Some time ago I saw a Mono application with colored output, probably because of it's log system, because all the messages were standardized.
Now, Python has the logging module, and it let you specify a lot of options or customize it entirely, so I'm imagining that something like that would be possible too with Python, however I could not find it anywhere. Is there any way to make the Python logging module to output in color? What I want is for error messages to appear in red, for instance. Debug messages in blue or yellow, and so on.
Of course this would probably only work on Linux, with compatible terminals (most modern terminals are), but I could fallback to the original logging output if color is not supported.

Any ideas?

link|improve this question
You should specify that you want a multiplatform solution - both Linux and Windows. – Sorin Sbarnea Aug 25 '09 at 18:55
feedback

9 Answers

I already knew about the color escapes, I used them in my bash prompt a while ago. Thanks anyway.
What I wanted was to integrate it with the logging module, which I eventually did after a couple of tries and errors.
Here is what I end up with:

BLACK, RED, GREEN, YELLOW, BLUE, MAGENTA, CYAN, WHITE = range(8)

#The background is set with 40 plus the number of the color, and the foreground with 30

#These are the sequences need to get colored ouput
RESET_SEQ = "\033[0m"
COLOR_SEQ = "\033[1;%dm"
BOLD_SEQ = "\033[1m"

def formatter_message(message, use_color = True):
    if use_color:
        message = message.replace("$RESET", RESET_SEQ).replace("$BOLD", BOLD_SEQ)
    else:
        message = message.replace("$RESET", "").replace("$BOLD", "")
    return message

COLORS = {
    'WARNING': YELLOW,
    'INFO': WHITE,
    'DEBUG': BLUE,
    'CRITICAL': YELLOW,
    'ERROR': RED
}

class ColoredFormatter(logging.Formatter):
    def __init__(self, msg, use_color = True):
        logging.Formatter.__init__(self, msg)
        self.use_color = use_color

    def format(self, record):
        levelname = record.levelname
        if self.use_color and levelname in COLORS:
            levelname_color = COLOR_SEQ % (30 + COLORS[levelname]) + levelname + RESET_SEQ
            record.levelname = levelname_color
        return logging.Formatter.format(self, record)

And to use it, create your own Logger:

# Custom logger class with multiple destinations
class ColoredLogger(logging.Logger):
    FORMAT = "[$BOLD%(name)-20s$RESET][%(levelname)-18s]  %(message)s ($BOLD%(filename)s$RESET:%(lineno)d)"
    COLOR_FORMAT = formatter_message(FORMAT, True)
    def __init__(self, name):
        logging.Logger.__init__(self, name, logging.DEBUG)                

        color_formatter = ColoredFormatter(self.COLOR_FORMAT)

        console = logging.StreamHandler()
        console.setFormatter(color_formatter)

        self.addHandler(console)
        return


logging.setLoggerClass(ColoredLogger)

Just in case anyone else needs it.

link|improve this answer
Where is YELLOW, WHITE, BLUE, etc. defined? – Swaroop C H May 22 '09 at 16:20
1  
@Swaroop - Those are ANSI escape codes, which you can read look up on Google, or find here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code, or alternatively pueblo.sourceforge.net/doc/manual/ansi_color_codes.html – Brian M. Hunt Aug 16 '09 at 20:56
12  
I don't believe that you should create a logger subclass just for this - your answer is fine as far as creating a specialised Formatter and specifying its use on a StreamHandler. But there's no need for a logger subclass. In fact the use of a logger class adds a handler to every logger created, which is not what you typically want. – Vinay Sajip Aug 17 '09 at 12:17
2  
You should mark this as your answer, this is a invaluable contribution you've made here. – David Jan 18 '10 at 19:05
2  
show 4 more comments
feedback

Here is a solution that should work on any platform. If it doesn't just tell me and I will update it.

How it works: on platform supporting ANSI escapes is using them (non-Windows) and on Windows it does use API calls to change the console colors.

The script does hack the logging.StreamHandler.emit method from standard library adding a wrapper to it.

