I'm using Python logging, and for some reason, all of my messages are appearing twice.
I have a module to configure logging:
# BUG: It's outputting logging messages twice - not sure why - it's not the propagate setting.
def configure_logging(self, logging_file):
self.logger = logging.getLogger("my_logger")
self.logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
self.logger.propagate = 0
# Format for our loglines
formatter = logging.Formatter("%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s")
# Setup console logging
ch = logging.StreamHandler()
ch.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
ch.setFormatter(formatter)
self.logger.addHandler(ch)
# Setup file logging as well
fh = logging.FileHandler(LOG_FILENAME)
fh.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
fh.setFormatter(formatter)
self.logger.addHandler(fh)
Later on, I call this method to configure logging:
if __name__ == '__main__':
tom = Boy()
tom.configure_logging(LOG_FILENAME)
tom.buy_ham()
And then within say, the buy_ham module, I'd call:
self.logger.info('Successfully able to write to %s' % path)
And for some reason, all the messages are appearing twice. I commented out one of the stream handlers, still the same thing. Bit of a weird one, not sure why this is happening. I'm assuming I've missed something obvious.
You are calling configure_logging
twice (maybe in the __init__
method of Boy
) : getLogger
will return the same object, but addHandler
does not check if a similar handler has already been added to the logger.
Try tracing calls to that method and eliminating one of these. Or set up a flag logging_initialized
initialized to False
in the __init__
method of Boy
and change configure_logging
to do nothing if logging_initialized
is True
, and to set it to True
after you've initialized the logger.
If your program creates several Boy
instances, you'll have to change the way you do things with a global configure_logging
function adding the handlers, and the Boy.configure_logging
method only initializing the self.logger
attribute.
Another way of solving this is by checking the handlers attribute of your logger:
logger = logging.getLogger('my_logger')
if not logger.handlers:
# create the handlers and call logger.addHandler(logging_handler)