This module offers universal logging solution for software development, taking into considerations things such as logfile title, managing existing logfiles, changing working directories, 4 log types, adjustable timestamp and log with pre- and postfixes.
It is also supplied with multithreading opportunity, using Events and Exception handling.
To use the LogPy, clone the repository into your directory using Git:
$ git clone https://github.com/PiotrJZielinski/LogPy
You can then (assuming you put LogPy module in your working directory) import it into your project using:
from LogPy.LogPy import Logger
You might as well install the package using pip:
pip install git+https://github.com/PiotrJZielinski/LogPy
The class is initialized with parameters:
Logger(filename='main', directory='', logtype='info', timestamp='%Y-%m-%d | %H:%M:%S.%f', logformat='[{timestamp}] {logtype}: {message}', prefix='', postfix='', title='Main Logger', logexists='append', console=False):
where:
filename
is the name of the file in which you intend to put the log in;directory
is the directory in which you want to put the file; leaving it default puts the file in your working directory;logtype
is the default log message to use (one of: info, warning, error, fatal);timestamp
is the string used for defining (see datetime.strftime() for timestamp formatting details);logformat
is the log configuration (string containing variables: timestamp, logtype, message, prefix, postfix)prefix
postfix
title
is the string to be put on the top of the logfilelogexists
is the default action to be performed in case logfile already exists (append, overwrite or rename)console
is a boolean specifying whether the logger should print messages in the consoleexternal_function
is a reference to function that returns string message for loginternal_logger_time
delay between external function calls
You can change most of these parameters during the operation of the program using property setters supplied in the module
Methods such as clear, delete, pause and resume are to perform as they are named. They are provided with security checks and necessary features.
For logging use the method
log(msg, logtype=''):
where:
msg
is the message to be put in the logfilelogtype
is the log details put before the message (one of the available) - defaults to the type defined in the initialization
Logging with a message starting with an exclamation mark ('!') will disable all information, putting just the message in the row.
If you assign a reference to class to external_function, internal thread calls it at regullar intervals. Size of the intervals equals internal_logger_time
value
The class is designed for running as a separate thread, which would provide exception catching for the log without interrupting main program execution and waiting for other instructions to execute. In order to take advantage of the threading use similar code:
from threading import Thread
from LogPy.LogPy import Logger
logger = Logger()
logger_thread = Thread(target=logger.run, name='My Logger')
logger_thread.start()
Alternative method for starting logger thread - call start method:
logger = Logger()
logger.start()
From then on the thread will be running. To log something use the aforemention log
method.
In order to stop the logger from running (ie. at the end of your program) you have to set an exit flag. To do so simply type:
logger.exit()
which will interrupt thread execution, terminating it.