TestColorer.py

# Usage: add Colorer.py near you script and import it.
import logging
import Colorer

logging.warn("a warning")
logging.error("some error")
logging.info("some info")

Colorer.py

#!/usr/bin/env python
# encoding: utf-8
import logging
# now we patch Python code to add color support to logging.StreamHandler
def add_coloring_to_emit_windows(fn):
        # add methods we need to the class
    def _out_handle(self):
        import ctypes
        return ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetStdHandle(self.STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE)
    out_handle = property(_out_handle)

    def _set_color(self, code):
        import ctypes
        # Constants from the Windows API
        self.STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE = -11
        hdl = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetStdHandle(self.STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE)
        ctypes.windll.kernel32.SetConsoleTextAttribute(hdl, code)

    setattr(logging.StreamHandler, '_set_color', _set_color)

    def new(*args):
        FOREGROUND_BLUE      = 0x0001 # text color contains blue.
        FOREGROUND_GREEN     = 0x0002 # text color contains green.
        FOREGROUND_RED       = 0x0004 # text color contains red.
        FOREGROUND_INTENSITY = 0x0008 # text color is intensified.
        FOREGROUND_WHITE     = FOREGROUND_BLUE|FOREGROUND_GREEN |FOREGROUND_RED
       # winbase.h
        STD_INPUT_HANDLE = -10
        STD_OUTPUT_HANDLE = -11
        STD_ERROR_HANDLE = -12

        # wincon.h
        FOREGROUND_BLACK     = 0x0000
        FOREGROUND_BLUE      = 0x0001
        FOREGROUND_GREEN     = 0x0002
        FOREGROUND_CYAN      = 0x0003
        FOREGROUND_RED       = 0x0004
        FOREGROUND_MAGENTA   = 0x0005
        FOREGROUND_YELLOW    = 0x0006
        FOREGROUND_GREY      = 0x0007
        FOREGROUND_INTENSITY = 0x0008 # foreground color is intensified.

        BACKGROUND_BLACK     = 0x0000
        BACKGROUND_BLUE      = 0x0010
        BACKGROUND_GREEN     = 0x0020
        BACKGROUND_CYAN      = 0x0030
        BACKGROUND_RED       = 0x0040
        BACKGROUND_MAGENTA   = 0x0050
        BACKGROUND_YELLOW    = 0x0060
        BACKGROUND_GREY      = 0x0070
        BACKGROUND_INTENSITY = 0x0080 # background color is intensified.     

        levelno = args[1].levelno
        if(levelno>=50):
            color = BACKGROUND_YELLOW | FOREGROUND_RED | FOREGROUND_INTENSITY | BACKGROUND_INTENSITY 
        elif(levelno>=40):
            color = FOREGROUND_RED | FOREGROUND_INTENSITY
        elif(levelno>=30):
            color = FOREGROUND_YELLOW | FOREGROUND_INTENSITY
        elif(levelno>=20):
            color = FOREGROUND_GREEN
        elif(levelno>=10):
            color = FOREGROUND_MAGENTA
        else:
            color =  FOREGROUND_WHITE
        args[0]._set_color(color)

        ret = fn(*args)
        args[0]._set_color( FOREGROUND_WHITE )
        #print "after"
        return ret
    return new

def add_coloring_to_emit_ansi(fn):
    # add methods we need to the class
    def new(*args):
        levelno = args[1].levelno
        if(levelno>=50):
            color = '\x1b[31m' # red
        elif(levelno>=40):
            color = '\x1b[31m' # red
        elif(levelno>=30):
            color = '\x1b[33m' # yellow
        elif(levelno>=20):
            color = '\x1b[32m' # green 
        elif(levelno>=10):
            color = '\x1b[35m' # pink
        else:
            color = '\x1b[0m' # normal
        args[1].msg = color + args[1].msg +  '\x1b[0m'  # normal
        #print "after"
        return fn(*args)
    return new

import platform
if platform.system()=='Windows':
    # Windows does not support ANSI escapes and we are using API calls to set the console color
    logging.StreamHandler.emit = add_coloring_to_emit_windows(logging.StreamHandler.emit)
else:
    # all non-Windows platforms are supporting ANSI escapes so we use them
    logging.StreamHandler.emit = add_coloring_to_emit_ansi(logging.StreamHandler.emit)
    #log = logging.getLogger()
    #log.addFilter(log_filter())
    #//hdlr = logging.StreamHandler()
    #//hdlr.setFormatter(formatter())
link|improve this answer
feedback

