88

I have a logger that has a RotatingFileHandler. I want to redirect all Stdout and Stderr to the logger. How to do so?

3
  • Do you have external modules/libraries that write to FDs 1 and 2 directly? Oct 17, 2013 at 14:46
  • @IgnacioVazquez-Abrams I don't really understand what you meant but I'll try to explain. I'm using several python processes, and from all of them I want to redirect all stdout and stderr message to my logger.
    – orenma
    Oct 23, 2013 at 11:19
  • Possible duplicate of How do I duplicate sys.stdout to a log file in python? Feb 25, 2018 at 2:36

12 Answers 12

58

Not enough rep to comment, but I wanted to add the version of this that worked for me in case others are in a similar situation.

class LoggerWriter:
    def __init__(self, level):
        # self.level is really like using log.debug(message)
        # at least in my case
        self.level = level

    def write(self, message):
        # if statement reduces the amount of newlines that are
        # printed to the logger
        if message != '\n':
            self.level(message)

    def flush(self):
        # create a flush method so things can be flushed when
        # the system wants to. Not sure if simply 'printing'
        # sys.stderr is the correct way to do it, but it seemed
        # to work properly for me.
        self.level(sys.stderr)

and this would look something like:

log = logging.getLogger('foobar')
sys.stdout = LoggerWriter(log.debug)
sys.stderr = LoggerWriter(log.warning)
4
  • 2
    I get a weird output because of the flush method: warning archan_pylint:18: <archan_pylint.LoggerWriter object at 0x7fde3cfa2208>. It seems the stderr object is printed rather than a newline or else, so I just removed the flush method and it seems to work now.
    – pawamoy
    Feb 20, 2018 at 22:29
  • 1
    @Cameron Please look at my answer below for a small improvement in output readability. Jul 31, 2018 at 11:35
  • 1
    It works both with python2 and 3, in case you log to a file (e.g. logging.basicConfig(filename='example.log', level=logging.DEBUG). But if you want e.g. logging.basicConfig(stream=sys.stdout, level=logging.DEBUG) then it does not work (on python3 it also causes stack overflow). (I guess because it captures std out), so not so useful for logging e.g. from a Kubernetes pod to std out. Note that the code found by shellcat_zero does work also with stream=sys.stdout.
    – Attila123
    Oct 5, 2018 at 12:41
  • def flush(self): pass avoids printing <archan_pylint.LoggerWriter object at 0x7fde3cfa2208> to the log Oct 11, 2020 at 7:23
42

UPDATE for Python 3:

  • Including a dummy flush function which prevents an error where the function is expected (Python 2 was fine with just linebuf='').
  • Note that your output (and log level) appears different if it is logged from an interpreter session vs being run from a file. Running from a file produces the expected behavior (and output featured below).
  • We still eliminate extra newlines which other solutions do not.
class StreamToLogger(object):
    """
    Fake file-like stream object that redirects writes to a logger instance.
    """
    def __init__(self, logger, level):
       self.logger = logger
       self.level = level
       self.linebuf = ''

    def write(self, buf):
       for line in buf.rstrip().splitlines():
          self.logger.log(self.level, line.rstrip())

    def flush(self):
        pass

Then test with something like:

import StreamToLogger
import sys
import logging

logging.basicConfig(
        level=logging.DEBUG,
        format='%(asctime)s:%(levelname)s:%(name)s:%(message)s',
        filename='out.log',
        filemode='a'
        )
log = logging.getLogger('foobar')
sys.stdout = StreamToLogger(log,logging.INFO)
sys.stderr = StreamToLogger(log,logging.ERROR)
print('Test to standard out')
raise Exception('Test to standard error')

See below for old Python 2.x answer and the example output:

