append the contextual information to the message string,
1488you just need to subclass :class:`LoggerAdapter` and override :meth:`process`
1489to do what you need. Here's an example script which uses this class, which
1490also illustrates what dict-like behaviour is needed from an arbitrary
1491"dict-like" object for use in the constructor::
1492
Christian Heimes587c2bf2008-01-19 16:21:02 +00001493 import logging
Georg Brandl86def6c2008-01-21 20:36:10 +00001494
Christian Heimes587c2bf2008-01-19 16:21:02 +00001495 class ConnInfo:
1496 """
1497 An example class which shows how an arbitrary class can be used as
1498 the 'extra' context information repository passed to a LoggerAdapter.
1499 """
Georg Brandl86def6c2008-01-21 20:36:10 +00001500
Christian Heimes587c2bf2008-01-19 16:21:02 +00001501 def __getitem__(self, name):
1502 """
1503 To allow this instance to look like a dict.
1504 """
1505 from random import choice
1506 if name == "ip":
1507 result = choice(["127.0.0.1", "192.168.0.1"])
1508 elif name == "user":
1509 result = choice(["jim", "fred", "sheila"])
1510 else:
1511 result = self.__dict__.get(name, "?")
1512 return result
Georg Brandl86def6c2008-01-21 20:36:10 +00001513
Christian Heimes587c2bf2008-01-19 16:21:02 +00001514 def __iter__(self):
1515 """
1516 To allow iteration over keys, which will be merged into
1517 the LogRecord dict before formatting and output.
1518 """
1519 keys = ["ip", "user"]
1520 keys.extend(self.__dict__.keys())
1521 return keys.__iter__()
Georg Brandl86def6c2008-01-21 20:36:10 +00001522
Christian Heimes587c2bf2008-01-19 16:21:02 +00001523 if __name__ == "__main__":
1524 from random import choice
1525 levels = (logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, logging.ERROR, logging.CRITICAL)
1526 a1 = logging.LoggerAdapter(logging.getLogger("a.b.c"),
1527 { "ip" : "123.231.231.123", "user" : "sheila" })
1528 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,
1529 format="%(asctime)-15s %(name)-5s %(levelname)-8s IP: %(ip)-15s User: %(user)-8s %(message)s")
1530 a1.debug("A debug message")
1531 a1.info("An info message with %s", "some parameters")
1532 a2 = logging.LoggerAdapter(logging.getLogger("d.e.f"), ConnInfo())
1533 for x in range(10):
1534 lvl = choice(levels)
1535 lvlname = logging.getLevelName(lvl)
1536 a2.log(lvl, "A message at %s level with %d %s", lvlname, 2, "parameters")
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00001537
1538When this script is run, the output should look something like this::
1539
Christian Heimes587c2bf2008-01-19 16:21:02 +00001540 2008-01-18 14:49:54,023 a.b.c DEBUG IP: 123.231.231.123 User: sheila A debug message
1541 2008-01-18 14:49:54,023 a.b.c INFO IP: 123.231.231.123 User: sheila An info message with some parameters
1542 2008-01-18 14:49:54,023 d.e.f CRITICAL IP: 192.168.0.1 User: jim A message at CRITICAL level with 2 parameters
1543 2008-01-18 14:49:54,033 d.e.f INFO IP: 192.168.0.1 User: jim A message at INFO level with 2 parameters
1544 2008-01-18 14:49:54,033 d.e.f WARNING IP: 192.168.0.1 User: sheila A message at WARNING level with 2 parameters
1545 2008-01-18 14:49:54,033 d.e.f ERROR IP: 127.0.0.1 User: fred A message at ERROR level with 2 parameters
1546 2008-01-18 14:49:54,033 d.e.f ERROR IP: 127.0.0.1 User: sheila A message at ERROR level with 2 parameters
1547 2008-01-18 14:49:54,033 d.e.f WARNING IP: 192.168.0.1 User: sheila A message at WARNING level with 2 parameters
1548 2008-01-18 14:49:54,033 d.e.f WARNING IP: 192.168.0.1 User: jim A message at WARNING level with 2 parameters
1549 2008-01-18 14:49:54,033 d.e.f INFO IP: 192.168.0.1 User: fred A message at INFO level with 2 parameters
1550 2008-01-18 14:49:54,033 d.e.f WARNING IP: 192.168.0.1 User: sheila A message at WARNING level with 2 parameters
1551 2008-01-18 14:49:54,033 d.e.f WARNING IP: 127.0.0.1 User: jim A message at WARNING level with 2 parameters
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00001552
Christian Heimes790c8232008-01-07 21:14:23 +00001553
Vinay Sajipac007992010-09-17 12:45:26 +00001554.. _filters-contextual:
1555
Vinay Sajipc31be632010-09-06 22:18:20 +00001556Using Filters to impart contextual information
1557^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1558
1559You can also add contextual information to log output using a user-defined
1560:class:`Filter`. ``Filter`` instances are allowed to modify the ``LogRecords``
1561passed to them, including adding additional attributes which can then be output
1562using a suitable format string, or if needed a custom :class:`Formatter`.
1563
1564For example in a web application, the request being processed (or at least,
1565the interesting parts of it) can be stored in a threadlocal
1566(:class:`threading.local`) variable, and then accessed from a ``Filter`` to
1567add, say, information from the request - say, the remote IP address and remote
1568user's username - to the ``LogRecord``, using the attribute names 'ip' and
1569'user' as in the ``LoggerAdapter`` example above. In that case, the same format
1570string can be used to get similar output to that shown above. Here's an example
1571script::
1572
1573 import logging
1574 from random import choice
1575
1576 class ContextFilter(logging.Filter):
1577 """
1578 This is a filter which injects contextual information into the log.
1579
1580 Rather than use actual contextual information, we just use random
1581 data in this demo.
1582 """
1583
1584 USERS = ['jim', 'fred', 'sheila']
1585 IPS = ['123.231.231.123', '127.0.0.1', '192.168.0.1']
1586
1587 def filter(self, record):
1588
1589 record.ip = choice(ContextFilter.IPS)
1590 record.user = choice(ContextFilter.USERS)
1591 return True
1592
1593 if __name__ == "__main__":
1594 levels = (logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING, logging.ERROR, logging.CRITICAL)
1595 a1 = logging.LoggerAdapter(logging.getLogger("a.b.c"),
1596 { "ip" : "123.231.231.123", "user" : "sheila" })
1597 logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG,
1598 format="%(asctime)-15s %(name)-5s %(levelname)-8s IP: %(ip)-15s User: %(user)-8s %(message)s")
1599 a1 = logging.getLogger("a.b.c")
1600 a2 = logging.getLogger("d.e.f")
1601
1602 f = ContextFilter()
1603 a1.addFilter(f)
1604 a2.addFilter(f)
1605 a1.debug("A debug message")
1606 a1.info("An info message with %s", "some parameters")
1607 for x in range(10):
1608 lvl = choice(levels)
1609 lvlname = logging.getLevelName(lvl)
1610 a2.log(lvl, "A message at %s level with %d %s", lvlname, 2, "parameters")
1611
1612which, when run, produces something like::
1613
1614 2010-09-06 22:38:15,292 a.b.c DEBUG IP: 123.231.231.123 User: fred A debug message
1615 2010-09-06 22:38:15,300 a.b.c INFO IP: 192.168.0.1 User: sheila An info message with some parameters
1616 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
1617 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
1618 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
1619 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
1620 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
1621 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
1622 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
1623 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
1624 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
1625 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
1626
1627
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00001628.. _multiple-processes:
1629
Vinay Sajipa7471bf2009-08-15 23:23:37 +00001630Logging to a single file from multiple processes
1631------------------------------------------------
1632
1633Although logging is thread-safe, and logging to a single file from multiple
1634threads in a single process *is* supported, logging to a single file from
1635*multiple processes* is *not* supported, because there is no standard way to
1636serialize access to a single file across multiple processes in Python. If you
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +00001637need to log to a single file from multiple processes, one way of doing this is
1638to have all the processes log to a :class:`SocketHandler`, and have a separate
1639process which implements a socket server which reads from the socket and logs
1640to file. (If you prefer, you can dedicate one thread in one of the existing
1641processes to perform this function.) The following section documents this
1642approach in more detail and includes a working socket receiver which can be
1643used as a starting point for you to adapt in your own applications.
Vinay Sajipa7471bf2009-08-15 23:23:37 +00001644
Vinay Sajip5a92b132009-08-15 23:35:08 +00001645If you are using a recent version of Python which includes the
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +00001646:mod:`multiprocessing` module, you could write your own handler which uses the
Vinay Sajip5a92b132009-08-15 23:35:08 +00001647:class:`Lock` class from this module to serialize access to the file from
1648your processes. The existing :class:`FileHandler` and subclasses do not make
1649use of :mod:`multiprocessing` at present, though they may do so in the future.
Vinay Sajip8c6b0a52009-08-17 13:17:47 +00001650Note that at present, the :mod:`multiprocessing` module does not provide
1651working lock functionality on all platforms (see
1652http://bugs.python.org/issue3770).
Vinay Sajip5a92b132009-08-15 23:35:08 +00001653
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +00001654.. currentmodule:: logging.handlers
1655
1656Alternatively, you can use a ``Queue`` and a :class:`QueueHandler` to send
1657all logging events to one of the processes in your multi-process application.
1658The following example script demonstrates how you can do this; in the example
1659a separate listener process listens for events sent by other processes and logs
1660them according to its own logging configuration. Although the example only
1661demonstrates one way of doing it (for example, you may want to use a listener
1662thread rather than a separate listener process - the implementation would be
1663analogous) it does allow for completely different logging configurations for
1664the listener and the other processes in your application, and can be used as
1665the basis for code meeting your own specific requirements::
1666
1667 # You'll need these imports in your own code
1668 import logging
1669 import logging.handlers
1670 import multiprocessing
1671
1672 # Next two import lines for this demo only
1673 from random import choice, random
1674 import time
1675
1676 #
1677 # Because you'll want to define the logging configurations for listener and workers, the
1678 # listener and worker process functions take a configurer parameter which is a callable
1679 # for configuring logging for that process. These functions are also passed the queue,
1680 # which they use for communication.
1681 #
1682 # In practice, you can configure the listener however you want, but note that in this
1683 # simple example, the listener does not apply level or filter logic to received records.
1684 # In practice, you would probably want to do ths logic in the worker processes, to avoid
1685 # sending events which would be filtered out between processes.
1686 #
1687 # The size of the rotated files is made small so you can see the results easily.
1688 def listener_configurer():
1689 root = logging.getLogger()
1690 h = logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler('/tmp/mptest.log', 'a', 300, 10)
1691 f = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s %(processName)-10s %(name)s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s')
1692 h.setFormatter(f)
1693 root.addHandler(h)
1694
1695 # This is the listener process top-level loop: wait for logging events
1696 # (LogRecords)on the queue and handle them, quit when you get a None for a
1697 # LogRecord.
1698 def listener_process(queue, configurer):
1699 configurer()
1700 while True:
1701 try:
1702 record = queue.get()
1703 if record is None: # We send this as a sentinel to tell the listener to quit.
1704 break
1705 logger = logging.getLogger(record.name)
1706 logger.handle(record) # No level or filter logic applied - just do it!
1707 except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit):
1708 raise
1709 except:
1710 import sys, traceback
1711 print >> sys.stderr, 'Whoops! Problem:'
1712 traceback.print_exc(file=sys.stderr)
1713
1714 # Arrays used for random selections in this demo
1715
1716 LEVELS = [logging.DEBUG, logging.INFO, logging.WARNING,
1717 logging.ERROR, logging.CRITICAL]
1718
1719 LOGGERS = ['a.b.c', 'd.e.f']
1720
1721 MESSAGES = [
1722 'Random message #1',
1723 'Random message #2',
1724 'Random message #3',
1725 ]
1726
1727 # The worker configuration is done at the start of the worker process run.
1728 # Note that on Windows you can't rely on fork semantics, so each process
1729 # will run the logging configuration code when it starts.
1730 def worker_configurer(queue):
1731 h = logging.handlers.QueueHandler(queue) # Just the one handler needed
1732 root = logging.getLogger()
1733 root.addHandler(h)
1734 root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) # send all messages, for demo; no other level or filter logic applied.
1735
1736 # This is the worker process top-level loop, which just logs ten events with
1737 # random intervening delays before terminating.
1738 # The print messages are just so you know it's doing something!
1739 def worker_process(queue, configurer):
1740 configurer(queue)
1741 name = multiprocessing.current_process().name
1742 print('Worker started: %s' % name)
1743 for i in range(10):
1744 time.sleep(random())
1745 logger = logging.getLogger(choice(LOGGERS))
1746 level = choice(LEVELS)
1747 message = choice(MESSAGES)
1748 logger.log(level, message)
1749 print('Worker finished: %s' % name)
1750
1751 # Here's where the demo gets orchestrated. Create the queue, create and start
1752 # the listener, create ten workers and start them, wait for them to finish,
1753 # then send a None to the queue to tell the listener to finish.
1754 def main():
1755 queue = multiprocessing.Queue(-1)
1756 listener = multiprocessing.Process(target=listener_process,
1757 args=(queue, listener_configurer))
1758 listener.start()
1759 workers = []
1760 for i in range(10):
1761 worker = multiprocessing.Process(target=worker_process,
1762 args=(queue, worker_configurer))
1763 workers.append(worker)
1764 worker.start()
1765 for w in workers:
1766 w.join()
1767 queue.put_nowait(None)
1768 listener.join()
1769
1770 if __name__ == '__main__':
1771 main()
1772
1773
1774.. currentmodule:: logging
1775
Benjamin Peterson8719ad52009-09-11 22:24:02 +00001776
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001777.. _network-logging:
1778
1779Sending and receiving logging events across a network
1780-----------------------------------------------------
1781
1782Let's say you want to send logging events across a network, and handle them at
1783the receiving end. A simple way of doing this is attaching a
1784:class:`SocketHandler` instance to the root logger at the sending end::
1785
1786 import logging, logging.handlers
1787
1788 rootLogger = logging.getLogger('')
1789 rootLogger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
1790 socketHandler = logging.handlers.SocketHandler('localhost',
1791 logging.handlers.DEFAULT_TCP_LOGGING_PORT)
1792 # don't bother with a formatter, since a socket handler sends the event as
1793 # an unformatted pickle
1794 rootLogger.addHandler(socketHandler)
1795
1796 # Now, we can log to the root logger, or any other logger. First the root...
