Reputation: 31161
I created a module named log.py where a function defines how the log will be registered. Here is the atomic code:
import logging
import time
def set_up_log():
"""
Create a logging file.
"""
#
# Create the parent logger.
#
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.setLevel(logging.INFO)
#
# Create a file as handler.
#
file_handler = logging.FileHandler('report\\activity.log')
file_handler.setLevel(logging.INFO)
formatter = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s - %(filename)s - %(name)s - % (levelname)4s - %(message)s')
file_handler.setFormatter(formatter)
logger.addHandler(file_handler)
#
# Start recording.
#
logger.info('______ STARTS RECORDING _______')
if __name__=='__main__':
set_up_log()
A second module named read_file.py is using this log.py to record potential error.
import logging
import log
log.set_up_log()
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
def read_bb_file(input_file):
"""
Input_file must be the path.
Open the source_name and read the content. Return the result.
"""
content = list()
logger.info('noi')
try:
file = open(input_file, 'r')
except IOError, e:
logger.error(e)
else:
for line in file:
str = line.rstrip('\n\r')
content.append(str)
file.close()
return content
if __name__ == "__main__":
logger.info("begin execution")
c = read_bb_file('textatraiter.out')
logger.info("end execution")
In the command prompt lauching read_file.py, I get this error:
No handlers could be found for logger "__main__"
My result in the file is the following
2014-05-12 13:32:58,690 - log.py - log - INFO - ______ STARTS RECORDING _______
I read lots of topics here and on Py Doc but it seems I did not understand them properly since I have this error. I add I would like to keep the log settlement appart in a function and not define it explicitely in my main method.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1464
Reputation: 13459
You have 2 distinct loggers and you're only configuring one.
The first is the one you make in log.py
and set up correctly. Its name however will be log
, because you have imported this module from read_file.py
.
The second logger, the one you're hoping is the same as the first, is the one you assign to the variable logger
in read_file.py
. Its name will be __main__
because you're calling this module from the command line. You're not configuring this logger.
What you could do is to add a parameter to set_up_log
to pass the name of the logger in, e.g.
def set_up_log(logname):
logger = logging.getLogger(logname)
That way, you will set the handlers and formatters for the correct logging instance.
Organizing your logs in a hierarchy is the way logging was intended to be used by Vinay Sajip, the original author of the module. So your modules would only log to a logging instance with the fully qualified name, as given by __name__
. Then your application code could set up the loggers, which is what you're trying to accomplish with your set_up_log
function. You just need to remember to pass it the relevant name, that's all. I found this reference very useful at the time.
Upvotes: 2