All of the prior answers seem to have problems adding extra newlines where they aren't needed. The solution that works best for me is from http://www.electricmonk.nl/log/2011/08/14/redirect-stdout-and-stderr-to-a-logger-in-python/, where he demonstrates how send both stdout and stderr to the logger:

import logging
import sys
 
class StreamToLogger(object):
   """
   Fake file-like stream object that redirects writes to a logger instance.
   """
   def __init__(self, logger, log_level=logging.INFO):
      self.logger = logger
      self.log_level = log_level
      self.linebuf = ''
 
   def write(self, buf):
      for line in buf.rstrip().splitlines():
         self.logger.log(self.log_level, line.rstrip())
 
logging.basicConfig(
   level=logging.DEBUG,
   format='%(asctime)s:%(levelname)s:%(name)s:%(message)s',
   filename="out.log",
   filemode='a'
)
 
stdout_logger = logging.getLogger('STDOUT')
sl = StreamToLogger(stdout_logger, logging.INFO)
sys.stdout = sl
 
stderr_logger = logging.getLogger('STDERR')
sl = StreamToLogger(stderr_logger, logging.ERROR)
sys.stderr = sl
 
print "Test to standard out"
raise Exception('Test to standard error')

The output looks like:

2011-08-14 14:46:20,573:INFO:STDOUT:Test to standard out
2011-08-14 14:46:20,573:ERROR:STDERR:Traceback (most recent call last):
2011-08-14 14:46:20,574:ERROR:STDERR:  File "redirect.py", line 33, in 
2011-08-14 14:46:20,574:ERROR:STDERR:raise Exception('Test to standard error')
2011-08-14 14:46:20,574:ERROR:STDERR:Exception
2011-08-14 14:46:20,574:ERROR:STDERR::
2011-08-14 14:46:20,574:ERROR:STDERR:Test to standard error

Note that self.linebuf = '' is where the flush is being handled, rather than implementing a flush function.

6
  • 6
    This code is licensed GPL. I'm not sure if it can even be posted on SO, which requires compatibility with CC by-sa.
    – asmeurer
    Mar 7, 2017 at 21:19
  • 7
    Any idea why I'm getting this error message? "Exception ignored in: <__main__.StreamToLogger object at 0x7f72a6fbe940> AttributeError 'StreamToLogger' object has no attribute 'flush' "
    – soungalo
    Jun 19, 2018 at 18:29
  • Remove the last two lines of the code snippet, the error message goes away.... Dec 12, 2019 at 18:03
  • 1
    It's 'safer' to extend TextIOBase. Somewhere in my library is calling sys.stdout.isatty() and the StreamToLogger failed because of no attribute 'isatty'. It works after I define class StreamToLogger(TextIOBase).
    – James H
    Nov 27, 2020 at 4:41
  • 1
    This does not cover my case. In my code I'm doing: check_call(command, shell=True, stdout=sys.stdout, stderr=sys.stderr ) . This leads to an error cause deep in the code python does this: c2pwrite = stdout.fileno()
    – Pablo
    Aug 18, 2022 at 17:25
19

You can use redirect_stdout context manager:

import logging
from contextlib import redirect_stdout

logging.basicConfig(stream=sys.stdout, level=logging.DEBUG)
logging.write = lambda msg: logging.info(msg) if msg != '\n' else None

with redirect_stdout(logging):
    print('Test')

or like this

import logging
from contextlib import redirect_stdout


logger = logging.getLogger('Meow')
logger.setLevel(logging.INFO)
formatter = logging.Formatter(
    fmt='[{name}] {asctime} {levelname}: {message}',
    datefmt='%m/%d/%Y %H:%M:%S',
    style='{'
)
ch = logging.StreamHandler()
ch.setLevel(logging.INFO)
ch.setFormatter(formatter)
logger.addHandler(ch)

logger.write = lambda msg: logger.info(msg) if msg != '\n' else None

with redirect_stdout(logger):
    print('Test')
2
  • 6
    docs.python.org/3/library/contextlib.html : "Context manager for temporarily redirecting sys.stdout to another file or file-like object." "Note that the global side effect on sys.stdout means that this context manager is not suitable for use in library code and most threaded applications. It also has no effect on the output of subprocesses. However, it is still a useful approach for many utility scripts." So it seems quite inconvenient (if possible at all) to cover a whole application (e.g. I have a microservice which runs a grpc server, which starts threads when serving requests).
    – Attila123
    Oct 5, 2018 at 12:56
  • 1
    Don't the other solutions here have the same global side effect on sys.stdout/sys.stderr as well? @Attila123
    – xjcl
    Feb 17, 2021 at 11:56
18

If it's an all-Python system (i.e. no C libraries writing to fds directly, as Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams asked about) then you might be able to use an approach as suggested here:

class LoggerWriter:
    def __init__(self, logger, level):
        self.logger = logger
        self.level = level

    def write(self, message):
        if message != '\n':
            self.logger.log(self.level, message)

and then set sys.stdout and sys.stderr to LoggerWriter instances.