1797 logging.info('Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.')
1798
1799 # Now, define a couple of other loggers which might represent areas in your
1800 # application:
1801
1802 logger1 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area1')
1803 logger2 = logging.getLogger('myapp.area2')
1804
1805 logger1.debug('Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.')
1806 logger1.info('How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.')
1807 logger2.warning('Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.')
1808 logger2.error('The five boxing wizards jump quickly.')
1809
Alexandre Vassalottice261952008-05-12 02:31:37 +00001810At the receiving end, you can set up a receiver using the :mod:`socketserver`
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001811module. Here is a basic working example::
1812
Georg Brandla35f4b92009-05-31 16:41:59 +00001813 import pickle
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001814 import logging
1815 import logging.handlers
Alexandre Vassalottice261952008-05-12 02:31:37 +00001816 import socketserver
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001817 import struct
1818
1819
Alexandre Vassalottice261952008-05-12 02:31:37 +00001820 class LogRecordStreamHandler(socketserver.StreamRequestHandler):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001821 """Handler for a streaming logging request.
1822
1823 This basically logs the record using whatever logging policy is
1824 configured locally.
1825 """
1826
1827 def handle(self):
1828 """
1829 Handle multiple requests - each expected to be a 4-byte length,
1830 followed by the LogRecord in pickle format. Logs the record
1831 according to whatever policy is configured locally.
1832 """
Collin Winter46334482007-09-10 00:49:57 +00001833 while True:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001834 chunk = self.connection.recv(4)
1835 if len(chunk) < 4:
1836 break
1837 slen = struct.unpack(">L", chunk)[0]
1838 chunk = self.connection.recv(slen)
1839 while len(chunk) < slen:
1840 chunk = chunk + self.connection.recv(slen - len(chunk))
1841 obj = self.unPickle(chunk)
1842 record = logging.makeLogRecord(obj)
1843 self.handleLogRecord(record)
1844
1845 def unPickle(self, data):
Georg Brandla35f4b92009-05-31 16:41:59 +00001846 return pickle.loads(data)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001847
1848 def handleLogRecord(self, record):
1849 # if a name is specified, we use the named logger rather than the one
1850 # implied by the record.
1851 if self.server.logname is not None:
1852 name = self.server.logname
1853 else:
1854 name = record.name
1855 logger = logging.getLogger(name)
1856 # N.B. EVERY record gets logged. This is because Logger.handle
1857 # is normally called AFTER logger-level filtering. If you want
1858 # to do filtering, do it at the client end to save wasting
1859 # cycles and network bandwidth!
1860 logger.handle(record)
1861
Alexandre Vassalottice261952008-05-12 02:31:37 +00001862 class LogRecordSocketReceiver(socketserver.ThreadingTCPServer):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001863 """simple TCP socket-based logging receiver suitable for testing.
1864 """
1865
1866 allow_reuse_address = 1
1867
1868 def __init__(self, host='localhost',
1869 port=logging.handlers.DEFAULT_TCP_LOGGING_PORT,
1870 handler=LogRecordStreamHandler):
Alexandre Vassalottice261952008-05-12 02:31:37 +00001871 socketserver.ThreadingTCPServer.__init__(self, (host, port), handler)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001872 self.abort = 0
1873 self.timeout = 1
1874 self.logname = None
1875
1876 def serve_until_stopped(self):
1877 import select
1878 abort = 0
1879 while not abort:
1880 rd, wr, ex = select.select([self.socket.fileno()],
1881 [], [],
1882 self.timeout)
1883 if rd:
1884 self.handle_request()
1885 abort = self.abort
1886
1887 def main():
1888 logging.basicConfig(
1889 format="%(relativeCreated)5d %(name)-15s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s")
1890 tcpserver = LogRecordSocketReceiver()
Georg Brandl6911e3c2007-09-04 07:15:32 +00001891 print("About to start TCP server...")
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001892 tcpserver.serve_until_stopped()
1893
1894 if __name__ == "__main__":
1895 main()
1896
1897First run the server, and then the client. On the client side, nothing is
1898printed on the console; on the server side, you should see something like::
1899
1900 About to start TCP server...
1901 59 root INFO Jackdaws love my big sphinx of quartz.
1902 59 myapp.area1 DEBUG Quick zephyrs blow, vexing daft Jim.
1903 69 myapp.area1 INFO How quickly daft jumping zebras vex.
1904 69 myapp.area2 WARNING Jail zesty vixen who grabbed pay from quack.
1905 69 myapp.area2 ERROR The five boxing wizards jump quickly.
1906
Vinay Sajipc15dfd62010-07-06 15:08:55 +00001907Note that there are some security issues with pickle in some scenarios. If
1908these affect you, you can use an alternative serialization scheme by overriding
1909the :meth:`makePickle` method and implementing your alternative there, as
1910well as adapting the above script to use your alternative serialization.
1911
Vinay Sajip4039aff2010-09-11 10:25:28 +00001912.. _arbitrary-object-messages:
1913
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00001914Using arbitrary objects as messages
1915-----------------------------------
1916
1917In the preceding sections and examples, it has been assumed that the message
1918passed when logging the event is a string. However, this is not the only
1919possibility. You can pass an arbitrary object as a message, and its
1920:meth:`__str__` method will be called when the logging system needs to convert
1921it to a string representation. In fact, if you want to, you can avoid
1922computing a string representation altogether - for example, the
1923:class:`SocketHandler` emits an event by pickling it and sending it over the
1924wire.
1925
Vinay Sajip55778922010-09-23 09:09:15 +00001926Dealing with handlers that block
1927--------------------------------
1928
1929.. currentmodule:: logging.handlers
1930
1931Sometimes you have to get your logging handlers to do their work without
1932blocking the thread you’re logging from. This is common in Web applications,
1933though of course it also occurs in other scenarios.
1934
1935A common culprit which demonstrates sluggish behaviour is the
1936:class:`SMTPHandler`: sending emails can take a long time, for a
1937number of reasons outside the developer’s control (for example, a poorly
1938performing mail or network infrastructure). But almost any network-based
1939handler can block: Even a :class:`SocketHandler` operation may do a
1940DNS query under the hood which is too slow (and this query can be deep in the
1941socket library code, below the Python layer, and outside your control).
1942
1943One solution is to use a two-part approach. For the first part, attach only a
1944:class:`QueueHandler` to those loggers which are accessed from
1945performance-critical threads. They simply write to their queue, which can be
1946sized to a large enough capacity or initialized with no upper bound to their
1947size. The write to the queue will typically be accepted quickly, though you
1948will probably need to catch the :ref:`queue.Full` exception as a precaution
1949in your code. If you are a library developer who has performance-critical
1950threads in their code, be sure to document this (together with a suggestion to
1951attach only ``QueueHandlers`` to your loggers) for the benefit of other
1952developers who will use your code.
1953
1954The second part of the solution is :class:`QueueListener`, which has been
1955designed as the counterpart to :class:`QueueHandler`. A
1956:class:`QueueListener` is very simple: it’s passed a queue and some handlers,
1957and it fires up an internal thread which listens to its queue for LogRecords
1958sent from ``QueueHandlers`` (or any other source of ``LogRecords``, for that
1959matter). The ``LogRecords`` are removed from the queue and passed to the
1960handlers for processing.
1961
1962The advantage of having a separate :class:`QueueListener` class is that you
1963can use the same instance to service multiple ``QueueHandlers``. This is more
1964resource-friendly than, say, having threaded versions of the existing handler
1965classes, which would eat up one thread per handler for no particular benefit.
1966
1967An example of using these two classes follows (imports omitted)::
1968
1969 que = queue.Queue(-1) # no limit on size
1970 queue_handler = QueueHandler(que)
1971 handler = logging.StreamHandler()
1972 listener = QueueListener(que, handler)
1973 root = logging.getLogger()
1974 root.addHandler(queue_handler)
1975 formatter = logging.Formatter('%(threadName)s: %(message)s')
1976 handler.setFormatter(formatter)
1977 listener.start()
1978 # The log output will display the thread which generated
1979 # the event (the main thread) rather than the internal
1980 # thread which monitors the internal queue. This is what
1981 # you want to happen.
1982 root.warning('Look out!')
1983 listener.stop()
1984
1985which, when run, will produce::
1986
1987 MainThread: Look out!
1988
1989
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00001990Optimization
1991------------
1992
1993Formatting of message arguments is deferred until it cannot be avoided.
1994However, computing the arguments passed to the logging method can also be
1995expensive, and you may want to avoid doing it if the logger will just throw
1996away your event. To decide what to do, you can call the :meth:`isEnabledFor`
1997method which takes a level argument and returns true if the event would be
1998created by the Logger for that level of call. You can write code like this::
1999
2000 if logger.isEnabledFor(logging.DEBUG):
2001 logger.debug("Message with %s, %s", expensive_func1(),
2002 expensive_func2())
2003
2004so that if the logger's threshold is set above ``DEBUG``, the calls to
2005:func:`expensive_func1` and :func:`expensive_func2` are never made.
2006
2007There are other optimizations which can be made for specific applications which
2008need more precise control over what logging information is collected. Here's a
2009list of things you can do to avoid processing during logging which you don't
2010need:
2011
2012+-----------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------+
2013| What you don't want to collect | How to avoid collecting it |
2014+===============================================+========================================+
2015| Information about where calls were made from. | Set ``logging._srcfile`` to ``None``. |
2016+-----------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------+
2017| Threading information. | Set ``logging.logThreads`` to ``0``. |
2018+-----------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------+
2019| Process information. | Set ``logging.logProcesses`` to ``0``. |
2020+-----------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------+
2021
2022Also note that the core logging module only includes the basic handlers. If
2023you don't import :mod:`logging.handlers` and :mod:`logging.config`, they won't
2024take up any memory.
2025
2026.. _handler:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002027
2028Handler Objects
2029---------------
2030
2031Handlers have the following attributes and methods. Note that :class:`Handler`
2032is never instantiated directly; this class acts as a base for more useful
2033subclasses. However, the :meth:`__init__` method in subclasses needs to call
2034:meth:`Handler.__init__`.
2035
2036
2037.. method:: Handler.__init__(level=NOTSET)
2038
2039 Initializes the :class:`Handler` instance by setting its level, setting the list
2040 of filters to the empty list and creating a lock (using :meth:`createLock`) for
2041 serializing access to an I/O mechanism.
2042
2043
2044.. method:: Handler.createLock()
2045
2046 Initializes a thread lock which can be used to serialize access to underlying
2047 I/O functionality which may not be threadsafe.
2048
2049
2050.. method:: Handler.acquire()
2051
2052 Acquires the thread lock created with :meth:`createLock`.
2053
2054
2055.. method:: Handler.release()
2056
2057 Releases the thread lock acquired with :meth:`acquire`.
2058
2059
2060.. method:: Handler.setLevel(lvl)
2061
2062 Sets the threshold for this handler to *lvl*. Logging messages which are less
2063 severe than *lvl* will be ignored. When a handler is created, the level is set
2064 to :const:`NOTSET` (which causes all messages to be processed).
2065
2066
2067.. method:: Handler.setFormatter(form)
2068
2069 Sets the :class:`Formatter` for this handler to *form*.
2070
2071
2072.. method:: Handler.addFilter(filt)
2073
2074 Adds the specified filter *filt* to this handler.
2075
2076
2077.. method:: Handler.removeFilter(filt)
2078
2079 Removes the specified filter *filt* from this handler.
2080
2081
2082.. method:: Handler.filter(record)
2083
2084 Applies this handler's filters to the record and returns a true value if the
2085 record is to be processed.
2086
2087
2088.. method:: Handler.flush()
2089
2090 Ensure all logging output has been flushed. This version does nothing and is
2091 intended to be implemented by subclasses.
2092
2093
2094.. method:: Handler.close()
2095
Benjamin Peterson3e4f0552008-09-02 00:31:15 +00002096 Tidy up any resources used by the handler. This version does no output but
2097 removes the handler from an internal list of handlers which is closed when
2098 :func:`shutdown` is called. Subclasses should ensure that this gets called
2099 from overridden :meth:`close` methods.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002100
2101
2102.. method:: Handler.handle(record)
2103
2104 Conditionally emits the specified logging record, depending on filters which may
2105 have been added to the handler. Wraps the actual emission of the record with
2106 acquisition/release of the I/O thread lock.
2107
2108
2109.. method:: Handler.handleError(record)
2110
2111 This method should be called from handlers when an exception is encountered
2112 during an :meth:`emit` call. By default it does nothing, which means that
2113 exceptions get silently ignored. This is what is mostly wanted for a logging
2114 system - most users will not care about errors in the logging system, they are
2115 more interested in application errors. You could, however, replace this with a
2116 custom handler if you wish. The specified record is the one which was being
2117 processed when the exception occurred.
2118
2119
2120.. method:: Handler.format(record)
2121
2122 Do formatting for a record - if a formatter is set, use it. Otherwise, use the
2123 default formatter for the module.
2124
2125
2126.. method:: Handler.emit(record)
2127
2128 Do whatever it takes to actually log the specified logging record. This version
2129 is intended to be implemented by subclasses and so raises a
2130 :exc:`NotImplementedError`.
