I'm using Logging (import logging
) to log messages.
Within 1 single module, I am logging messages at the debug level my_logger.debug('msg')
;
Some of these debug messages come from function_a()
and others from function_b()
; I'd like to be able to enable/disable logging based on whether they come from a or from b;
I'm guessing that I have to use Logging's filtering mechanism.
Can someone show me how the code below would need to be instrumented to do what I want?
import logging
logger = logging.getLogger( "module_name" )
def function_a( ... ):
logger.debug( "a message" )
def function_b( ... ):
logger.debug( "another message" )
if __name__ == "__main__":
logging.basicConfig( stream=sys.stderr, level=logging.DEBUG )
#don't want function_a()'s noise -> ....
#somehow filter-out function_a's logging
function_a()
#don't want function_b()'s noise -> ....
#somehow filter-out function_b's logging
function_b()
If I scaled this simple example to more modules and more funcs per module, I'd be concerned about lots of loggers;
Can I keep it down to 1 logger per module? Note that the log messages are "structured", i.e. if the function(s) logging it are doing some parsing work, they all contain a prefix logger.debug("parsing: xxx")
- can I somehow with a single line just shut-off all "parsing" messages (regardless of the module/function emitting the message?)
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