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I've got the following code running on each request of a wsgi (web2py) application:

import logging, logging.handlers
from logging import StreamHandler, Formatter

def get_configured_logger(name):

    logger = logging.getLogger(name)

    if (len(logger.handlers) == 0):
        # This logger has no handlers, so we can assume it hasn't yet been configured (Django uses similiar trick)

        # === Configure logger ===

        # Create Formatted StreamHandler:
        FORMAT = "%(process)s %(thread)s: %(message)s"
        formatter = logging.Formatter(fmt=FORMAT)
        handler = logging.StreamHandler()
        handler.setFormatter(formatter)
        logger.addHandler(handler)
        logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
        logger.debug('CONFIGURING LOGGER')

    return logger

# Get app specific logger:
logger = get_configured_logger(request.application)
logger.debug("TEST")

It's meant to configure the logger once, with the formatted handler I want. It works, except that I'm getting double entries in my stdout:

81893 4329050112: CONFIGURING LOGGER
DEBUG:dummy:CONFIGURING LOGGER
81893 4329050112: TEST
DEBUG:dummy:TEST

How do I use my new formatted handler and get rid of/hide the default one?

share|improve this question
I have never used this class before, but don't you think logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) and logger.debug is sort of redundant? – MiJyn Aug 5 '12 at 21:50
lkjoel- No, they're two different things. calling .debug(..) creates log entries at the debug level, while setting the logging level tells the handler to handle log entries at that level. – Yarin Aug 5 '12 at 21:57
Are you calling logging.basicConfig anywhere? If so, comment that out. – unutbu Aug 5 '12 at 22:28
unutbu- the web2py framework does call basicConfig in it's core, so can't comment it out. Can I overwrite it instead? – Yarin Aug 5 '12 at 22:39

1 Answer

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Perhaps the following example will help. Basically you can either remove the handlers of the logger you'd like to disable, or don't propagate with the logger you are logging from.

$ cat testlog.py
import logging
logging.basicConfig(filename='foo', level=logging.DEBUG)
root_logger = logging.getLogger()
root_logger.debug('bar')

my_logger = logging.getLogger('my_logger')
FORMAT = "%(process)s %(thread)s: %(message)s"
formatter = logging.Formatter(fmt=FORMAT)
handler = logging.StreamHandler()
handler.setFormatter(formatter)

my_logger.addHandler(handler)
my_logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
my_logger.info('baz')

my_logger.propagate = False
my_logger.info('foobar')

my_logger.propagate = True
my_logger.info('foobaz')
root_logger.handlers = []
my_logger.info('barbaz')

$ python testlog.py
5927 140735224465760: baz
5927 140735224465760: foobar
5927 140735224465760: foobaz
5927 140735224465760: barbaz

$ cat foo
DEBUG:root:bar
INFO:my_logger:baz
INFO:my_logger:foobaz
share|improve this answer
Derek- setting logger.propagate = False was all I needed- thanks! – Yarin Aug 6 '12 at 2:37

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