I updated the example from airmind supporting tags for foreground and background. Just use the color variables $BLACK - $WHITE in your log formatter string. To set the background just use $BG-BLACK - $BG-WHITE.

import logging

BLACK, RED, GREEN, YELLOW, BLUE, MAGENTA, CYAN, WHITE = range(8)

COLORS = {
    'WARNING'  : YELLOW,
    'INFO'     : WHITE,
    'DEBUG'    : BLUE,
    'CRITICAL' : YELLOW,
    'ERROR'    : RED,
    'RED'      : RED,
    'GREEN'    : GREEN,
    'YELLOW'   : YELLOW,
    'BLUE'     : BLUE,
    'MAGENTA'  : MAGENTA,
    'CYAN'     : CYAN,
    'WHITE'    : WHITE,
}

RESET_SEQ = "\033[0m"
COLOR_SEQ = "\033[1;%dm"
BOLD_SEQ  = "\033[1m"

class ColorFormatter(logging.Formatter):

    def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        # can't do super(...) here because Formatter is an old school class
        logging.Formatter.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)

    def format(self, record):
        levelname = record.levelname
        color     = COLOR_SEQ % (30 + COLORS[levelname])
        message   = logging.Formatter.format(self, record)
        message   = message.replace("$RESET", RESET_SEQ)\
                           .replace("$BOLD",  BOLD_SEQ)\
                           .replace("$COLOR", color)
        for k,v in COLORS.items():
            message = message.replace("$" + k,    COLOR_SEQ % (v+30))\
                             .replace("$BG" + k,  COLOR_SEQ % (v+40))\
                             .replace("$BG-" + k, COLOR_SEQ % (v+40))
        return message + RESET_SEQ

logging.ColorFormatter = ColorFormatter

So now you can simple do the following in your config file:

[formatter_colorFormatter]
class=logging.ColorFormatter
format= $COLOR%(levelname)s $RESET %(asctime)s $BOLD$COLOR%(name)s$RESET %(message)s
link|improve this answer
feedback

Look at the following solution. The stream handler should be the thing doing the colouring, then you have the option of colouring words rather than just the whole line (with the Formatter).

http://plumberjack.blogspot.com/2010/12/colorizing-logging-output-in-terminals.html

link|improve this answer
You can find an updated implementation in this gist (maintained by the blog author). I'm using it and works just fine. Thanks for sharing. – noisebleed Apr 14 at 22:52
feedback

I modified the original example provided by Sorin and subclassed StreamHandler to a ColorizedConsoleHandler.

The downside of their solution is that it modifies the message, and because that is modifying the actual logmessage any other handlers will get the modified message as well.

This resulted in logfiles with colorcodes in them in our case because we use multiple loggers.

The class below only works on platforms that support ansi, but it should be trivial to add the windows colorcodes to it.

import copy, logging
class ColoredConsoleHandler( logging.StreamHandler ):
def emit( self, record ):
    # Need to make a actual copy of the record 
    # to prevent altering the message for other loggers
    myrecord = copy.copy( record )
    levelno = myrecord.levelno
    if( levelno >= 50 ): # CRITICAL / FATAL
        color = '\x1b[31m' # red
    elif( levelno >= 40 ): # ERROR
        color = '\x1b[31m' # red
    elif( levelno >= 30 ): # WARNING
        color = '\x1b[33m' # yellow
    elif( levelno >= 20 ): # INFO
        color = '\x1b[32m' # green
    elif( levelno >= 10 ): # DEBUG
        color = '\x1b[35m' # pink
    else: # NOTSET and anything else
        color = '\x1b[0m' # normal
    myrecord.msg = color + str( myrecord.msg ) + '\x1b[0m'  # normal
    logging.StreamHandler.emit( self, myrecord )
link|improve this answer
feedback