2131
2132
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002133.. _stream-handler:
2134
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002135StreamHandler
2136^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2137
2138The :class:`StreamHandler` class, located in the core :mod:`logging` package,
2139sends logging output to streams such as *sys.stdout*, *sys.stderr* or any
2140file-like object (or, more precisely, any object which supports :meth:`write`
2141and :meth:`flush` methods).
2142
2143
Benjamin Peterson1baf4652009-12-31 03:11:23 +00002144.. currentmodule:: logging
2145
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00002146.. class:: StreamHandler(stream=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002147
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00002148 Returns a new instance of the :class:`StreamHandler` class. If *stream* is
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002149 specified, the instance will use it for logging output; otherwise, *sys.stderr*
2150 will be used.
2151
2152
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002153 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002154
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002155 If a formatter is specified, it is used to format the record. The record
2156 is then written to the stream with a trailing newline. If exception
2157 information is present, it is formatted using
2158 :func:`traceback.print_exception` and appended to the stream.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002159
2160
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002161 .. method:: flush()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002162
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002163 Flushes the stream by calling its :meth:`flush` method. Note that the
2164 :meth:`close` method is inherited from :class:`Handler` and so does
Benjamin Peterson3e4f0552008-09-02 00:31:15 +00002165 no output, so an explicit :meth:`flush` call may be needed at times.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002166
Vinay Sajip05ed6952010-10-20 20:34:09 +00002167.. versionchanged:: 3.2
2168 The ``StreamHandler`` class now has a ``terminator`` attribute, default
2169 value ``"\n"``, which is used as the terminator when writing a formatted
2170 record to a stream. If you don't want this newline termination, you can
2171 set the handler instance's ``terminator`` attribute to the empty string.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002172
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002173.. _file-handler:
2174
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002175FileHandler
2176^^^^^^^^^^^
2177
2178The :class:`FileHandler` class, located in the core :mod:`logging` package,
2179sends logging output to a disk file. It inherits the output functionality from
2180:class:`StreamHandler`.
2181
2182
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002183.. class:: FileHandler(filename, mode='a', encoding=None, delay=False)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002184
2185 Returns a new instance of the :class:`FileHandler` class. The specified file is
2186 opened and used as the stream for logging. If *mode* is not specified,
2187 :const:`'a'` is used. If *encoding* is not *None*, it is used to open the file
Christian Heimese7a15bb2008-01-24 16:21:45 +00002188 with that encoding. If *delay* is true, then file opening is deferred until the
2189 first call to :meth:`emit`. By default, the file grows indefinitely.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002190
2191
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002192 .. method:: close()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002193
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002194 Closes the file.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002195
2196
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002197 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002198
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002199 Outputs the record to the file.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002200
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002201.. _null-handler:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002202
Vinay Sajipaa672eb2009-01-02 18:53:45 +00002203NullHandler
2204^^^^^^^^^^^
2205
2206.. versionadded:: 3.1
2207
2208The :class:`NullHandler` class, located in the core :mod:`logging` package,
2209does not do any formatting or output. It is essentially a "no-op" handler
2210for use by library developers.
2211
2212
2213.. class:: NullHandler()
2214
2215 Returns a new instance of the :class:`NullHandler` class.
2216
2217
2218 .. method:: emit(record)
2219
2220 This method does nothing.
2221
Vinay Sajip76ca3b42010-09-27 13:53:47 +00002222 .. method:: handle(record)
2223
2224 This method does nothing.
2225
2226 .. method:: createLock()
2227
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00002228 This method returns ``None`` for the lock, since there is no
Vinay Sajip76ca3b42010-09-27 13:53:47 +00002229 underlying I/O to which access needs to be serialized.
2230
2231
Vinay Sajip26a2d5e2009-01-10 13:37:26 +00002232See :ref:`library-config` for more information on how to use
2233:class:`NullHandler`.
Benjamin Peterson960cf0f2009-01-09 04:11:44 +00002234
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002235.. _watched-file-handler:
2236
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002237WatchedFileHandler
2238^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2239
Benjamin Peterson058e31e2009-01-16 03:54:08 +00002240.. currentmodule:: logging.handlers
Vinay Sajipaa672eb2009-01-02 18:53:45 +00002241
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002242The :class:`WatchedFileHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers`
2243module, is a :class:`FileHandler` which watches the file it is logging to. If
2244the file changes, it is closed and reopened using the file name.
2245
2246A file change can happen because of usage of programs such as *newsyslog* and
2247*logrotate* which perform log file rotation. This handler, intended for use
2248under Unix/Linux, watches the file to see if it has changed since the last emit.
2249(A file is deemed to have changed if its device or inode have changed.) If the
2250file has changed, the old file stream is closed, and the file opened to get a
2251new stream.
2252
2253This handler is not appropriate for use under Windows, because under Windows
2254open log files cannot be moved or renamed - logging opens the files with
2255exclusive locks - and so there is no need for such a handler. Furthermore,
2256*ST_INO* is not supported under Windows; :func:`stat` always returns zero for
2257this value.
2258
2259
Christian Heimese7a15bb2008-01-24 16:21:45 +00002260.. class:: WatchedFileHandler(filename[,mode[, encoding[, delay]]])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002261
2262 Returns a new instance of the :class:`WatchedFileHandler` class. The specified
2263 file is opened and used as the stream for logging. If *mode* is not specified,
2264 :const:`'a'` is used. If *encoding* is not *None*, it is used to open the file
Christian Heimese7a15bb2008-01-24 16:21:45 +00002265 with that encoding. If *delay* is true, then file opening is deferred until the
2266 first call to :meth:`emit`. By default, the file grows indefinitely.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002267
2268
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002269 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002270
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002271 Outputs the record to the file, but first checks to see if the file has
2272 changed. If it has, the existing stream is flushed and closed and the
2273 file opened again, before outputting the record to the file.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002274
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002275.. _rotating-file-handler:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002276
2277RotatingFileHandler
2278^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2279
2280The :class:`RotatingFileHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers`
2281module, supports rotation of disk log files.
2282
2283
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00002284.. class:: RotatingFileHandler(filename, mode='a', maxBytes=0, backupCount=0, encoding=None, delay=0)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002285
2286 Returns a new instance of the :class:`RotatingFileHandler` class. The specified
2287 file is opened and used as the stream for logging. If *mode* is not specified,
Christian Heimese7a15bb2008-01-24 16:21:45 +00002288 ``'a'`` is used. If *encoding* is not *None*, it is used to open the file
2289 with that encoding. If *delay* is true, then file opening is deferred until the
2290 first call to :meth:`emit`. By default, the file grows indefinitely.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002291
2292 You can use the *maxBytes* and *backupCount* values to allow the file to
2293 :dfn:`rollover` at a predetermined size. When the size is about to be exceeded,
2294 the file is closed and a new file is silently opened for output. Rollover occurs
2295 whenever the current log file is nearly *maxBytes* in length; if *maxBytes* is
2296 zero, rollover never occurs. If *backupCount* is non-zero, the system will save
2297 old log files by appending the extensions ".1", ".2" etc., to the filename. For
2298 example, with a *backupCount* of 5 and a base file name of :file:`app.log`, you
2299 would get :file:`app.log`, :file:`app.log.1`, :file:`app.log.2`, up to
2300 :file:`app.log.5`. The file being written to is always :file:`app.log`. When
2301 this file is filled, it is closed and renamed to :file:`app.log.1`, and if files
2302 :file:`app.log.1`, :file:`app.log.2`, etc. exist, then they are renamed to
2303 :file:`app.log.2`, :file:`app.log.3` etc. respectively.
2304
2305
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002306 .. method:: doRollover()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002307
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002308 Does a rollover, as described above.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002309
2310
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002311 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002312
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002313 Outputs the record to the file, catering for rollover as described
2314 previously.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002315
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002316.. _timed-rotating-file-handler:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002317
2318TimedRotatingFileHandler
2319^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2320
2321The :class:`TimedRotatingFileHandler` class, located in the
2322:mod:`logging.handlers` module, supports rotation of disk log files at certain
2323timed intervals.
2324
2325
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002326.. class:: TimedRotatingFileHandler(filename, when='h', interval=1, backupCount=0, encoding=None, delay=False, utc=False)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002327
2328 Returns a new instance of the :class:`TimedRotatingFileHandler` class. The
2329 specified file is opened and used as the stream for logging. On rotating it also
2330 sets the filename suffix. Rotating happens based on the product of *when* and
2331 *interval*.
2332
2333 You can use the *when* to specify the type of *interval*. The list of possible
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002334 values is below. Note that they are not case sensitive.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002335
Christian Heimesb558a2e2008-03-02 22:46:37 +00002336 +----------------+-----------------------+
2337 | Value | Type of interval |
2338 +================+=======================+
2339 | ``'S'`` | Seconds |
2340 +----------------+-----------------------+
2341 | ``'M'`` | Minutes |
2342 +----------------+-----------------------+
2343 | ``'H'`` | Hours |
2344 +----------------+-----------------------+
2345 | ``'D'`` | Days |
2346 +----------------+-----------------------+
2347 | ``'W'`` | Week day (0=Monday) |
2348 +----------------+-----------------------+
2349 | ``'midnight'`` | Roll over at midnight |
2350 +----------------+-----------------------+
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002351
Christian Heimesb558a2e2008-03-02 22:46:37 +00002352 The system will save old log files by appending extensions to the filename.
2353 The extensions are date-and-time based, using the strftime format
Benjamin Petersonad9d48d2008-04-02 21:49:44 +00002354 ``%Y-%m-%d_%H-%M-%S`` or a leading portion thereof, depending on the
Georg Brandl3dbca812008-07-23 16:10:53 +00002355 rollover interval.
Benjamin Peterson9451a1c2010-03-13 22:30:34 +00002356
2357 When computing the next rollover time for the first time (when the handler
2358 is created), the last modification time of an existing log file, or else
2359 the current time, is used to compute when the next rotation will occur.
2360
Georg Brandl0c77a822008-06-10 16:37:50 +00002361 If the *utc* argument is true, times in UTC will be used; otherwise
2362 local time is used.
2363
2364 If *backupCount* is nonzero, at most *backupCount* files
Benjamin Petersonad9d48d2008-04-02 21:49:44 +00002365 will be kept, and if more would be created when rollover occurs, the oldest
2366 one is deleted. The deletion logic uses the interval to determine which
2367 files to delete, so changing the interval may leave old files lying around.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002368
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002369 If *delay* is true, then file opening is deferred until the first call to
2370 :meth:`emit`.
2371
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002372
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002373 .. method:: doRollover()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002374
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002375 Does a rollover, as described above.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002376
2377
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002378 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002379
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002380 Outputs the record to the file, catering for rollover as described above.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002381
2382
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002383.. _socket-handler:
2384
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002385SocketHandler
2386^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2387
2388The :class:`SocketHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers` module,
2389sends logging output to a network socket. The base class uses a TCP socket.
2390
2391
2392.. class:: SocketHandler(host, port)
2393
2394 Returns a new instance of the :class:`SocketHandler` class intended to
2395 communicate with a remote machine whose address is given by *host* and *port*.
2396
2397
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002398 .. method:: close()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002399
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002400 Closes the socket.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002401
2402
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002403 .. method:: emit()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002404
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002405 Pickles the record's attribute dictionary and writes it to the socket in
2406 binary format. If there is an error with the socket, silently drops the
2407 packet. If the connection was previously lost, re-establishes the
2408 connection. To unpickle the record at the receiving end into a
2409 :class:`LogRecord`, use the :func:`makeLogRecord` function.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002410
2411
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002412 .. method:: handleError()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002413
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002414 Handles an error which has occurred during :meth:`emit`. The most likely
2415 cause is a lost connection. Closes the socket so that we can retry on the
2416 next event.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002417
2418
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002419 .. method:: makeSocket()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002420
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002421 This is a factory method which allows subclasses to define the precise
2422 type of socket they want. The default implementation creates a TCP socket
2423 (:const:`socket.SOCK_STREAM`).
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002424
2425
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002426 .. method:: makePickle(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002427
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002428 Pickles the record's attribute dictionary in binary format with a length
2429 prefix, and returns it ready for transmission across the socket.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002430
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002431 Note that pickles aren't completely secure. If you are concerned about
2432 security, you may want to override this method to implement a more secure
2433 mechanism. For example, you can sign pickles using HMAC and then verify
2434 them on the receiving end, or alternatively you can disable unpickling of
2435 global objects on the receiving end.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002436
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002437 .. method:: send(packet)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002438
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002439 Send a pickled string *packet* to the socket. This function allows for
2440 partial sends which can happen when the network is busy.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002441
2442
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002443.. _datagram-handler:
2444
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002445DatagramHandler
2446^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2447
2448The :class:`DatagramHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers`
2449module, inherits from :class:`SocketHandler` to support sending logging messages
2450over UDP sockets.
2451
2452
2453.. class:: DatagramHandler(host, port)
2454
2455 Returns a new instance of the :class:`DatagramHandler` class intended to
2456 communicate with a remote machine whose address is given by *host* and *port*.
2457
2458
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002459 .. method:: emit()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002460
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002461 Pickles the record's attribute dictionary and writes it to the socket in
2462 binary format. If there is an error with the socket, silently drops the
2463 packet. To unpickle the record at the receiving end into a
2464 :class:`LogRecord`, use the :func:`makeLogRecord` function.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002465
2466
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002467 .. method:: makeSocket()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002468
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002469 The factory method of :class:`SocketHandler` is here overridden to create
2470 a UDP socket (:const:`socket.SOCK_DGRAM`).
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002471
2472
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002473 .. method:: send(s)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002474
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002475 Send a pickled string to a socket.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002476
2477
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002478.. _syslog-handler:
2479
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002480SysLogHandler
2481^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2482
2483The :class:`SysLogHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers` module,
2484supports sending logging messages to a remote or local Unix syslog.