6
  • thank you, that did the job, but for some reason stderr send it's message each word separately, do you know why?
    – orenma
    Oct 23, 2013 at 5:59
  • @orenma presumably because write is called word-by-word. You can adapt my example code to suit your needs more closely. Oct 23, 2013 at 9:55
  • What if sys.stderr.flush() is called after redirecting stderr?
    – Moberg
    Oct 17, 2014 at 14:36
  • 1
    I cant make library code not use sys.stderr .flush() etc. What is the best way to handle all its attributes?
    – Moberg
    Oct 17, 2014 at 19:48
  • 2
    What if C libraries are involved? Then what? How to get the C library to output to the same LoggerWriter?
    – azmath
    Apr 28, 2017 at 5:36
16

Output Redirection Done Right!

The Problem

logger.log and the other functions (.info/.error/etc.) output each call as a separate line, i.e. implicitly add (formatting and) a newline to it.

sys.stderr.write on the other hand just writes its literal input to stream, including partial lines. For example: The output "ZeroDivisionError: division by zero" is actually 4(!) separate calls to sys.stderr.write:

sys.stderr.write('ZeroDivisionError')
sys.stderr.write(': ')
sys.stderr.write('division by zero')
sys.stderr.write('\n')

The 4 most upvoted approaches (1, 2, 3, 4) thus result in extra newlines -- simply put "1/0" into your program and you will get the following:

2021-02-17 13:10:40,814 - ERROR - ZeroDivisionError
2021-02-17 13:10:40,814 - ERROR - : 
2021-02-17 13:10:40,814 - ERROR - division by zero

The Solution

Store the intermediate writes in a buffer. The reason I am using a list as buffer rather than a string is to avoid the Shlemiel the painter’s algorithm. TLDR: It is O(n) instead of potentially O(n^2)

class LoggerWriter:
    def __init__(self, logfct):
        self.logfct = logfct
        self.buf = []

    def write(self, msg):
        if msg.endswith('\n'):
            self.buf.append(msg.removesuffix('\n'))
            self.logfct(''.join(self.buf))
            self.buf = []
        else:
            self.buf.append(msg)

    def flush(self):
        pass

# To access the original stdout/stderr, use sys.__stdout__/sys.__stderr__
sys.stdout = LoggerWriter(logger.info)
sys.stderr = LoggerWriter(logger.error)
2021-02-17 13:15:22,956 - ERROR - ZeroDivisionError: division by zero

For versions below Python 3.9, you could replace replace msg.removesuffix('\n') with either msg.rstrip('\n') or msg[:-1].

4
  • Nice but you are assuming that if there is a '\n' in msg it will always be at the end of msg, and that a single msg will never have more than one '\n'. This is probably true in most current Python implementations, but I'm not sure if it is defined as a language standard, so I prefer the "check each time" approach. It is not as bad as it seems because each time Shlemiel gets a new paint bucket (a '\n') he brings it to the current painting point, starting anew from zero. Mar 26, 2021 at 9:02
  • 2
    @ToniHomedesiSaun A message with '\n's in it is ok and will just be printed as a multiline log, but as you said most internal error messages are chunked calls to sys.stderr and will appear as separate logs. But I guess you could also msg.split('\n') if you are not ok with multiline logs.
    – xjcl
    Mar 26, 2021 at 9:25
  • I tried your solution with Python 3.9.16 but nothing get's logged in my file handler. Could you please take a look? Thank you! pastebin.com/fKweeqYQ
    – Jim B
    Feb 15, 2023 at 18:52
  • 1
    @JimB You are passing the wrong object. As the name logfct implies, you have to pass the function .info of a logger = logging.getLogger() object. Instead, you are passing logging.INFO, which is just a constant representing a log level that is just the number 20.
    – xjcl
    Feb 16, 2023 at 19:33
11

