Django 1.4 “LOGGING” variable in settings.py seems

2019-08-21 14:06发布

I've got a module I want to log in Django that looks something like this:

import logging
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)

def foo():
    #this is a test of logging
    logger.info("info foo")
    logger.warning("warn foo")
    logger.error("error foo")

My LOGGING in settings.py is set to the following:

LOGGING = {
    'version': 1,
    'disable_existing_loggers': True,
    'formatters': {
        'verbose': {
            'format': '%(levelname)s %(asctime)s %(module)s %(process)d %(thread)d %(message)s'
        },
        'simple': {
            'format': '%(levelname)s %(message)s'
        },
        },
    'handlers': {
        'null': {
            'level':'DEBUG',
            'class':'django.utils.log.NullHandler',
            },
        'console':{
            'level':'DEBUG',
            'class':'logging.StreamHandler',
            'formatter': 'simple'
        },
        'mail_admins': {
            'level': 'ERROR',
            'class': 'django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler',
        }
    },
    'loggers': {
        'django': {
            'handlers':['null', 'console'],
            'propagate': True,
            'level':'INFO',
            },
        'django.request': {
            'handlers': ['mail_admins'],
            'level': 'ERROR',
            'propagate': False,
            },
    }
}

The output when I run a view calling foo is as follows:

WARNING:root:warn foo
ERROR:root:error foo

I would've expected the info log as well, but ok, let's try again but this time with every 'level' parameter in LOGGING set to 'INFO':

WARNING:root:warn foo
ERROR:root:error foo

OK... well how about setting everything to 'ERROR'?:

WARNING:root:warn foo
ERROR:root:error foo

LOGGING commented out?

WARNING:root:warn foo
ERROR:root:error foo

I've set DEBUG = False and even bothered to manually set

LOGGING_CONFIG = 'django.utils.log.dictConfig'

Does anyone have any other ideas? I don't understand why Django is ignoring my LOGGING setting.

1条回答
仙女界的扛把子
2楼-- · 2019-08-21 14:52

As usual, typing it up on stack overflow lead me to realize my mistake.

Rather than calling

logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)

I needed to call the desired logger specifically:

logger = logging.getLogger('django')

This has solved the problem.

查看更多
登录 后发表回答