2485
2486
Vinay Sajipcbabd7e2009-10-10 20:32:36 +00002487.. class:: SysLogHandler(address=('localhost', SYSLOG_UDP_PORT), facility=LOG_USER, socktype=socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002488
2489 Returns a new instance of the :class:`SysLogHandler` class intended to
2490 communicate with a remote Unix machine whose address is given by *address* in
2491 the form of a ``(host, port)`` tuple. If *address* is not specified,
Vinay Sajipcbabd7e2009-10-10 20:32:36 +00002492 ``('localhost', 514)`` is used. The address is used to open a socket. An
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002493 alternative to providing a ``(host, port)`` tuple is providing an address as a
2494 string, for example "/dev/log". In this case, a Unix domain socket is used to
2495 send the message to the syslog. If *facility* is not specified,
Vinay Sajipcbabd7e2009-10-10 20:32:36 +00002496 :const:`LOG_USER` is used. The type of socket opened depends on the
2497 *socktype* argument, which defaults to :const:`socket.SOCK_DGRAM` and thus
2498 opens a UDP socket. To open a TCP socket (for use with the newer syslog
2499 daemons such as rsyslog), specify a value of :const:`socket.SOCK_STREAM`.
2500
Vinay Sajip972412d2010-09-23 20:31:24 +00002501 Note that if your server is not listening on UDP port 514,
2502 :class:`SysLogHandler` may appear not to work. In that case, check what
2503 address you should be using for a domain socket - it's system dependent.
2504 For example, on Linux it's usually "/dev/log" but on OS/X it's
2505 "/var/run/syslog". You'll need to check your platform and use the
2506 appropriate address (you may need to do this check at runtime if your
2507 application needs to run on several platforms). On Windows, you pretty
2508 much have to use the UDP option.
2509
Vinay Sajipcbabd7e2009-10-10 20:32:36 +00002510 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
2511 *socktype* was added.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002512
2513
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002514 .. method:: close()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002515
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002516 Closes the socket to the remote host.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002517
2518
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002519 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002520
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002521 The record is formatted, and then sent to the syslog server. If exception
2522 information is present, it is *not* sent to the server.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002523
2524
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002525 .. method:: encodePriority(facility, priority)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002526
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002527 Encodes the facility and priority into an integer. You can pass in strings
2528 or integers - if strings are passed, internal mapping dictionaries are
2529 used to convert them to integers.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002530
Benjamin Peterson22005fc2010-04-11 16:25:06 +00002531 The symbolic ``LOG_`` values are defined in :class:`SysLogHandler` and
2532 mirror the values defined in the ``sys/syslog.h`` header file.
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +00002533
Georg Brandl88d7dbd2010-04-18 09:50:07 +00002534 **Priorities**
2535
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +00002536 +--------------------------+---------------+
2537 | Name (string) | Symbolic value|
2538 +==========================+===============+
2539 | ``alert`` | LOG_ALERT |
2540 +--------------------------+---------------+
2541 | ``crit`` or ``critical`` | LOG_CRIT |
2542 +--------------------------+---------------+
2543 | ``debug`` | LOG_DEBUG |
2544 +--------------------------+---------------+
2545 | ``emerg`` or ``panic`` | LOG_EMERG |
2546 +--------------------------+---------------+
2547 | ``err`` or ``error`` | LOG_ERR |
2548 +--------------------------+---------------+
2549 | ``info`` | LOG_INFO |
2550 +--------------------------+---------------+
2551 | ``notice`` | LOG_NOTICE |
2552 +--------------------------+---------------+
2553 | ``warn`` or ``warning`` | LOG_WARNING |
2554 +--------------------------+---------------+
2555
Georg Brandl88d7dbd2010-04-18 09:50:07 +00002556 **Facilities**
2557
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +00002558 +---------------+---------------+
2559 | Name (string) | Symbolic value|
2560 +===============+===============+
2561 | ``auth`` | LOG_AUTH |
2562 +---------------+---------------+
2563 | ``authpriv`` | LOG_AUTHPRIV |
2564 +---------------+---------------+
2565 | ``cron`` | LOG_CRON |
2566 +---------------+---------------+
2567 | ``daemon`` | LOG_DAEMON |
2568 +---------------+---------------+
2569 | ``ftp`` | LOG_FTP |
2570 +---------------+---------------+
2571 | ``kern`` | LOG_KERN |
2572 +---------------+---------------+
2573 | ``lpr`` | LOG_LPR |
2574 +---------------+---------------+
2575 | ``mail`` | LOG_MAIL |
2576 +---------------+---------------+
2577 | ``news`` | LOG_NEWS |
2578 +---------------+---------------+
2579 | ``syslog`` | LOG_SYSLOG |
2580 +---------------+---------------+
2581 | ``user`` | LOG_USER |
2582 +---------------+---------------+
2583 | ``uucp`` | LOG_UUCP |
2584 +---------------+---------------+
2585 | ``local0`` | LOG_LOCAL0 |
2586 +---------------+---------------+
2587 | ``local1`` | LOG_LOCAL1 |
2588 +---------------+---------------+
2589 | ``local2`` | LOG_LOCAL2 |
2590 +---------------+---------------+
2591 | ``local3`` | LOG_LOCAL3 |
2592 +---------------+---------------+
2593 | ``local4`` | LOG_LOCAL4 |
2594 +---------------+---------------+
2595 | ``local5`` | LOG_LOCAL5 |
2596 +---------------+---------------+
2597 | ``local6`` | LOG_LOCAL6 |
2598 +---------------+---------------+
2599 | ``local7`` | LOG_LOCAL7 |
2600 +---------------+---------------+
2601
2602 .. method:: mapPriority(levelname)
2603
2604 Maps a logging level name to a syslog priority name.
2605 You may need to override this if you are using custom levels, or
2606 if the default algorithm is not suitable for your needs. The
2607 default algorithm maps ``DEBUG``, ``INFO``, ``WARNING``, ``ERROR`` and
2608 ``CRITICAL`` to the equivalent syslog names, and all other level
2609 names to "warning".
2610
2611.. _nt-eventlog-handler:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002612
2613NTEventLogHandler
2614^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2615
2616The :class:`NTEventLogHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers`
2617module, supports sending logging messages to a local Windows NT, Windows 2000 or
2618Windows XP event log. Before you can use it, you need Mark Hammond's Win32
2619extensions for Python installed.
2620
2621
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00002622.. class:: NTEventLogHandler(appname, dllname=None, logtype='Application')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002623
2624 Returns a new instance of the :class:`NTEventLogHandler` class. The *appname* is
2625 used to define the application name as it appears in the event log. An
2626 appropriate registry entry is created using this name. The *dllname* should give
2627 the fully qualified pathname of a .dll or .exe which contains message
2628 definitions to hold in the log (if not specified, ``'win32service.pyd'`` is used
2629 - this is installed with the Win32 extensions and contains some basic
2630 placeholder message definitions. Note that use of these placeholders will make
2631 your event logs big, as the entire message source is held in the log. If you
2632 want slimmer logs, you have to pass in the name of your own .dll or .exe which
2633 contains the message definitions you want to use in the event log). The
2634 *logtype* is one of ``'Application'``, ``'System'`` or ``'Security'``, and
2635 defaults to ``'Application'``.
2636
2637
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002638 .. method:: close()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002639
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002640 At this point, you can remove the application name from the registry as a
2641 source of event log entries. However, if you do this, you will not be able
2642 to see the events as you intended in the Event Log Viewer - it needs to be
2643 able to access the registry to get the .dll name. The current version does
Benjamin Peterson3e4f0552008-09-02 00:31:15 +00002644 not do this.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002645
2646
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002647 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002648
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002649 Determines the message ID, event category and event type, and then logs
2650 the message in the NT event log.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002651
2652
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002653 .. method:: getEventCategory(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002654
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002655 Returns the event category for the record. Override this if you want to
2656 specify your own categories. This version returns 0.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002657
2658
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002659 .. method:: getEventType(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002660
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002661 Returns the event type for the record. Override this if you want to
2662 specify your own types. This version does a mapping using the handler's
2663 typemap attribute, which is set up in :meth:`__init__` to a dictionary
2664 which contains mappings for :const:`DEBUG`, :const:`INFO`,
2665 :const:`WARNING`, :const:`ERROR` and :const:`CRITICAL`. If you are using
2666 your own levels, you will either need to override this method or place a
2667 suitable dictionary in the handler's *typemap* attribute.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002668
2669
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002670 .. method:: getMessageID(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002671
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002672 Returns the message ID for the record. If you are using your own messages,
2673 you could do this by having the *msg* passed to the logger being an ID
2674 rather than a format string. Then, in here, you could use a dictionary
2675 lookup to get the message ID. This version returns 1, which is the base
2676 message ID in :file:`win32service.pyd`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002677
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002678.. _smtp-handler:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002679
2680SMTPHandler
2681^^^^^^^^^^^
2682
2683The :class:`SMTPHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers` module,
2684supports sending logging messages to an email address via SMTP.
2685
2686
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00002687.. class:: SMTPHandler(mailhost, fromaddr, toaddrs, subject, credentials=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002688
2689 Returns a new instance of the :class:`SMTPHandler` class. The instance is
2690 initialized with the from and to addresses and subject line of the email. The
2691 *toaddrs* should be a list of strings. To specify a non-standard SMTP port, use
2692 the (host, port) tuple format for the *mailhost* argument. If you use a string,
2693 the standard SMTP port is used. If your SMTP server requires authentication, you
2694 can specify a (username, password) tuple for the *credentials* argument.
2695
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002696
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002697 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002698
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002699 Formats the record and sends it to the specified addressees.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002700
2701
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002702 .. method:: getSubject(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002703
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002704 If you want to specify a subject line which is record-dependent, override
2705 this method.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002706
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002707.. _memory-handler:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002708
2709MemoryHandler
2710^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2711
2712The :class:`MemoryHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers` module,
2713supports buffering of logging records in memory, periodically flushing them to a
2714:dfn:`target` handler. Flushing occurs whenever the buffer is full, or when an
2715event of a certain severity or greater is seen.
2716
2717:class:`MemoryHandler` is a subclass of the more general
2718:class:`BufferingHandler`, which is an abstract class. This buffers logging
2719records in memory. Whenever each record is added to the buffer, a check is made
2720by calling :meth:`shouldFlush` to see if the buffer should be flushed. If it
2721should, then :meth:`flush` is expected to do the needful.
2722
2723
2724.. class:: BufferingHandler(capacity)
2725
2726 Initializes the handler with a buffer of the specified capacity.
2727
2728
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002729 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002730
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002731 Appends the record to the buffer. If :meth:`shouldFlush` returns true,
2732 calls :meth:`flush` to process the buffer.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002733
2734
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002735 .. method:: flush()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002736
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002737 You can override this to implement custom flushing behavior. This version
2738 just zaps the buffer to empty.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002739
2740
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002741 .. method:: shouldFlush(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002742
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002743 Returns true if the buffer is up to capacity. This method can be
2744 overridden to implement custom flushing strategies.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002745
2746
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00002747.. class:: MemoryHandler(capacity, flushLevel=ERROR, target=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002748
2749 Returns a new instance of the :class:`MemoryHandler` class. The instance is
2750 initialized with a buffer size of *capacity*. If *flushLevel* is not specified,
2751 :const:`ERROR` is used. If no *target* is specified, the target will need to be
2752 set using :meth:`setTarget` before this handler does anything useful.
2753
2754
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002755 .. method:: close()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002756
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002757 Calls :meth:`flush`, sets the target to :const:`None` and clears the
2758 buffer.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002759
2760
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002761 .. method:: flush()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002762
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002763 For a :class:`MemoryHandler`, flushing means just sending the buffered
Vinay Sajipc84f0162010-09-21 11:25:39 +00002764 records to the target, if there is one. The buffer is also cleared when
2765 this happens. Override if you want different behavior.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002766
2767
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002768 .. method:: setTarget(target)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002769
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002770 Sets the target handler for this handler.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002771
2772
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002773 .. method:: shouldFlush(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002774
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002775 Checks for buffer full or a record at the *flushLevel* or higher.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002776
2777
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00002778.. _http-handler:
2779
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002780HTTPHandler
2781^^^^^^^^^^^
2782
2783The :class:`HTTPHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers` module,
2784supports sending logging messages to a Web server, using either ``GET`` or
2785``POST`` semantics.
2786
2787
Vinay Sajip1b5646a2010-09-13 20:37:50 +00002788.. class:: HTTPHandler(host, url, method='GET', secure=False, credentials=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002789
Vinay Sajip1b5646a2010-09-13 20:37:50 +00002790 Returns a new instance of the :class:`HTTPHandler` class. The *host* can be
2791 of the form ``host:port``, should you need to use a specific port number.
2792 If no *method* is specified, ``GET`` is used. If *secure* is True, an HTTPS
2793 connection will be used. If *credentials* is specified, it should be a
2794 2-tuple consisting of userid and password, which will be placed in an HTTP
2795 'Authorization' header using Basic authentication. If you specify
2796 credentials, you should also specify secure=True so that your userid and
2797 password are not passed in cleartext across the wire.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002798
2799
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00002800 .. method:: emit(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002801
Senthil Kumaranf0769e82010-08-09 19:53:52 +00002802 Sends the record to the Web server as a percent-encoded dictionary.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002803
2804
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +00002805.. _queue-handler:
2806
2807
2808QueueHandler
2809^^^^^^^^^^^^
2810
2811The :class:`QueueHandler` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers` module,
2812supports sending logging messages to a queue, such as those implemented in the
2813:mod:`queue` or :mod:`multiprocessing` modules.
2814
Vinay Sajip0637d492010-09-23 08:15:54 +00002815Along with the :class:`QueueListener` class, :class:`QueueHandler` can be used
2816to let handlers do their work on a separate thread from the one which does the
2817logging. This is important in Web applications and also other service
2818applications where threads servicing clients need to respond as quickly as
2819possible, while any potentially slow operations (such as sending an email via
2820:class:`SMTPHandler`) are done on a separate thread.
