Up to now, I’ve been peppering my code with ‘print debug message’ and even ‘if condition: print debug message’. But a number of people have told me that’s not the best way to do it, and I really should learn how to use the logging module. After a quick read, it looks as though it does everything I could possibly want, and then some. It looks like a learning project in its own right, and I want to work on other projects now and simply use the minimum functionality to help me. If it makes any difference, I am on python 2.6 and will be for the forseeable future, due to library and legacy compatibilities.
All I want to do at the moment is pepper my code with messages that I can turn on and off section by section, as I manage to debug specific regions. As a ‘hello_log_world’, I tried this, and it doesn’t do what I expected
import logging
# logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)
logging.error('first error')
logging.debug('first debug')
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)
logging.error('second error')
logging.debug('second debug')
You’ll notice I’m using the really basic config, using as many defaults as possible, to keep things simple. But appears that it’s too simple, or that I don’t understand the programming model behind logging.
I had expected that sys.stderr would end up with
ERROR:root:first error
ERROR:root:second error
DEBUG:root:second debug
… but only the two error messages appear. Setting level=DEBUG doesn’t make the second one appear. If I uncomment the basicConfig call at the start of the program, all four get output.
Am I trying to run it at too simple a level?
What’s the simplest thing I can add to what I’ve written there to get my expected behaviour?
Logging actually follows a particular hierarchy (
DEBUG -> INFO -> WARNING -> ERROR -> CRITICAL), and the default level isWARNING. Therefore the reason you see the two ERROR messages is because it is ahead ofWARNINGon the hierarchy chain.As for the odd commenting behavior, the explanation is found in the logging docs (which as you say are a task unto themselves 🙂 ):
However you can use the
setLevelparameter to get what you desire:The lack of an argument to
getLogger()means that the root logger is modified. This is essentially one step before @del’s (good) answer, where you start getting into multiple loggers, each with their own specific properties/output levels/etc.