| Logging |
| ======= |
|
|
| Flask uses standard Python :mod:`logging`. Messages about your Flask |
| application are logged with :meth:`app.logger <flask.Flask.logger>`, |
| which takes the same name as :attr:`app.name <flask.Flask.name>`. This |
| logger can also be used to log your own messages. |
|
|
| .. code-block:: python |
|
|
| @app.route('/login', methods=['POST']) |
| def login(): |
| user = get_user(request.form['username']) |
|
|
| if user.check_password(request.form['password']): |
| login_user(user) |
| app.logger.info('%s logged in successfully', user.username) |
| return redirect(url_for('index')) |
| else: |
| app.logger.info('%s failed to log in', user.username) |
| abort(401) |
|
|
| If you don't configure logging, Python's default log level is usually |
| 'warning'. Nothing below the configured level will be visible. |
|
|
|
|
| Basic Configuration |
| ------------------- |
|
|
| When you want to configure logging for your project, you should do it as soon |
| as possible when the program starts. If :meth:`app.logger <flask.Flask.logger>` |
| is accessed before logging is configured, it will add a default handler. If |
| possible, configure logging before creating the application object. |
|
|
| This example uses :func:`~logging.config.dictConfig` to create a logging |
| configuration similar to Flask's default, except for all logs:: |
| |
| from logging.config import dictConfig |
| |
| dictConfig({ |
| 'version': 1, |
| 'formatters': {'default': { |
| 'format': '[%(asctime)s] %(levelname)s in %(module)s: %(message)s', |
| }}, |
| 'handlers': {'wsgi': { |
| 'class': 'logging.StreamHandler', |
| 'stream': 'ext: |
| 'formatter': 'default' |
| }}, |
| 'root': |
| |
| |
| |
| }) |
|
|
| app = Flask(__name__) |
|
|
|
|
| Default Configuration |
| ````````````````````` |
|
|
| If you do not configure logging yourself, Flask will add a |
| :class:`~logging.StreamHandler` to :meth:`app.logger <flask.Flask.logger>` |
| automatically. During requests, it will write to the stream specified by the |
| WSGI server in ``environ['wsgi.errors']`` (which is usually |
| :data:`sys.stderr`). Outside a request, it will log to :data:`sys.stderr`. |
|
|
|
|
| Removing the Default Handler |
| ```````````````````````````` |
|
|
| If you configured logging after accessing |
| :meth:`app.logger <flask.Flask.logger>`, and need to remove the default |
| handler, you can import and remove it:: |
|
|
| from flask.logging import default_handler |
|
|
| app.logger.removeHandler(default_handler) |
|
|
|
|
| Email Errors to Admins |
| ---------------------- |
|
|
| When running the application on a remote server for production, you probably |
| won't be looking at the log messages very often. The WSGI server will probably |
| send log messages to a file, and you'll only check that file if a user tells |
| you something went wrong. |
|
|
| To be proactive about discovering and fixing bugs, you can configure a |
| :class:`logging.handlers.SMTPHandler` to send an email when errors and higher |
| are logged. :: |
|
|
| import logging |
| from logging.handlers import SMTPHandler |
|
|
| mail_handler = SMTPHandler( |
| mailhost='127.0.0.1', |
| fromaddr='server-error@example.com', |
| toaddrs=['admin@example.com'], |
| subject='Application Error' |
| ) |
| mail_handler.setLevel(logging.ERROR) |
| mail_handler.setFormatter(logging.Formatter( |
| '[%(asctime)s] %(levelname)s in %(module)s: %(message)s' |
| )) |
|
|
| if not app.debug: |
| app.logger.addHandler(mail_handler) |
|
|
| This requires that you have an SMTP server set up on the same server. See the |
| Python docs for more information about configuring the handler. |
|
|
|
|
| Injecting Request Information |
| ----------------------------- |
|
|
| Seeing more information about the request, such as the IP address, may help |
| debugging some errors. You can subclass :class:`logging.Formatter` to inject |
| your own fields that can be used in messages. You can change the formatter for |
| Flask's default handler, the mail handler defined above, or any other |
| handler. :: |
| |
| from flask import has_request_context, request |
| from flask.logging import default_handler |
| |
| class RequestFormatter(logging.Formatter): |
| def format(self, record): |
| if has_request_context(): |
| record.url = request.url |
| record.remote_addr = request.remote_addr |
| else: |
| record.url = None |
| record.remote_addr = None |
| |
| return super().format(record) |
| |
| formatter = RequestFormatter( |
| '[%(asctime)s] %(remote_addr)s requested %(url)s\n' |
| '%(levelname)s in %(module)s: %(message)s' |
| ) |
| default_handler.setFormatter(formatter) |
| mail_handler.setFormatter(formatter) |
| |
| |
| Other Libraries |
| --------------- |
| |
| Other libraries may use logging extensively, and you want to see relevant |
| messages from those logs too. The simplest way to do this is to add handlers |
| to the root logger instead of only the app logger. :: |
| |
| from flask.logging import default_handler |
| |
| root = logging.getLogger() |
| root.addHandler(default_handler) |
| root.addHandler(mail_handler) |
| |
| Depending on your project, it may be more useful to configure each logger you |
| care about separately, instead of configuring only the root logger. :: |
| |
| for logger in ( |
| app.logger, |
| logging.getLogger('sqlalchemy'), |
| logging.getLogger('other_package'), |
| ): |
| logger.addHandler(default_handler) |
| logger.addHandler(mail_handler) |
| |
| |
| Werkzeug |
| ```````` |
| |
| Werkzeug logs basic request/response information to the ``'werkzeug'`` logger. |
| If the root logger has no handlers configured, Werkzeug adds a |
| :class:`~logging.StreamHandler` to its logger. |
| |
| |
| Flask Extensions |
| ```````````````` |
| |
| Depending on the situation, an extension may choose to log to |
| :meth:`app.logger <flask.Flask.logger>` or its own named logger. Consult each |
| extension's documentation for details. |
|
|