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +00002821
2822.. class:: QueueHandler(queue)
2823
2824 Returns a new instance of the :class:`QueueHandler` class. The instance is
Vinay Sajip63891ed2010-09-13 20:02:39 +00002825 initialized with the queue to send messages to. The queue can be any queue-
Vinay Sajip0637d492010-09-23 08:15:54 +00002826 like object; it's used as-is by the :meth:`enqueue` method, which needs
Vinay Sajip63891ed2010-09-13 20:02:39 +00002827 to know how to send messages to it.
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +00002828
2829
2830 .. method:: emit(record)
2831
Vinay Sajip0258ce82010-09-22 20:34:53 +00002832 Enqueues the result of preparing the LogRecord.
2833
2834 .. method:: prepare(record)
2835
2836 Prepares a record for queuing. The object returned by this
2837 method is enqueued.
2838
2839 The base implementation formats the record to merge the message
2840 and arguments, and removes unpickleable items from the record
2841 in-place.
2842
2843 You might want to override this method if you want to convert
2844 the record to a dict or JSON string, or send a modified copy
2845 of the record while leaving the original intact.
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +00002846
2847 .. method:: enqueue(record)
2848
2849 Enqueues the record on the queue using ``put_nowait()``; you may
2850 want to override this if you want to use blocking behaviour, or a
2851 timeout, or a customised queue implementation.
2852
2853
2854.. versionadded:: 3.2
2855
2856The :class:`QueueHandler` class was not present in previous versions.
2857
Vinay Sajip0637d492010-09-23 08:15:54 +00002858.. queue-listener:
2859
2860QueueListener
2861^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2862
2863The :class:`QueueListener` class, located in the :mod:`logging.handlers`
2864module, supports receiving logging messages from a queue, such as those
2865implemented in the :mod:`queue` or :mod:`multiprocessing` modules. The
2866messages are received from a queue in an internal thread and passed, on
2867the same thread, to one or more handlers for processing.
2868
2869Along with the :class:`QueueHandler` class, :class:`QueueListener` can be used
2870to let handlers do their work on a separate thread from the one which does the
2871logging. This is important in Web applications and also other service
2872applications where threads servicing clients need to respond as quickly as
2873possible, while any potentially slow operations (such as sending an email via
2874:class:`SMTPHandler`) are done on a separate thread.
2875
2876.. class:: QueueListener(queue, *handlers)
2877
2878 Returns a new instance of the :class:`QueueListener` class. The instance is
2879 initialized with the queue to send messages to and a list of handlers which
2880 will handle entries placed on the queue. The queue can be any queue-
2881 like object; it's passed as-is to the :meth:`dequeue` method, which needs
2882 to know how to get messages from it.
2883
2884 .. method:: dequeue(block)
2885
2886 Dequeues a record and return it, optionally blocking.
2887
2888 The base implementation uses ``get()``. You may want to override this
2889 method if you want to use timeouts or work with custom queue
2890 implementations.
2891
2892 .. method:: prepare(record)
2893
2894 Prepare a record for handling.
2895
2896 This implementation just returns the passed-in record. You may want to
2897 override this method if you need to do any custom marshalling or
2898 manipulation of the record before passing it to the handlers.
2899
2900 .. method:: handle(record)
2901
2902 Handle a record.
2903
2904 This just loops through the handlers offering them the record
2905 to handle. The actual object passed to the handlers is that which
2906 is returned from :meth:`prepare`.
2907
2908 .. method:: start()
2909
2910 Starts the listener.
2911
2912 This starts up a background thread to monitor the queue for
2913 LogRecords to process.
2914
2915 .. method:: stop()
2916
2917 Stops the listener.
2918
2919 This asks the thread to terminate, and then waits for it to do so.
2920 Note that if you don't call this before your application exits, there
2921 may be some records still left on the queue, which won't be processed.
2922
2923.. versionadded:: 3.2
2924
2925The :class:`QueueListener` class was not present in previous versions.
2926
Vinay Sajip63891ed2010-09-13 20:02:39 +00002927.. _zeromq-handlers:
2928
Vinay Sajip0637d492010-09-23 08:15:54 +00002929Subclassing QueueHandler
2930^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2931
Vinay Sajip63891ed2010-09-13 20:02:39 +00002932You can use a :class:`QueueHandler` subclass to send messages to other kinds
2933of queues, for example a ZeroMQ "publish" socket. In the example below,the
2934socket is created separately and passed to the handler (as its 'queue')::
2935
2936 import zmq # using pyzmq, the Python binding for ZeroMQ
2937 import json # for serializing records portably
2938
2939 ctx = zmq.Context()
2940 sock = zmq.Socket(ctx, zmq.PUB) # or zmq.PUSH, or other suitable value
2941 sock.bind('tcp://*:5556') # or wherever
2942
2943 class ZeroMQSocketHandler(QueueHandler):
2944 def enqueue(self, record):
2945 data = json.dumps(record.__dict__)
2946 self.queue.send(data)
2947
Vinay Sajip0055c422010-09-14 09:42:39 +00002948 handler = ZeroMQSocketHandler(sock)
2949
2950
Vinay Sajip63891ed2010-09-13 20:02:39 +00002951Of course there are other ways of organizing this, for example passing in the
2952data needed by the handler to create the socket::
2953
2954 class ZeroMQSocketHandler(QueueHandler):
2955 def __init__(self, uri, socktype=zmq.PUB, ctx=None):
2956 self.ctx = ctx or zmq.Context()
2957 socket = zmq.Socket(self.ctx, socktype)
Vinay Sajip0637d492010-09-23 08:15:54 +00002958 socket.bind(uri)
Vinay Sajip0055c422010-09-14 09:42:39 +00002959 QueueHandler.__init__(self, socket)
Vinay Sajip63891ed2010-09-13 20:02:39 +00002960
2961 def enqueue(self, record):
2962 data = json.dumps(record.__dict__)
2963 self.queue.send(data)
2964
Vinay Sajipde726922010-09-14 06:59:24 +00002965 def close(self):
2966 self.queue.close()
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +00002967
Vinay Sajip0637d492010-09-23 08:15:54 +00002968Subclassing QueueListener
2969^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2970
2971You can also subclass :class:`QueueListener` to get messages from other kinds
2972of queues, for example a ZeroMQ "subscribe" socket. Here's an example::
2973
2974 class ZeroMQSocketListener(QueueListener):
2975 def __init__(self, uri, *handlers, **kwargs):
2976 self.ctx = kwargs.get('ctx') or zmq.Context()
2977 socket = zmq.Socket(self.ctx, zmq.SUB)
2978 socket.setsockopt(zmq.SUBSCRIBE, '') # subscribe to everything
2979 socket.connect(uri)
2980
2981 def dequeue(self):
2982 msg = self.queue.recv()
2983 return logging.makeLogRecord(json.loads(msg))
2984
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00002985.. _formatter-objects:
2986
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002987Formatter Objects
2988-----------------
2989
Benjamin Peterson75edad02009-01-01 15:05:06 +00002990.. currentmodule:: logging
2991
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002992:class:`Formatter`\ s have the following attributes and methods. They are
2993responsible for converting a :class:`LogRecord` to (usually) a string which can
2994be interpreted by either a human or an external system. The base
2995:class:`Formatter` allows a formatting string to be specified. If none is
2996supplied, the default value of ``'%(message)s'`` is used.
2997
2998A Formatter can be initialized with a format string which makes use of knowledge
2999of the :class:`LogRecord` attributes - such as the default value mentioned above
3000making use of the fact that the user's message and arguments are pre-formatted
3001into a :class:`LogRecord`'s *message* attribute. This format string contains
Ezio Melotti0639d5a2009-12-19 23:26:38 +00003002standard Python %-style mapping keys. See section :ref:`old-string-formatting`
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003003for more information on string formatting.
3004
3005Currently, the useful mapping keys in a :class:`LogRecord` are:
3006
3007+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3008| Format | Description |
3009+=========================+===============================================+
3010| ``%(name)s`` | Name of the logger (logging channel). |
3011+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3012| ``%(levelno)s`` | Numeric logging level for the message |
3013| | (:const:`DEBUG`, :const:`INFO`, |
3014| | :const:`WARNING`, :const:`ERROR`, |
3015| | :const:`CRITICAL`). |
3016+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3017| ``%(levelname)s`` | Text logging level for the message |
3018| | (``'DEBUG'``, ``'INFO'``, ``'WARNING'``, |
3019| | ``'ERROR'``, ``'CRITICAL'``). |
3020+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3021| ``%(pathname)s`` | Full pathname of the source file where the |
3022| | logging call was issued (if available). |
3023+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3024| ``%(filename)s`` | Filename portion of pathname. |
3025+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3026| ``%(module)s`` | Module (name portion of filename). |
3027+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3028| ``%(funcName)s`` | Name of function containing the logging call. |
3029+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3030| ``%(lineno)d`` | Source line number where the logging call was |
3031| | issued (if available). |
3032+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3033| ``%(created)f`` | Time when the :class:`LogRecord` was created |
3034| | (as returned by :func:`time.time`). |
3035+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3036| ``%(relativeCreated)d`` | Time in milliseconds when the LogRecord was |
3037| | created, relative to the time the logging |
3038| | module was loaded. |
3039+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3040| ``%(asctime)s`` | Human-readable time when the |
3041| | :class:`LogRecord` was created. By default |
3042| | this is of the form "2003-07-08 16:49:45,896" |
3043| | (the numbers after the comma are millisecond |
3044| | portion of the time). |
3045+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3046| ``%(msecs)d`` | Millisecond portion of the time when the |
3047| | :class:`LogRecord` was created. |
3048+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3049| ``%(thread)d`` | Thread ID (if available). |
3050+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3051| ``%(threadName)s`` | Thread name (if available). |
3052+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3053| ``%(process)d`` | Process ID (if available). |
3054+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
Vinay Sajip121a1c42010-09-08 10:46:15 +00003055| ``%(processName)s`` | Process name (if available). |
3056+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003057| ``%(message)s`` | The logged message, computed as ``msg % |
3058| | args``. |
3059+-------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
3060
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003061
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00003062.. class:: Formatter(fmt=None, datefmt=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003063
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00003064 Returns a new instance of the :class:`Formatter` class. The instance is
3065 initialized with a format string for the message as a whole, as well as a
3066 format string for the date/time portion of a message. If no *fmt* is
3067 specified, ``'%(message)s'`` is used. If no *datefmt* is specified, the
3068 ISO8601 date format is used.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003069
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003070 .. method:: format(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003071
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003072 The record's attribute dictionary is used as the operand to a string
3073 formatting operation. Returns the resulting string. Before formatting the
3074 dictionary, a couple of preparatory steps are carried out. The *message*
3075 attribute of the record is computed using *msg* % *args*. If the
3076 formatting string contains ``'(asctime)'``, :meth:`formatTime` is called
3077 to format the event time. If there is exception information, it is
3078 formatted using :meth:`formatException` and appended to the message. Note
3079 that the formatted exception information is cached in attribute
3080 *exc_text*. This is useful because the exception information can be
3081 pickled and sent across the wire, but you should be careful if you have
3082 more than one :class:`Formatter` subclass which customizes the formatting
3083 of exception information. In this case, you will have to clear the cached
3084 value after a formatter has done its formatting, so that the next
3085 formatter to handle the event doesn't use the cached value but
3086 recalculates it afresh.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003087
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00003088 If stack information is available, it's appended after the exception
3089 information, using :meth:`formatStack` to transform it if necessary.
3090
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003091
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00003092 .. method:: formatTime(record, datefmt=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003093
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003094 This method should be called from :meth:`format` by a formatter which
3095 wants to make use of a formatted time. This method can be overridden in
3096 formatters to provide for any specific requirement, but the basic behavior
3097 is as follows: if *datefmt* (a string) is specified, it is used with
3098 :func:`time.strftime` to format the creation time of the
3099 record. Otherwise, the ISO8601 format is used. The resulting string is
3100 returned.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003101
3102
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003103 .. method:: formatException(exc_info)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003104
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003105 Formats the specified exception information (a standard exception tuple as
3106 returned by :func:`sys.exc_info`) as a string. This default implementation
3107 just uses :func:`traceback.print_exception`. The resulting string is
3108 returned.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003109
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00003110 .. method:: formatStack(stack_info)
3111
3112 Formats the specified stack information (a string as returned by
3113 :func:`traceback.print_stack`, but with the last newline removed) as a
3114 string. This default implementation just returns the input value.
3115
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00003116.. _filter:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003117
3118Filter Objects
3119--------------
3120
Georg Brandl5c66bca2010-10-29 05:36:28 +00003121``Filters`` can be used by ``Handlers`` and ``Loggers`` for more sophisticated
Vinay Sajipfc082ca2010-10-19 21:13:49 +00003122filtering than is provided by levels. The base filter class only allows events
3123which are below a certain point in the logger hierarchy. For example, a filter
3124initialized with "A.B" will allow events logged by loggers "A.B", "A.B.C",
3125"A.B.C.D", "A.B.D" etc. but not "A.BB", "B.A.B" etc. If initialized with the
3126empty string, all events are passed.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003127
3128
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00003129.. class:: Filter(name='')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003130
3131 Returns an instance of the :class:`Filter` class. If *name* is specified, it
3132 names a logger which, together with its children, will have its events allowed
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00003133 through the filter. If *name* is the empty string, allows every event.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003134
3135
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003136 .. method:: filter(record)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003137
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003138 Is the specified record to be logged? Returns zero for no, nonzero for
3139 yes. If deemed appropriate, the record may be modified in-place by this
3140 method.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003141
Vinay Sajip81010212010-08-19 19:17:41 +00003142Note that filters attached to handlers are consulted whenever an event is
3143emitted by the handler, whereas filters attached to loggers are consulted
3144whenever an event is logged to the handler (using :meth:`debug`, :meth:`info`,
3145etc.) This means that events which have been generated by descendant loggers
3146will not be filtered by a logger's filter setting, unless the filter has also
3147been applied to those descendant loggers.