Another minor remix of airmind's approach that keeps everything in one class:

class ColorFormatter(logging.Formatter):
  FORMAT = ("[$BOLD%(name)-20s$RESET][%(levelname)-18s]  "
            "%(message)s "
            "($BOLD%(filename)s$RESET:%(lineno)d)")

  BLACK, RED, GREEN, YELLOW, BLUE, MAGENTA, CYAN, WHITE = range(8)

  RESET_SEQ = "\033[0m"
  COLOR_SEQ = "\033[1;%dm"
  BOLD_SEQ = "\033[1m"

  COLORS = {
    'WARNING': YELLOW,
    'INFO': WHITE,
    'DEBUG': BLUE,
    'CRITICAL': YELLOW,
    'ERROR': RED
  }

  def formatter_msg(self, msg, use_color = True):
    if use_color:
      msg = msg.replace("$RESET", self.RESET_SEQ).replace("$BOLD", self.BOLD_SEQ)
    else:
      msg = msg.replace("$RESET", "").replace("$BOLD", "")
    return msg

  def __init__(self, use_color=True):
    msg = self.formatter_msg(self.FORMAT, use_color)
    logging.Formatter.__init__(self, msg)
    self.use_color = use_color

  def format(self, record):
    levelname = record.levelname
    if self.use_color and levelname in self.COLORS:
      fore_color = 30 + self.COLORS[levelname]
      levelname_color = self.COLOR_SEQ % fore_color + levelname + self.RESET_SEQ
      record.levelname = levelname_color
    return logging.Formatter.format(self, record)

To use attach the formatter to a handler, something like:

handler.setFormatter(ColorFormatter())
logger.addHandler(handler)
link|improve this answer
feedback

The bit I had trouble with was setting up the formatter properly:

class ColouredFormatter(logging.Formatter):    
    def __init__(self, msg):
        logging.Formatter.__init__(self, msg)
        self._init_colour = _get_colour()

    def close(self):
        # restore the colour information to what it was
        _set_colour(self._init_colour)

    def format(self, record):        
        # Add your own colourer based on the other examples
        _set_colour( LOG_LEVEL_COLOUR[record.levelno] )
        return logging.Formatter.format(self, record)         

def init():
    # Set up the formatter. Needs to be first thing done.
    rootLogger = logging.getLogger()
    hdlr = logging.StreamHandler()
    fmt = ColouredFormatter('%(message)s')
    hdlr.setFormatter(fmt)
    rootLogger.addHandler(hdlr)

And then to use:

import coloured_log
import logging

coloured_log.init()
logging.info("info")    
logging.debug("debug")    

coloured_log.close()    # restore colours
link|improve this answer
The code for the close() method is missing, isn't it? – gotgenes Jan 13 '11 at 16:59
It was supposed to be pseudo code (as _set_colour missing as well), but have added something. The thing had most trouble with was knowing how to attach the formatter correctly. – Nick Jan 14 '11 at 13:55
See the "plumber jack" solution. I think this is a better way to solve the problem (i.e. the handler should do the colourisation). stackoverflow.com/questions/384076/… – Nick Jan 14 '11 at 13:56
feedback

Quick and dirty solution for predefined log levels and without defining a new class.

logging.addLevelName( logging.WARNING, "\033[1;31m%s\033[1;m" % logging.getLevelName(logging.WARNING))
logging.addLevelName( logging.ERROR, "\033[1;41m%s\033[1;m" % logging.getLevelName(logging.ERROR))
link|improve this answer
feedback

I believe (as David has alluded to) that you need to look into escape characters. There seems to be a pretty good tutorial here with an example (in C) but the concept should be the same. But a general google for terminal escape characters should point you in the right direction.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.