Logger#
Superclasses: Object
Implemented Interfaces: SessionFeature
Debug logging support
Logger
watches a Session
and logs the HTTP traffic that
it generates, for debugging purposes. Many applications use an
environment variable to determine whether or not to use
Logger
, and to determine the amount of debugging output.
To use Logger
, first create a logger with new
, optionally
configure it with set_request_filter
,
set_response_filter
, and set_printer
, and
then attach it to a session (or multiple sessions) with
add_feature
.
By default, the debugging output is sent to stdout
, and looks something
like:
> POST /unauth HTTP/1.1
> Soup-Debug-Timestamp: 1200171744
> Soup-Debug: SoupSession 1 (0x612190), SoupMessage 1 (0x617000), GSocket 1 (0x612220)
> Host: localhost
> Content-Type: text/plain
> Connection: close
< HTTP/1.1 201 Created
< Soup-Debug-Timestamp: 1200171744
< Soup-Debug: SoupMessage 1 (0x617000)
< Date: Sun, 12 Jan 2008 21:02:24 GMT
< Content-Length: 0
The Soup-Debug-Timestamp
line gives the time (as a time_t
) when the
request was sent, or the response fully received.
The Soup-Debug
line gives further debugging information about the
Session
, Message
, and Socket
involved; the hex
numbers are the addresses of the objects in question (which may be useful if
you are running in a debugger). The decimal IDs are simply counters that
uniquely identify objects across the lifetime of the Logger
. In
particular, this can be used to identify when multiple messages are sent
across the same connection.
Currently, the request half of the message is logged just before
the first byte of the request gets written to the network (from the
starting
signal).
The response is logged just after the last byte of the response body is read
from the network (from the got_body
or
got_informational
signal), which means that the
got_headers
signal, and anything triggered off it (such as
Message
::authenticate) will be emitted before the response headers are
actually logged.
If the response doesn’t happen to trigger the got_body
nor
got_informational
signals due to, for example, a
cancellation before receiving the last byte of the response body, the
response will still be logged on the event of the finished
signal.
Constructors#
- class Logger
- classmethod new(level: LoggerLogLevel) Logger #
Creates a new
Logger
with the given debug level.If you need finer control over what message parts are and aren’t logged, use
set_request_filter
andset_response_filter
.- Parameters:
level – the debug level
Methods#
- class Logger
-
- set_max_body_size(max_body_size: int) None #
Sets the maximum body size for
logger
(-1 means no limit).- Parameters:
max_body_size – the maximum body size to log
- set_printer(printer: Callable[[Logger, LoggerLogLevel, int, str, Any], None], printer_data: Any = None) None #
Sets up an alternate log printing routine, if you don’t want the log to go to
stdout
.- Parameters:
printer – the callback for printing logging output
printer_data – data to pass to the callback
- set_request_filter(request_filter: Callable[[Logger, Message, Any], LoggerLogLevel], filter_data: Any = None) None #
Sets up a filter to determine the log level for a given request.
For each HTTP request
logger
will invokerequest_filter
to determine how much (if any) of that request to log. (If you do not set a request filter,logger
will just always log requests at the level passed tonew
.)- Parameters:
request_filter – the callback for request debugging
filter_data – data to pass to the callback
- set_response_filter(response_filter: Callable[[Logger, Message, Any], LoggerLogLevel], filter_data: Any = None) None #
Sets up a filter to determine the log level for a given response.
For each HTTP response
logger
will invokeresponse_filter
to determine how much (if any) of that response to log. (If you do not set a response filter,logger
will just always log responses at the level passed tonew
.)- Parameters:
response_filter – the callback for response debugging
filter_data – data to pass to the callback
Properties#
- class Logger
- props.level: LoggerLogLevel#
The type of the None singleton.