3148
Vinay Sajip22246fd2010-10-20 11:40:02 +00003149You don't actually need to subclass ``Filter``: you can pass any instance
3150which has a ``filter`` method with the same semantics.
3151
Vinay Sajipfc082ca2010-10-19 21:13:49 +00003152.. versionchanged:: 3.2
Vinay Sajip05ed6952010-10-20 20:34:09 +00003153 You don't need to create specialized ``Filter`` classes, or use other
3154 classes with a ``filter`` method: you can use a function (or other
3155 callable) as a filter. The filtering logic will check to see if the filter
3156 object has a ``filter`` attribute: if it does, it's assumed to be a
3157 ``Filter`` and its :meth:`~Filter.filter` method is called. Otherwise, it's
3158 assumed to be a callable and called with the record as the single
3159 parameter. The returned value should conform to that returned by
3160 :meth:`~Filter.filter`.
Vinay Sajipfc082ca2010-10-19 21:13:49 +00003161
Vinay Sajipac007992010-09-17 12:45:26 +00003162Other uses for filters
3163^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3164
3165Although filters are used primarily to filter records based on more
3166sophisticated criteria than levels, they get to see every record which is
3167processed by the handler or logger they're attached to: this can be useful if
3168you want to do things like counting how many records were processed by a
3169particular logger or handler, or adding, changing or removing attributes in
3170the LogRecord being processed. Obviously changing the LogRecord needs to be
3171done with some care, but it does allow the injection of contextual information
3172into logs (see :ref:`filters-contextual`).
3173
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00003174.. _log-record:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003175
3176LogRecord Objects
3177-----------------
3178
Vinay Sajip4039aff2010-09-11 10:25:28 +00003179:class:`LogRecord` instances are created automatically by the :class:`Logger`
3180every time something is logged, and can be created manually via
3181:func:`makeLogRecord` (for example, from a pickled event received over the
3182wire).
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003183
3184
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00003185.. class:: LogRecord(name, lvl, pathname, lineno, msg, args, exc_info, func=None, sinfo=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003186
Vinay Sajip4039aff2010-09-11 10:25:28 +00003187 Contains all the information pertinent to the event being logged.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003188
Vinay Sajip4039aff2010-09-11 10:25:28 +00003189 The primary information is passed in :attr:`msg` and :attr:`args`, which
3190 are combined using ``msg % args`` to create the :attr:`message` field of the
3191 record.
3192
3193 .. attribute:: args
3194
3195 Tuple of arguments to be used in formatting :attr:`msg`.
3196
3197 .. attribute:: exc_info
3198
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003199 Exception tuple (à la :func:`sys.exc_info`) or ``None`` if no exception
Georg Brandl6faee4e2010-09-21 14:48:28 +00003200 information is available.
Vinay Sajip4039aff2010-09-11 10:25:28 +00003201
3202 .. attribute:: func
3203
3204 Name of the function of origin (i.e. in which the logging call was made).
3205
3206 .. attribute:: lineno
3207
3208 Line number in the source file of origin.
3209
3210 .. attribute:: lvl
3211
3212 Numeric logging level.
3213
3214 .. attribute:: message
3215
3216 Bound to the result of :meth:`getMessage` when
3217 :meth:`Formatter.format(record)<Formatter.format>` is invoked.
3218
3219 .. attribute:: msg
3220
3221 User-supplied :ref:`format string<string-formatting>` or arbitrary object
3222 (see :ref:`arbitrary-object-messages`) used in :meth:`getMessage`.
3223
3224 .. attribute:: name
3225
3226 Name of the logger that emitted the record.
3227
3228 .. attribute:: pathname
3229
3230 Absolute pathname of the source file of origin.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003231
Vinay Sajip8593ae62010-11-14 21:33:04 +00003232 .. attribute:: stack_info
3233
3234 Stack frame information (where available) from the bottom of the stack
3235 in the current thread, up to and including the stack frame of the
3236 logging call which resulted in the creation of this record.
3237
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003238 .. method:: getMessage()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003239
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003240 Returns the message for this :class:`LogRecord` instance after merging any
Vinay Sajip4039aff2010-09-11 10:25:28 +00003241 user-supplied arguments with the message. If the user-supplied message
3242 argument to the logging call is not a string, :func:`str` is called on it to
3243 convert it to a string. This allows use of user-defined classes as
3244 messages, whose ``__str__`` method can return the actual format string to
3245 be used.
3246
Vinay Sajipd31f3632010-06-29 15:31:15 +00003247.. _logger-adapter:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003248
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00003249LoggerAdapter Objects
3250---------------------
3251
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00003252:class:`LoggerAdapter` instances are used to conveniently pass contextual
Georg Brandl86def6c2008-01-21 20:36:10 +00003253information into logging calls. For a usage example , see the section on
3254`adding contextual information to your logging output`__.
3255
3256__ context-info_
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00003257
3258.. class:: LoggerAdapter(logger, extra)
3259
3260 Returns an instance of :class:`LoggerAdapter` initialized with an
3261 underlying :class:`Logger` instance and a dict-like object.
3262
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003263 .. method:: process(msg, kwargs)
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00003264
Benjamin Petersone41251e2008-04-25 01:59:09 +00003265 Modifies the message and/or keyword arguments passed to a logging call in
3266 order to insert contextual information. This implementation takes the object
3267 passed as *extra* to the constructor and adds it to *kwargs* using key
3268 'extra'. The return value is a (*msg*, *kwargs*) tuple which has the
3269 (possibly modified) versions of the arguments passed in.
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00003270
Vinay Sajipc84f0162010-09-21 11:25:39 +00003271In addition to the above, :class:`LoggerAdapter` supports the following
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00003272methods of :class:`Logger`, i.e. :meth:`debug`, :meth:`info`, :meth:`warning`,
Vinay Sajipc84f0162010-09-21 11:25:39 +00003273:meth:`error`, :meth:`exception`, :meth:`critical`, :meth:`log`,
3274:meth:`isEnabledFor`, :meth:`getEffectiveLevel`, :meth:`setLevel`,
3275:meth:`hasHandlers`. These methods have the same signatures as their
3276counterparts in :class:`Logger`, so you can use the two types of instances
3277interchangeably.
Christian Heimes04c420f2008-01-18 18:40:46 +00003278
Ezio Melotti4d5195b2010-04-20 10:57:44 +00003279.. versionchanged:: 3.2
Vinay Sajipc84f0162010-09-21 11:25:39 +00003280 The :meth:`isEnabledFor`, :meth:`getEffectiveLevel`, :meth:`setLevel` and
3281 :meth:`hasHandlers` methods were added to :class:`LoggerAdapter`. These
3282 methods delegate to the underlying logger.
Benjamin Peterson22005fc2010-04-11 16:25:06 +00003283
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003284
3285Thread Safety
3286-------------
3287
3288The logging module is intended to be thread-safe without any special work
3289needing to be done by its clients. It achieves this though using threading
3290locks; there is one lock to serialize access to the module's shared data, and
3291each handler also creates a lock to serialize access to its underlying I/O.
3292
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00003293If you are implementing asynchronous signal handlers using the :mod:`signal`
3294module, you may not be able to use logging from within such handlers. This is
3295because lock implementations in the :mod:`threading` module are not always
3296re-entrant, and so cannot be invoked from such signal handlers.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003297
Benjamin Peterson9451a1c2010-03-13 22:30:34 +00003298
3299Integration with the warnings module
3300------------------------------------
3301
3302The :func:`captureWarnings` function can be used to integrate :mod:`logging`
3303with the :mod:`warnings` module.
3304
3305.. function:: captureWarnings(capture)
3306
3307 This function is used to turn the capture of warnings by logging on and
3308 off.
3309
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003310 If *capture* is ``True``, warnings issued by the :mod:`warnings` module will
3311 be redirected to the logging system. Specifically, a warning will be
Benjamin Peterson9451a1c2010-03-13 22:30:34 +00003312 formatted using :func:`warnings.formatwarning` and the resulting string
3313 logged to a logger named "py.warnings" with a severity of `WARNING`.
3314
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003315 If *capture* is ``False``, the redirection of warnings to the logging system
Benjamin Peterson9451a1c2010-03-13 22:30:34 +00003316 will stop, and warnings will be redirected to their original destinations
3317 (i.e. those in effect before `captureWarnings(True)` was called).
3318
3319
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003320Configuration
3321-------------
3322
3323
3324.. _logging-config-api:
3325
3326Configuration functions
3327^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3328
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003329The following functions configure the logging module. They are located in the
3330:mod:`logging.config` module. Their use is optional --- you can configure the
3331logging module using these functions or by making calls to the main API (defined
3332in :mod:`logging` itself) and defining handlers which are declared either in
3333:mod:`logging` or :mod:`logging.handlers`.
3334
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003335.. function:: dictConfig(config)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003336
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003337 Takes the logging configuration from a dictionary. The contents of
3338 this dictionary are described in :ref:`logging-config-dictschema`
3339 below.
3340
3341 If an error is encountered during configuration, this function will
3342 raise a :exc:`ValueError`, :exc:`TypeError`, :exc:`AttributeError`
3343 or :exc:`ImportError` with a suitably descriptive message. The
3344 following is a (possibly incomplete) list of conditions which will
3345 raise an error:
3346
3347 * A ``level`` which is not a string or which is a string not
3348 corresponding to an actual logging level.
3349 * A ``propagate`` value which is not a boolean.
3350 * An id which does not have a corresponding destination.
3351 * A non-existent handler id found during an incremental call.
3352 * An invalid logger name.
3353 * Inability to resolve to an internal or external object.
3354
3355 Parsing is performed by the :class:`DictConfigurator` class, whose
3356 constructor is passed the dictionary used for configuration, and
3357 has a :meth:`configure` method. The :mod:`logging.config` module
3358 has a callable attribute :attr:`dictConfigClass`
3359 which is initially set to :class:`DictConfigurator`.
3360 You can replace the value of :attr:`dictConfigClass` with a
3361 suitable implementation of your own.
3362
3363 :func:`dictConfig` calls :attr:`dictConfigClass` passing
3364 the specified dictionary, and then calls the :meth:`configure` method on
3365 the returned object to put the configuration into effect::
3366
3367 def dictConfig(config):
3368 dictConfigClass(config).configure()
3369
3370 For example, a subclass of :class:`DictConfigurator` could call
3371 ``DictConfigurator.__init__()`` in its own :meth:`__init__()`, then
3372 set up custom prefixes which would be usable in the subsequent
3373 :meth:`configure` call. :attr:`dictConfigClass` would be bound to
3374 this new subclass, and then :func:`dictConfig` could be called exactly as
3375 in the default, uncustomized state.
3376
3377.. function:: fileConfig(fname[, defaults])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003378
Alexandre Vassalotti1d1eaa42008-05-14 22:59:42 +00003379 Reads the logging configuration from a :mod:`configparser`\-format file named
Benjamin Peterson960cf0f2009-01-09 04:11:44 +00003380 *fname*. This function can be called several times from an application,
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003381 allowing an end user to select from various pre-canned
Alexandre Vassalotti1d1eaa42008-05-14 22:59:42 +00003382 configurations (if the developer provides a mechanism to present the choices
3383 and load the chosen configuration). Defaults to be passed to the ConfigParser
3384 can be specified in the *defaults* argument.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003385
Georg Brandlcd7f32b2009-06-08 09:13:45 +00003386
3387.. function:: listen(port=DEFAULT_LOGGING_CONFIG_PORT)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003388
3389 Starts up a socket server on the specified port, and listens for new
3390 configurations. If no port is specified, the module's default
3391 :const:`DEFAULT_LOGGING_CONFIG_PORT` is used. Logging configurations will be
3392 sent as a file suitable for processing by :func:`fileConfig`. Returns a
3393 :class:`Thread` instance on which you can call :meth:`start` to start the
3394 server, and which you can :meth:`join` when appropriate. To stop the server,
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00003395 call :func:`stopListening`.
3396
3397 To send a configuration to the socket, read in the configuration file and
3398 send it to the socket as a string of bytes preceded by a four-byte length
3399 string packed in binary using ``struct.pack('>L', n)``.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003400
3401
3402.. function:: stopListening()
3403
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00003404 Stops the listening server which was created with a call to :func:`listen`.
3405 This is typically called before calling :meth:`join` on the return value from
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003406 :func:`listen`.
3407
3408
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003409.. _logging-config-dictschema:
3410
3411Configuration dictionary schema
3412^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3413
3414Describing a logging configuration requires listing the various
3415objects to create and the connections between them; for example, you
3416may create a handler named "console" and then say that the logger
3417named "startup" will send its messages to the "console" handler.
3418These objects aren't limited to those provided by the :mod:`logging`
3419module because you might write your own formatter or handler class.
3420The parameters to these classes may also need to include external
3421objects such as ``sys.stderr``. The syntax for describing these
3422objects and connections is defined in :ref:`logging-config-dict-connections`
3423below.
3424
3425Dictionary Schema Details
3426"""""""""""""""""""""""""
3427
3428The dictionary passed to :func:`dictConfig` must contain the following
3429keys:
3430
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003431* *version* - to be set to an integer value representing the schema
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003432 version. The only valid value at present is 1, but having this key
3433 allows the schema to evolve while still preserving backwards
3434 compatibility.
3435
3436All other keys are optional, but if present they will be interpreted
3437as described below. In all cases below where a 'configuring dict' is
3438mentioned, it will be checked for the special ``'()'`` key to see if a
3439custom instantiation is required. If so, the mechanism described in
3440:ref:`logging-config-dict-userdef` below is used to create an instance;
3441otherwise, the context is used to determine what to instantiate.
3442
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003443* *formatters* - the corresponding value will be a dict in which each
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003444 key is a formatter id and each value is a dict describing how to
3445 configure the corresponding Formatter instance.
