forked from goodboy/tractor
`StackLevelAdapter._log(stacklevel: int)` for custom levels..
Apparently (and i don't know if this was always broken [i feel like no?] or is a recent change to stdlib's `logging` stuff) we need increment the `stacklevel` input by one for our custom level methods now? Without this you're going to see the path to the method's-callstack-frame on every emission instead of to the caller's. I first noticed this when debugging the workspace layer spawning in `modden.bigd` and then verified it in other depended projects.. I guess we should add some tests for this as well XDmultihomed
parent
814384848d
commit
00024181cd
|
@ -48,12 +48,15 @@ LOG_FORMAT = (
|
|||
|
||||
DATE_FORMAT = '%b %d %H:%M:%S'
|
||||
|
||||
LEVELS = {
|
||||
LEVELS: dict[str, int] = {
|
||||
'TRANSPORT': 5,
|
||||
'RUNTIME': 15,
|
||||
'CANCEL': 16,
|
||||
'PDB': 500,
|
||||
}
|
||||
# _custom_levels: set[str] = {
|
||||
# lvlname.lower for lvlname in LEVELS.keys()
|
||||
# }
|
||||
|
||||
STD_PALETTE = {
|
||||
'CRITICAL': 'red',
|
||||
|
@ -102,7 +105,11 @@ class StackLevelAdapter(logging.LoggerAdapter):
|
|||
Cancellation logging, mostly for runtime reporting.
|
||||
|
||||
'''
|
||||
return self.log(16, msg)
|
||||
return self.log(
|
||||
level=16,
|
||||
msg=msg,
|
||||
# stacklevel=4,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
def pdb(
|
||||
self,
|
||||
|
@ -114,14 +121,37 @@ class StackLevelAdapter(logging.LoggerAdapter):
|
|||
'''
|
||||
return self.log(500, msg)
|
||||
|
||||
def log(self, level, msg, *args, **kwargs):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
def log(
|
||||
self,
|
||||
level,
|
||||
msg,
|
||||
*args,
|
||||
**kwargs,
|
||||
):
|
||||
'''
|
||||
Delegate a log call to the underlying logger, after adding
|
||||
contextual information from this adapter instance.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
'''
|
||||
if self.isEnabledFor(level):
|
||||
stacklevel: int = 3
|
||||
if (
|
||||
level in LEVELS.values()
|
||||
# or level in _custom_levels
|
||||
):
|
||||
stacklevel: int = 4
|
||||
|
||||
# msg, kwargs = self.process(msg, kwargs)
|
||||
self._log(level, msg, args, **kwargs)
|
||||
self._log(
|
||||
level=level,
|
||||
msg=msg,
|
||||
args=args,
|
||||
# NOTE: not sure how this worked before but, it
|
||||
# seems with our custom level methods defined above
|
||||
# we do indeed (now) require another stack level??
|
||||
stacklevel=stacklevel,
|
||||
**kwargs,
|
||||
)
|
||||
|
||||
# LOL, the stdlib doesn't allow passing through ``stacklevel``..
|
||||
def _log(
|
||||
|
@ -134,12 +164,15 @@ class StackLevelAdapter(logging.LoggerAdapter):
|
|||
stack_info=False,
|
||||
|
||||
# XXX: bit we added to show fileinfo from actual caller.
|
||||
# this level then ``.log()`` then finally the caller's level..
|
||||
stacklevel=3,
|
||||
# - this level
|
||||
# - then ``.log()``
|
||||
# - then finally the caller's level..
|
||||
stacklevel=4,
|
||||
):
|
||||
"""
|
||||
'''
|
||||
Low-level log implementation, proxied to allow nested logger adapters.
|
||||
"""
|
||||
|
||||
'''
|
||||
return self.logger._log(
|
||||
level,
|
||||
msg,
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue