315

Is there a way to disable SQL query logging when I'm executing commands in the console? Ideally, it would be great if I can just disable it and re-enable it with a command in the console.

I'm trying to debug something and using "puts" to print out some relevant data. However, the sql query output is making it hard to read.


Edit: I found another solution, since setting the logger to nil sometimes raised an error, if something other than my code tried to call logger.warn

Instead of setting the logger to nil you can set the level of the logger to 1.

ActiveRecord::Base.logger.level = 1 # or Logger::INFO
2

10 Answers 10

379

To turn it off:

old_logger = ActiveRecord::Base.logger
ActiveRecord::Base.logger = nil

To turn it back on:

ActiveRecord::Base.logger = old_logger
11
  • 1
    Is there anywhere I can put this so I disable the SQL output permanently? I tried adding it to envs/dev.rb but not luck. Dec 4, 2011 at 4:40
  • 7
    you can put this code in .irbrc, which is basically .bashrc for the Rails console. in fact you can do just about anything in .irbrc if you want, e.g., syntax coloring, history, edit code in vi and then execute it in the Rails console, etc. check my gem utility_belt if you're on Ruby 1.8 or the Ruby 1.9 port called flyrb Sep 5, 2012 at 3:57
  • 2
    @giles bowkett: Actually, .irbrcis like .bashrc but actually for your ruby interactive commandline. It's not a rails thing. I imagine you'd probably get errors if you tried to reference rails classes when you were running irb outside of a rails environment.
    – eremzeit
    Dec 19, 2012 at 12:56
  • 9
    @samvermette you can it in a config file. For example: config/initializers/activerecord_logger.rb
    – Uri
    Feb 16, 2013 at 17:46
  • 22
    ActiveRecord::Base.logger.level = 1 is a much better answer as it won't raise exceptions if you use .info and others.
    – Mick F
    Feb 4, 2014 at 16:26
96

This might not be a suitable solution for the console, but Rails has a method for this problem: Logger#silence

ActiveRecord::Base.logger.silence do
  # the stuff you want to be silenced
end
6
  • 4
    Will work only for up to Rails 3: "DEPRECATION WARNING: silence is deprecated and will be removed from Rails 4.0"
    – Kangur
    Jun 7, 2013 at 12:49
  • 7
    @Kangur I'm on rails 4.2 and silence seems to work fine May 16, 2016 at 14:20
  • 3
    @Kangur I can also confirm this approach works just fine on Rails 4.2 Nov 29, 2016 at 15:44
  • 7
    Works in Rails 5 and I see no warnings. This is the best answer IMO. Nov 23, 2017 at 22:39
  • 4
    Works fine in Rails 6. Maybe it's just been moved around a bit?
    – johncip
    Mar 11, 2020 at 4:57
83

Here's a variation I consider somewhat cleaner, that still allows potential other logging from AR. In config/environments/development.rb :

config.after_initialize do
  ActiveRecord::Base.logger = Rails.logger.clone
  ActiveRecord::Base.logger.level = Logger::INFO
end
3
  • Odd, not for me, in Rails 3.0 or 3.1. Why would your Rails.logger be nil in an after_initialize block, did you do something else to customize your Rails init stack, or did you forget the config.after_initialize ?
    – jrochkind
    Dec 5, 2011 at 5:39
  • 1
    Works great in my Rails 3.1 app. Seemsl ike the nicest solution. +1
    – Martijn
    Mar 22, 2012 at 10:41
  • Doesn't work for me ... sets the level OK in the after_initialize block, but the level is back to 0 by the time the console is open. Strange. (I'm using Pry as a console replacement, is that why?)
    – Mike Blyth
    Aug 3, 2012 at 14:41
28

For Rails 4 you can put the following in an environment file:

# /config/environments/development.rb

config.active_record.logger = nil
2
  • That would only take effect in production, where logging is mostly surpressed anyway....
    – Rob
    Aug 18, 2017 at 17:42
  • in rails 5 this doesn't work. If you're work in linux environment, the following will work: config.active_record.logger = Logger.new('/dev/null') not sure if the same goes with newer version like 6 and 7
    – nadavgam
    Jun 24, 2022 at 18:55
16

In case someone wants to actually knock out SQL statement logging (without changing logging level, and while keeping the logging from their AR models):

The line that writes to the log (in Rails 3.2.16, anyway) is the call to debug in lib/active_record/log_subscriber.rb:50.

That debug method is defined by ActiveSupport::LogSubscriber.

So we can knock out the logging by overwriting it like so:

module ActiveSupport
  class LogSubscriber
    def debug(*args, &block)
    end
  end
end
4
  • 2
    Good one. This works on SQL logging without affecting Rails.logger.debug statements. Mar 3, 2015 at 10:27
  • Total noob here. Where exactly should we put this?
    – devius
    May 4, 2016 at 14:50
  • I keep it in lib/monkeypatch.rb and have rails pull it in with the following line in config/application.rb: Dir.glob( "./lib/*.{rb}" ).each{ | file | require file }. Keep in mind that monkeypatching is frowned upon by some. Probably shouldn't check this into your production code.
    – fakeleft
    May 6, 2016 at 12:57
  • I used this as a starting point for my Rails / ActiveRecord 6 solution, which I've added as an answer here. This version didn't quite work because it actually suppressed a lot of other logs I wanted to see.
    – Chris R
    Aug 24, 2021 at 16:11
11

I used this: config.log_level = :info edit-in config/environments/performance.rb

Working great for me, rejecting SQL output, and show only rendering and important info.

2
  • I'm on rails 4.1.0 and it's worked fine for me. thanks
    – Zakaria
    Nov 18, 2017 at 6:01
  • Thanks for mentioning this, if put config.log_level = :fatal it basically disables output to production log file almost completely, this is what I need since there is a custom request logger in play Oct 6, 2020 at 9:58
4

In Rails 3.2 I'm doing something like this in config/environment/development.rb:

module MyApp
  class Application < Rails::Application
    console do
      ActiveRecord::Base.logger = Logger.new( Rails.root.join("log", "development.log") )
    end
  end
end
4

Just as an FYI, in Rails 2 you can do

ActiveRecord::Base.silence { <code you don't want to log goes here> }

Obviously the curly braces could be replaced with a do end block if you wanted.

0
4

I use activerecord 6.0.3.3 and I had to include ActiveSupport::LoggerSilence

include ActiveSupport::LoggerSilence

ActiveSupport::LoggerSilence.silence do
    ## everything you want to silence
end

This however did not work with anything related to creating or deleting SQL tables like ActiveRecord::Migration.drop_table. For this to be silenced I added:

ActiveRecord::Schema.verbose = false
2

I had to solve this for ActiveRecord 6, and I based my answer on fakeleft's response, but it wasn't quite right, since it was suppressing other logging such as the logging of nested views. What I did was created config/initializers/activerecord_logger.rb:

# Suppress SQL statement logging if necessary
# This is a dirty, dirty trick, but it works:
if ENV["ACTIVERECORD_HIDE_SQL"].present?
  module ActiveRecord
    class LogSubscriber
      def sql(event)
      end
    end
  end
end

The log subscriber in AR 6 has a sql event that we want to hide, so this is very narrowly targeted to skip that event.

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