3446
3447 The configuring dict is searched for keys ``format`` and ``datefmt``
3448 (with defaults of ``None``) and these are used to construct a
3449 :class:`logging.Formatter` instance.
3450
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003451* *filters* - the corresponding value will be a dict in which each key
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003452 is a filter id and each value is a dict describing how to configure
3453 the corresponding Filter instance.
3454
3455 The configuring dict is searched for the key ``name`` (defaulting to the
3456 empty string) and this is used to construct a :class:`logging.Filter`
3457 instance.
3458
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003459* *handlers* - the corresponding value will be a dict in which each
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003460 key is a handler id and each value is a dict describing how to
3461 configure the corresponding Handler instance.
3462
3463 The configuring dict is searched for the following keys:
3464
3465 * ``class`` (mandatory). This is the fully qualified name of the
3466 handler class.
3467
3468 * ``level`` (optional). The level of the handler.
3469
3470 * ``formatter`` (optional). The id of the formatter for this
3471 handler.
3472
3473 * ``filters`` (optional). A list of ids of the filters for this
3474 handler.
3475
3476 All *other* keys are passed through as keyword arguments to the
3477 handler's constructor. For example, given the snippet::
3478
3479 handlers:
3480 console:
3481 class : logging.StreamHandler
3482 formatter: brief
3483 level : INFO
3484 filters: [allow_foo]
3485 stream : ext://sys.stdout
3486 file:
3487 class : logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler
3488 formatter: precise
3489 filename: logconfig.log
3490 maxBytes: 1024
3491 backupCount: 3
3492
3493 the handler with id ``console`` is instantiated as a
3494 :class:`logging.StreamHandler`, using ``sys.stdout`` as the underlying
3495 stream. The handler with id ``file`` is instantiated as a
3496 :class:`logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler` with the keyword arguments
3497 ``filename='logconfig.log', maxBytes=1024, backupCount=3``.
3498
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003499* *loggers* - the corresponding value will be a dict in which each key
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003500 is a logger name and each value is a dict describing how to
3501 configure the corresponding Logger instance.
3502
3503 The configuring dict is searched for the following keys:
3504
3505 * ``level`` (optional). The level of the logger.
3506
3507 * ``propagate`` (optional). The propagation setting of the logger.
3508
3509 * ``filters`` (optional). A list of ids of the filters for this
3510 logger.
3511
3512 * ``handlers`` (optional). A list of ids of the handlers for this
3513 logger.
3514
3515 The specified loggers will be configured according to the level,
3516 propagation, filters and handlers specified.
3517
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003518* *root* - this will be the configuration for the root logger.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003519 Processing of the configuration will be as for any logger, except
3520 that the ``propagate`` setting will not be applicable.
3521
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003522* *incremental* - whether the configuration is to be interpreted as
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003523 incremental to the existing configuration. This value defaults to
3524 ``False``, which means that the specified configuration replaces the
3525 existing configuration with the same semantics as used by the
3526 existing :func:`fileConfig` API.
3527
3528 If the specified value is ``True``, the configuration is processed
3529 as described in the section on :ref:`logging-config-dict-incremental`.
3530
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003531* *disable_existing_loggers* - whether any existing loggers are to be
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003532 disabled. This setting mirrors the parameter of the same name in
3533 :func:`fileConfig`. If absent, this parameter defaults to ``True``.
Senthil Kumaran46a48be2010-10-15 13:10:10 +00003534 This value is ignored if *incremental* is ``True``.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00003535
3536.. _logging-config-dict-incremental:
3537
3538Incremental Configuration
3539"""""""""""""""""""""""""
3540
3541It is difficult to provide complete flexibility for incremental
3542configuration. For example, because objects such as filters
3543and formatters are anonymous, once a configuration is set up, it is
3544not possible to refer to such anonymous objects when augmenting a
3545configuration.
3546
3547Furthermore, there is not a compelling case for arbitrarily altering
3548the object graph of loggers, handlers, filters, formatters at
3549run-time, once a configuration is set up; the verbosity of loggers and
3550handlers can be controlled just by setting levels (and, in the case of
3551loggers, propagation flags). Changing the object graph arbitrarily in
3552a safe way is problematic in a multi-threaded environment; while not
3553impossible, the benefits are not worth the complexity it adds to the
3554implementation.
3555
3556Thus, when the ``incremental`` key of a configuration dict is present
3557and is ``True``, the system will completely ignore any ``formatters`` and
3558``filters`` entries, and process only the ``level``
3559settings in the ``handlers`` entries, and the ``level`` and
3560``propagate`` settings in the ``loggers`` and ``root`` entries.
3561
3562Using a value in the configuration dict lets configurations to be sent
3563over the wire as pickled dicts to a socket listener. Thus, the logging
3564verbosity of a long-running application can be altered over time with
3565no need to stop and restart the application.
3566
3567.. _logging-config-dict-connections:
3568
3569Object connections
3570""""""""""""""""""
3571
3572The schema describes a set of logging objects - loggers,
3573handlers, formatters, filters - which are connected to each other in
3574an object graph. Thus, the schema needs to represent connections
3575between the objects. For example, say that, once configured, a
3576particular logger has attached to it a particular handler. For the
3577purposes of this discussion, we can say that the logger represents the
3578source, and the handler the destination, of a connection between the
3579two. Of course in the configured objects this is represented by the
3580logger holding a reference to the handler. In the configuration dict,
3581this is done by giving each destination object an id which identifies
3582it unambiguously, and then using the id in the source object's
3583configuration to indicate that a connection exists between the source
3584and the destination object with that id.
3585
3586So, for example, consider the following YAML snippet::
3587
3588 formatters:
3589 brief:
3590 # configuration for formatter with id 'brief' goes here
3591 precise:
3592 # configuration for formatter with id 'precise' goes here
3593 handlers:
3594 h1: #This is an id
3595 # configuration of handler with id 'h1' goes here
3596 formatter: brief
3597 h2: #This is another id
3598 # configuration of handler with id 'h2' goes here
3599 formatter: precise
3600 loggers:
3601 foo.bar.baz:
3602 # other configuration for logger 'foo.bar.baz'
3603 handlers: [h1, h2]
3604
3605(Note: YAML used here because it's a little more readable than the
3606equivalent Python source form for the dictionary.)
3607
3608The ids for loggers are the logger names which would be used
3609programmatically to obtain a reference to those loggers, e.g.
3610``foo.bar.baz``. The ids for Formatters and Filters can be any string
3611value (such as ``brief``, ``precise`` above) and they are transient,
3612in that they are only meaningful for processing the configuration
3613dictionary and used to determine connections between objects, and are
3614not persisted anywhere when the configuration call is complete.
3615
3616The above snippet indicates that logger named ``foo.bar.baz`` should
3617have two handlers attached to it, which are described by the handler
3618ids ``h1`` and ``h2``. The formatter for ``h1`` is that described by id
3619``brief``, and the formatter for ``h2`` is that described by id
3620``precise``.
3621
3622
3623.. _logging-config-dict-userdef:
3624
3625User-defined objects
3626""""""""""""""""""""
3627
3628The schema supports user-defined objects for handlers, filters and
3629formatters. (Loggers do not need to have different types for
3630different instances, so there is no support in this configuration
3631schema for user-defined logger classes.)
3632
3633Objects to be configured are described by dictionaries
3634which detail their configuration. In some places, the logging system
3635will be able to infer from the context how an object is to be
3636instantiated, but when a user-defined object is to be instantiated,
3637the system will not know how to do this. In order to provide complete
3638flexibility for user-defined object instantiation, the user needs
3639to provide a 'factory' - a callable which is called with a
3640configuration dictionary and which returns the instantiated object.
3641This is signalled by an absolute import path to the factory being
3642made available under the special key ``'()'``. Here's a concrete
3643example::
3644
3645 formatters:
3646 brief:
3647 format: '%(message)s'
3648 default:
3649 format: '%(asctime)s %(levelname)-8s %(name)-15s %(message)s'
3650 datefmt: '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'
3651 custom:
3652 (): my.package.customFormatterFactory
3653 bar: baz
3654 spam: 99.9
3655 answer: 42
3656
3657The above YAML snippet defines three formatters. The first, with id
3658``brief``, is a standard :class:`logging.Formatter` instance with the
3659specified format string. The second, with id ``default``, has a
3660longer format and also defines the time format explicitly, and will
3661result in a :class:`logging.Formatter` initialized with those two format
3662strings. Shown in Python source form, the ``brief`` and ``default``
3663formatters have configuration sub-dictionaries::
3664
3665 {
3666 'format' : '%(message)s'
3667 }
3668
3669and::
3670
3671 {
3672 'format' : '%(asctime)s %(levelname)-8s %(name)-15s %(message)s',
3673 'datefmt' : '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'
3674 }
3675
3676respectively, and as these dictionaries do not contain the special key
3677``'()'``, the instantiation is inferred from the context: as a result,
3678standard :class:`logging.Formatter` instances are created. The
3679configuration sub-dictionary for the third formatter, with id
3680``custom``, is::
3681
3682 {
3683 '()' : 'my.package.customFormatterFactory',
3684 'bar' : 'baz',
3685 'spam' : 99.9,
3686 'answer' : 42
3687 }
3688
3689and this contains the special key ``'()'``, which means that
3690user-defined instantiation is wanted. In this case, the specified
3691factory callable will be used. If it is an actual callable it will be
3692used directly - otherwise, if you specify a string (as in the example)
3693the actual callable will be located using normal import mechanisms.
3694The callable will be called with the **remaining** items in the
3695configuration sub-dictionary as keyword arguments. In the above
3696example, the formatter with id ``custom`` will be assumed to be
3697returned by the call::
3698
3699 my.package.customFormatterFactory(bar='baz', spam=99.9, answer=42)
3700
3701The key ``'()'`` has been used as the special key because it is not a
3702valid keyword parameter name, and so will not clash with the names of
3703the keyword arguments used in the call. The ``'()'`` also serves as a
3704mnemonic that the corresponding value is a callable.
3705
3706
3707.. _logging-config-dict-externalobj:
3708
3709Access to external objects
3710""""""""""""""""""""""""""
3711
3712There are times where a configuration needs to refer to objects
3713external to the configuration, for example ``sys.stderr``. If the
3714configuration dict is constructed using Python code, this is
3715straightforward, but a problem arises when the configuration is
3716provided via a text file (e.g. JSON, YAML). In a text file, there is
3717no standard way to distinguish ``sys.stderr`` from the literal string
3718``'sys.stderr'``. To facilitate this distinction, the configuration
3719system looks for certain special prefixes in string values and
3720treat them specially. For example, if the literal string
3721``'ext://sys.stderr'`` is provided as a value in the configuration,
3722then the ``ext://`` will be stripped off and the remainder of the
3723value processed using normal import mechanisms.
3724
3725The handling of such prefixes is done in a way analogous to protocol
3726handling: there is a generic mechanism to look for prefixes which
3727match the regular expression ``^(?P<prefix>[a-z]+)://(?P<suffix>.*)$``
3728whereby, if the ``prefix`` is recognised, the ``suffix`` is processed
3729in a prefix-dependent manner and the result of the processing replaces
3730the string value. If the prefix is not recognised, then the string
3731value will be left as-is.
3732
3733
3734.. _logging-config-dict-internalobj:
3735
3736Access to internal objects
3737""""""""""""""""""""""""""
3738
3739As well as external objects, there is sometimes also a need to refer
3740to objects in the configuration. This will be done implicitly by the
3741configuration system for things that it knows about. For example, the
3742string value ``'DEBUG'`` for a ``level`` in a logger or handler will
3743automatically be converted to the value ``logging.DEBUG``, and the
3744``handlers``, ``filters`` and ``formatter`` entries will take an
3745object id and resolve to the appropriate destination object.
3746
3747However, a more generic mechanism is needed for user-defined
3748objects which are not known to the :mod:`logging` module. For
3749example, consider :class:`logging.handlers.MemoryHandler`, which takes
3750a ``target`` argument which is another handler to delegate to. Since
3751the system already knows about this class, then in the configuration,
3752the given ``target`` just needs to be the object id of the relevant
3753target handler, and the system will resolve to the handler from the
3754id. If, however, a user defines a ``my.package.MyHandler`` which has
3755an ``alternate`` handler, the configuration system would not know that
3756the ``alternate`` referred to a handler. To cater for this, a generic
3757resolution system allows the user to specify::
3758
3759 handlers:
3760 file:
3761 # configuration of file handler goes here
3762
3763 custom:
3764 (): my.package.MyHandler
3765 alternate: cfg://handlers.file
3766
3767The literal string ``'cfg://handlers.file'`` will be resolved in an
3768analogous way to strings with the ``ext://`` prefix, but looking
3769in the configuration itself rather than the import namespace. The
3770mechanism allows access by dot or by index, in a similar way to
3771that provided by ``str.format``. Thus, given the following snippet::
3772
3773 handlers:
3774 email:
3775 class: logging.handlers.SMTPHandler
3776 mailhost: localhost
3777 fromaddr: my_app@domain.tld
3778 toaddrs:
3779 - support_team@domain.tld
3780 - dev_team@domain.tld
3781 subject: Houston, we have a problem.
3782
3783in the configuration, the string ``'cfg://handlers'`` would resolve to
3784the dict with key ``handlers``, the string ``'cfg://handlers.email``
3785would resolve to the dict with key ``email`` in the ``handlers`` dict,
3786and so on. The string ``'cfg://handlers.email.toaddrs[1]`` would
3787resolve to ``'dev_team.domain.tld'`` and the string
3788``'cfg://handlers.email.toaddrs[0]'`` would resolve to the value
3789``'support_team@domain.tld'``. The ``subject`` value could be accessed
3790using either ``'cfg://handlers.email.subject'`` or, equivalently,
3791``'cfg://handlers.email[subject]'``. The latter form only needs to be
3792used if the key contains spaces or non-alphanumeric characters. If an
3793index value consists only of decimal digits, access will be attempted
3794using the corresponding integer value, falling back to the string
3795value if needed.
