This package provides an additional log handler for Python's standard logging package (PEP 282). This handler will write log events to a log file which is rotated when the log file reaches a certain size. Multiple processes can safely write to the same log file concurrently. Rotated logs can be gzipped if desired. Both Windows and POSIX systems are supported. An optional threaded queue logging handler is provided to perform logging in the background.
This is a fork of Lowell Alleman's ConcurrentLogHandler 0.9.1 which fixes a hanging/deadlocking problem. See this:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/python-concurrent-log-handler/+bug/1265150
Summary of other changes:
- Renamed package to
concurrent_log_handler
- Provide
use_gzip
option to compress rotated logs - Support for Windows
- Uses file locking to ensure exclusive write access Note: file locking is advisory, not a hard lock against external processes
- More secure generation of random numbers for temporary filenames
- Change the name of the lockfile to have .__ in front of it.
- Provide a QueueListener / QueueHandler implementation for handling log events in a background thread. Optional: requires Python 3.
- Allow setting owner and mode permissions of rollover file on Unix
- Depends on
portalocker
package, which (on Windows only) depends onPyWin32
You can download and install the package with pip
using the following command:
pip install concurrent-log-handler
This will also install the portalocker module, which on Windows in turn depends on pywin32.
If installing from source, use the following command:
python setup.py install
To build a Python "wheel" for distribution, use the following:
python setup.py clean --all bdist_wheel
# Copy the .whl file from under the "dist" folder
Concurrent Log Handler (CLH) is designed to allow multiple processes to write to the same logfile in a concurrent manner. It is important that each process involved MUST follow these requirements:
-
Each process must create its OWN instance of the handler (
ConcurrentRotatingFileHandler
)- This requirement does not apply to threads within a given process. Different threads within a process can use the same CLH instance. Thread locking is handled automatically.
-
As a result of the above, you CANNOT serialize a handler instance and reuse it in another process. This means you cannot, for example, pass a CLH handler instance from parent process to child process using the
multiprocessing
package (or similar techniques). Each child process must initialize its own CLH instance. In the case of a multiprocessing target function, the child target function can call code to initialize a CLH instance. If your app uses fork() then this may not apply; child processes of a fork() should be able to inherit the object instance. -
It is important that every process or thread writing to a given logfile must all use the same settings, especially related to file rotation. Also do not attempt to mix different handler classes writing to the same file, e.g. do not also use a
RotatingFileHandler
on the same file. -
Special attention may need to be paid when the log file being written to resides on a network shared drive. Whether the multi-process advisory lock technique (via portalocker) works on a network share may depend on the details of your configuration.
-
A separate handler instance is needed for each individual log file. For instance, if your app writes to two different logs you will need to set up two CLH instances per process.
Here is a simple usage example:
from logging import getLogger, INFO
from concurrent_log_handler import ConcurrentRotatingFileHandler
import os
log = getLogger(__name__)
# Use an absolute path to prevent file rotation trouble.
logfile = os.path.abspath("mylogfile.log")
# Rotate log after reaching 512K, keep 5 old copies.
rotateHandler = ConcurrentRotatingFileHandler(logfile, "a", 512*1024, 5)
log.addHandler(rotateHandler)
log.setLevel(INFO)
log.info("Here is a very exciting log message, just for you")
See also the file src/example.py for a configuration and usage example.
To use this module from a logging config file, use a handler entry like this:
[handler_hand01]
class=handlers.ConcurrentRotatingFileHandler
level=NOTSET
formatter=form01
args=("rotating.log", "a")
kwargs={'backupCount': 5, 'maxBytes': 512*1024}
Please note that Python 3.7 and higher accepts keyword arguments (kwargs) in a logging config file, but earlier versions of Python only accept positional args.
Note: you must have a "import concurrent_log_handler" before you call fileConfig(). For more information see http://docs.python.org/lib/logging-config-fileformat.html
By default, the logfile will have line endings appropriate to the platform. On Windows the line endings will be CRLF ('\r\n') and on Unix/Mac they will be LF ('\n').
It is possible to force another line ending format by using the newline and terminator arguments.
The following would force Windows-style CRLF line endings on Unix:
kwargs={'newline': '', 'terminator': '\r\n'}
The following would force Unix-style LF line endings on Windows:
kwargs={'newline': '', 'terminator': '\n'}
To use the background logging queue, you must call this code at some point in your
app where it sets up logging configuration. Please read the doc string in the
file concurrent_log_handler/queue.py
for more details. This requires Python 3.
from concurrent_log_handler.queue import setup_logging_queues
# convert all configured loggers to use a background thread
setup_logging_queues()
This module is designed to function well in a multi-threaded or multi-processes concurrent environment. However, all writers to a given log file should be using the same class and the same settings at the same time, otherwise unexpected behavior may result during file rotation.
This may mean that if you change the logging settings at any point you may need to restart your app service so that all processes are using the same settings at the same time.
The ConcurrentRotatingFileHandler
class is a drop-in replacement for
Python's standard log handler RotatingFileHandler
. This module uses file
locking so that multiple processes can concurrently log to a single file without
dropping or clobbering log events. This module provides a file rotation scheme
like with RotatingFileHandler
. Extra care is taken to ensure that logs
can be safely rotated before the rotation process is started. (This module works
around the file rename issue with RotatingFileHandler
on Windows, where a
rotation failure means that all subsequent log events are dropped).
This module attempts to preserve log records at all cost. This means that log
files will grow larger than the specified maximum (rotation) size. So if disk
space is tight, you may want to stick with RotatingFileHandler
, which will
strictly adhere to the maximum file size.
Important:
If you have multiple instances of a script (or multiple scripts) all running at
the same time and writing to the same log file, then all of the scripts should
be using ConcurrentRotatingFileHandler
. You should not attempt to mix
and match RotatingFileHandler
and ConcurrentRotatingFileHandler
.
The file locking is advisory only - it is respected by other Concurrent Log Handler
instances, but does not protect against outside processes (or different Python logging
file handlers) from writing to a log file in use.
See CHANGELOG.md
The original version was written by Lowell Alleman.
Other contributors are listed in CONTRIBUTORS.md.
See the LICENSE file