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authorVinay Sajip <vinay_sajip@yahoo.co.uk>2010-12-12 22:45:35 (GMT)
committerVinay Sajip <vinay_sajip@yahoo.co.uk>2010-12-12 22:45:35 (GMT)
commit97b886dc8c786451465184ac87896075cfdb85bd (patch)
tree68bee8b49321f78dd5a0a80b5ccd65037e57f6bd /Doc
parent36675b6a0fe359a76c0280ddd635fba0fa2370f3 (diff)
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Logging documentation - further update.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/logging.rst28
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/logging.rst b/Doc/library/logging.rst
index b11dbc5..17da172 100644
--- a/Doc/library/logging.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/logging.rst
@@ -146,15 +146,35 @@ messages::
INFO:root:So should this
WARNING:root:And this, too
+This example also shows how you can set the logging level which acts as the
+threshold for tracking. In this case, because we set the threshold to
+``DEBUG``, all of the messages were printed.
+
+If you want to set the logging level from a command-line option such as::
+
+ --log=INFO
+
+and you have the value of the parameter passed for ``--log`` in some variable
+*loglevel*, you can use::
+
+ getattr(logging, loglevel.upper())
+
+to get the value which you'll pass to :func:`basicConfig` via the *level*
+argument. You may want to error check any user input value, perhaps as in the
+following example::
+
+ # assuming loglevel is bound to the string value obtained from the
+ # command line argument. Convert to upper case to allow the user to
+ # specify --log=DEBUG or --log=debug
+ numeric_level = getattr(logging, loglevel.upper(), None)
+ assert numeric_level is not None, 'Invalid log level: %s' % loglevel
+ logging.basicConfig(level=numeric_level, ...)
+
The call to :func:`basicConfig` should come *before* any calls to :func:`debug`,
:func:`info` etc. As it's intended as a one-off simple configuration facility,
only the first call will actually do anything: subsequent calls are effectively
no-ops.
-This example also shows how you can set the logging level which acts as the
-threshold for tracking. In this case, because we set the threshold to
-``DEBUG``, all of the messages were printed.
-
If you run the above script several times, the messages from successive runs
are appended to the file *example.log*. If you want each run to start afresh,
not remembering the messages from earlier runs, you can specify the *filemode*