3796
3797Given a string ``cfg://handlers.myhandler.mykey.123``, this will
3798resolve to ``config_dict['handlers']['myhandler']['mykey']['123']``.
3799If the string is specified as ``cfg://handlers.myhandler.mykey[123]``,
3800the system will attempt to retrieve the value from
3801``config_dict['handlers']['myhandler']['mykey'][123]``, and fall back
3802to ``config_dict['handlers']['myhandler']['mykey']['123']`` if that
3803fails.
3804
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003805.. _logging-config-fileformat:
3806
3807Configuration file format
3808^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3809
Benjamin Peterson960cf0f2009-01-09 04:11:44 +00003810The configuration file format understood by :func:`fileConfig` is based on
3811:mod:`configparser` functionality. The file must contain sections called
3812``[loggers]``, ``[handlers]`` and ``[formatters]`` which identify by name the
3813entities of each type which are defined in the file. For each such entity, there
3814is a separate section which identifies how that entity is configured. Thus, for
3815a logger named ``log01`` in the ``[loggers]`` section, the relevant
3816configuration details are held in a section ``[logger_log01]``. Similarly, a
3817handler called ``hand01`` in the ``[handlers]`` section will have its
3818configuration held in a section called ``[handler_hand01]``, while a formatter
3819called ``form01`` in the ``[formatters]`` section will have its configuration
3820specified in a section called ``[formatter_form01]``. The root logger
3821configuration must be specified in a section called ``[logger_root]``.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003822
3823Examples of these sections in the file are given below. ::
3824
3825 [loggers]
3826 keys=root,log02,log03,log04,log05,log06,log07
3827
3828 [handlers]
3829 keys=hand01,hand02,hand03,hand04,hand05,hand06,hand07,hand08,hand09
3830
3831 [formatters]
3832 keys=form01,form02,form03,form04,form05,form06,form07,form08,form09
3833
3834The root logger must specify a level and a list of handlers. An example of a
3835root logger section is given below. ::
3836
3837 [logger_root]
3838 level=NOTSET
3839 handlers=hand01
3840
3841The ``level`` entry can be one of ``DEBUG, INFO, WARNING, ERROR, CRITICAL`` or
3842``NOTSET``. For the root logger only, ``NOTSET`` means that all messages will be
3843logged. Level values are :func:`eval`\ uated in the context of the ``logging``
3844package's namespace.
3845
3846The ``handlers`` entry is a comma-separated list of handler names, which must
3847appear in the ``[handlers]`` section. These names must appear in the
3848``[handlers]`` section and have corresponding sections in the configuration
3849file.
3850
3851For loggers other than the root logger, some additional information is required.
3852This is illustrated by the following example. ::
3853
3854 [logger_parser]
3855 level=DEBUG
3856 handlers=hand01
3857 propagate=1
3858 qualname=compiler.parser
3859
3860The ``level`` and ``handlers`` entries are interpreted as for the root logger,
3861except that if a non-root logger's level is specified as ``NOTSET``, the system
3862consults loggers higher up the hierarchy to determine the effective level of the
3863logger. The ``propagate`` entry is set to 1 to indicate that messages must
3864propagate to handlers higher up the logger hierarchy from this logger, or 0 to
3865indicate that messages are **not** propagated to handlers up the hierarchy. The
3866``qualname`` entry is the hierarchical channel name of the logger, that is to
3867say the name used by the application to get the logger.
3868
3869Sections which specify handler configuration are exemplified by the following.
3870::
3871
3872 [handler_hand01]
3873 class=StreamHandler
3874 level=NOTSET
3875 formatter=form01
3876 args=(sys.stdout,)
3877
3878The ``class`` entry indicates the handler's class (as determined by :func:`eval`
3879in the ``logging`` package's namespace). The ``level`` is interpreted as for
3880loggers, and ``NOTSET`` is taken to mean "log everything".
3881
3882The ``formatter`` entry indicates the key name of the formatter for this
3883handler. If blank, a default formatter (``logging._defaultFormatter``) is used.
3884If a name is specified, it must appear in the ``[formatters]`` section and have
3885a corresponding section in the configuration file.
3886
3887The ``args`` entry, when :func:`eval`\ uated in the context of the ``logging``
3888package's namespace, is the list of arguments to the constructor for the handler
3889class. Refer to the constructors for the relevant handlers, or to the examples
3890below, to see how typical entries are constructed. ::
3891
3892 [handler_hand02]
3893 class=FileHandler
3894 level=DEBUG
3895 formatter=form02
3896 args=('python.log', 'w')
3897
3898 [handler_hand03]
3899 class=handlers.SocketHandler
3900 level=INFO
3901 formatter=form03
3902 args=('localhost', handlers.DEFAULT_TCP_LOGGING_PORT)
3903
3904 [handler_hand04]
3905 class=handlers.DatagramHandler
3906 level=WARN
3907 formatter=form04
3908 args=('localhost', handlers.DEFAULT_UDP_LOGGING_PORT)
3909
3910 [handler_hand05]
3911 class=handlers.SysLogHandler
3912 level=ERROR
3913 formatter=form05
3914 args=(('localhost', handlers.SYSLOG_UDP_PORT), handlers.SysLogHandler.LOG_USER)
3915
3916 [handler_hand06]
3917 class=handlers.NTEventLogHandler
3918 level=CRITICAL
3919 formatter=form06
3920 args=('Python Application', '', 'Application')
3921
3922 [handler_hand07]
3923 class=handlers.SMTPHandler
3924 level=WARN
3925 formatter=form07
3926 args=('localhost', 'from@abc', ['user1@abc', 'user2@xyz'], 'Logger Subject')
3927
3928 [handler_hand08]
3929 class=handlers.MemoryHandler
3930 level=NOTSET
3931 formatter=form08
3932 target=
3933 args=(10, ERROR)
3934
3935 [handler_hand09]
3936 class=handlers.HTTPHandler
3937 level=NOTSET
3938 formatter=form09
3939 args=('localhost:9022', '/log', 'GET')
3940
3941Sections which specify formatter configuration are typified by the following. ::
3942
3943 [formatter_form01]
3944 format=F1 %(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(message)s
3945 datefmt=
3946 class=logging.Formatter
3947
3948The ``format`` entry is the overall format string, and the ``datefmt`` entry is
Christian Heimes5b5e81c2007-12-31 16:14:33 +00003949the :func:`strftime`\ -compatible date/time format string. If empty, the
3950package substitutes ISO8601 format date/times, which is almost equivalent to
3951specifying the date format string ``"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"``. The ISO8601 format
3952also specifies milliseconds, which are appended to the result of using the above
3953format string, with a comma separator. An example time in ISO8601 format is
3954``2003-01-23 00:29:50,411``.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00003955
3956The ``class`` entry is optional. It indicates the name of the formatter's class
3957(as a dotted module and class name.) This option is useful for instantiating a
3958:class:`Formatter` subclass. Subclasses of :class:`Formatter` can present
3959exception tracebacks in an expanded or condensed format.
3960
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00003961
3962Configuration server example
3963^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
3964
3965Here is an example of a module using the logging configuration server::
3966
3967 import logging
3968 import logging.config
3969 import time
3970 import os
3971
3972 # read initial config file
3973 logging.config.fileConfig("logging.conf")
3974
3975 # create and start listener on port 9999
3976 t = logging.config.listen(9999)
3977 t.start()
3978
3979 logger = logging.getLogger("simpleExample")
3980
3981 try:
3982 # loop through logging calls to see the difference
3983 # new configurations make, until Ctrl+C is pressed
3984 while True:
3985 logger.debug("debug message")
3986 logger.info("info message")
3987 logger.warn("warn message")
3988 logger.error("error message")
3989 logger.critical("critical message")
3990 time.sleep(5)
3991 except KeyboardInterrupt:
3992 # cleanup
3993 logging.config.stopListening()
3994 t.join()
3995
3996And here is a script that takes a filename and sends that file to the server,
3997properly preceded with the binary-encoded length, as the new logging
3998configuration::
3999
4000 #!/usr/bin/env python
4001 import socket, sys, struct
4002
4003 data_to_send = open(sys.argv[1], "r").read()
4004
4005 HOST = 'localhost'
4006 PORT = 9999
4007 s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
Georg Brandlf6945182008-02-01 11:56:49 +00004008 print("connecting...")
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004009 s.connect((HOST, PORT))
Georg Brandlf6945182008-02-01 11:56:49 +00004010 print("sending config...")
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004011 s.send(struct.pack(">L", len(data_to_send)))
4012 s.send(data_to_send)
4013 s.close()
Georg Brandlf6945182008-02-01 11:56:49 +00004014 print("complete")
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004015
4016
4017More examples
4018-------------
4019
4020Multiple handlers and formatters
4021^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4022
4023Loggers are plain Python objects. The :func:`addHandler` method has no minimum
4024or maximum quota for the number of handlers you may add. Sometimes it will be
4025beneficial for an application to log all messages of all severities to a text
4026file while simultaneously logging errors or above to the console. To set this
4027up, simply configure the appropriate handlers. The logging calls in the
4028application code will remain unchanged. Here is a slight modification to the
4029previous simple module-based configuration example::
4030
4031 import logging
4032
4033 logger = logging.getLogger("simple_example")
4034 logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
4035 # create file handler which logs even debug messages
4036 fh = logging.FileHandler("spam.log")
4037 fh.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
4038 # create console handler with a higher log level
4039 ch = logging.StreamHandler()
4040 ch.setLevel(logging.ERROR)
4041 # create formatter and add it to the handlers
4042 formatter = logging.Formatter("%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s")
4043 ch.setFormatter(formatter)
4044 fh.setFormatter(formatter)
4045 # add the handlers to logger
4046 logger.addHandler(ch)
4047 logger.addHandler(fh)
4048
4049 # "application" code
4050 logger.debug("debug message")
4051 logger.info("info message")
4052 logger.warn("warn message")
4053 logger.error("error message")
4054 logger.critical("critical message")
4055
4056Notice that the "application" code does not care about multiple handlers. All
4057that changed was the addition and configuration of a new handler named *fh*.
4058
4059The ability to create new handlers with higher- or lower-severity filters can be
4060very helpful when writing and testing an application. Instead of using many
4061``print`` statements for debugging, use ``logger.debug``: Unlike the print
4062statements, which you will have to delete or comment out later, the logger.debug
4063statements can remain intact in the source code and remain dormant until you
4064need them again. At that time, the only change that needs to happen is to
4065modify the severity level of the logger and/or handler to debug.
4066
4067
4068Using logging in multiple modules
4069^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
4070
4071It was mentioned above that multiple calls to
4072``logging.getLogger('someLogger')`` return a reference to the same logger
4073object. This is true not only within the same module, but also across modules
4074as long as it is in the same Python interpreter process. It is true for
4075references to the same object; additionally, application code can define and
4076configure a parent logger in one module and create (but not configure) a child
4077logger in a separate module, and all logger calls to the child will pass up to
4078the parent. Here is a main module::
4079
4080 import logging
4081 import auxiliary_module
4082
4083 # create logger with "spam_application"
4084 logger = logging.getLogger("spam_application")
4085 logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
4086 # create file handler which logs even debug messages
4087 fh = logging.FileHandler("spam.log")
4088 fh.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
4089 # create console handler with a higher log level
4090 ch = logging.StreamHandler()
4091 ch.setLevel(logging.ERROR)
4092 # create formatter and add it to the handlers
4093 formatter = logging.Formatter("%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s")
4094 fh.setFormatter(formatter)
4095 ch.setFormatter(formatter)
4096 # add the handlers to the logger
4097 logger.addHandler(fh)
4098 logger.addHandler(ch)
4099
4100 logger.info("creating an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary")
4101 a = auxiliary_module.Auxiliary()
4102 logger.info("created an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary")
4103 logger.info("calling auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something")
4104 a.do_something()
4105 logger.info("finished auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something")
4106 logger.info("calling auxiliary_module.some_function()")
4107 auxiliary_module.some_function()
4108 logger.info("done with auxiliary_module.some_function()")
4109
4110Here is the auxiliary module::
4111
4112 import logging
4113
4114 # create logger
4115 module_logger = logging.getLogger("spam_application.auxiliary")
4116
4117 class Auxiliary:
4118 def __init__(self):
4119 self.logger = logging.getLogger("spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary")
4120 self.logger.info("creating an instance of Auxiliary")
4121 def do_something(self):
4122 self.logger.info("doing something")
4123 a = 1 + 1
4124 self.logger.info("done doing something")
4125
4126 def some_function():
4127 module_logger.info("received a call to \"some_function\"")
4128
4129The output looks like this::
4130
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004131 2005-03-23 23:47:11,663 - spam_application - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004132 creating an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004133 2005-03-23 23:47:11,665 - spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004134 creating an instance of Auxiliary
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004135 2005-03-23 23:47:11,665 - spam_application - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004136 created an instance of auxiliary_module.Auxiliary
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004137 2005-03-23 23:47:11,668 - spam_application - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004138 calling auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004139 2005-03-23 23:47:11,668 - spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004140 doing something
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004141 2005-03-23 23:47:11,669 - spam_application.auxiliary.Auxiliary - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004142 done doing something
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004143 2005-03-23 23:47:11,670 - spam_application - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004144 finished auxiliary_module.Auxiliary.do_something
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004145 2005-03-23 23:47:11,671 - spam_application - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004146 calling auxiliary_module.some_function()
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004147 2005-03-23 23:47:11,672 - spam_application.auxiliary - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004148 received a call to "some_function"
Christian Heimes043d6f62008-01-07 17:19:16 +00004149 2005-03-23 23:47:11,673 - spam_application - INFO -
Christian Heimes8b0facf2007-12-04 19:30:01 +00004150 done with auxiliary_module.some_function()
4151