As an evolution to Cameron Gagnon's response, I've improved the LoggerWriterclass to:

class LoggerWriter(object):
    def __init__(self, writer):
        self._writer = writer
        self._msg = ''

    def write(self, message):
        self._msg = self._msg + message
        while '\n' in self._msg:
            pos = self._msg.find('\n')
            self._writer(self._msg[:pos])
            self._msg = self._msg[pos+1:]

    def flush(self):
        if self._msg != '':
            self._writer(self._msg)
            self._msg = ''

now uncontrolled exceptions look nicer:

2018-07-31 13:20:37,482 - ERROR - Traceback (most recent call last):
2018-07-31 13:20:37,483 - ERROR -   File "mf32.py", line 317, in <module>
2018-07-31 13:20:37,485 - ERROR -     main()
2018-07-31 13:20:37,486 - ERROR -   File "mf32.py", line 289, in main
2018-07-31 13:20:37,488 - ERROR -     int('')
2018-07-31 13:20:37,489 - ERROR - ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: ''
1
  • 1
    You are right, the top answers produce spurious newlines on e.g. Exceptions. My answer follows a very similar approach.
    – xjcl
    Feb 17, 2021 at 12:02
6

Quick but Fragile One-Liner

sys.stdout.write = logger.info
sys.stderr.write = logger.error

What this does is simply assign the logger functions to the stdout/stderr .write call which means any write call will instead invoke the logger functions.

The downside of this approach is that both calls to .write and the logger functions typically add a newline so you will end up with extra lines in your log file, which may or may not be a problem depending on your use case.

Another pitfall is that if your logger writes to stderr itself we get infinite recursion (a stack overflow error). So only output to a file.

0
5

With flush added to Vinay Sajip's answer:

class LoggerWriter:
    def __init__(self, logger, level): 
        self.logger = logger
        self.level = level 

    def write(self, message):
        if message != '\n':
            self.logger.log(self.level, message)

    def flush(self): 
        pass
1
2

Solving problem where StreamHandler causes infinite Recurison

My logger was causing an infinite recursion, because the Streamhandler was trying to write to stdout, which itself is a logger -> leading to infinite recursion.

Solution

Reinstate the original sys.__stdout__ for the StreamHandler ONLY, so that you can still see the logs showing in the terminal.

class DefaultStreamHandler(logging.StreamHandler):
    def __init__(self, stream=sys.__stdout__):
        # Use the original sys.__stdout__ to write to stdout
        # for this handler, as sys.stdout will write out to logger.
        super().__init__(stream)


class LoggerWriter(io.IOBase):
    """Class to replace the stderr/stdout calls to a logger"""

    def __init__(self, logger_name: str, log_level: int):
        """:param logger_name: Name to give the logger (e.g. 'stderr')
        :param log_level: The log level, e.g. logging.DEBUG / logging.INFO that
                          the MESSAGES should be logged at.
        """
        self.std_logger = logging.getLogger(logger_name)
        # Get the "root" logger from by its name (i.e. from a config dict or at the bottom of this file)
        #  We will use this to create a copy of all its settings, except the name
        app_logger = logging.getLogger("myAppsLogger")
        [self.std_logger.addHandler(handler) for handler in app_logger.handlers]
        self.std_logger.setLevel(app_logger.level)  # the minimum lvl msgs will show at
        self.level = log_level  # the level msgs will be logged at
        self.buffer = []

    def write(self, msg: str):
        """Stdout/stderr logs one line at a time, rather than 1 message at a time.
        Use this function to aggregate multi-line messages into 1 log call."""
        msg = msg.decode() if issubclass(type(msg), bytes) else msg

        if not msg.endswith("\n"):
            return self.buffer.append(msg)

        self.buffer.append(msg.rstrip("\n"))
        message = "".join(self.buffer)
        self.std_logger.log(self.level, message)
        self.buffer = []


def replace_stderr_and_stdout_with_logger():
    """Replaces calls to sys.stderr -> logger.info & sys.stdout -> logger.error"""
    # To access the original stdout/stderr, use sys.__stdout__/sys.__stderr__
    sys.stdout = LoggerWriter("stdout", logging.INFO)
    sys.stderr = LoggerWriter("stderr", logging.ERROR)


if __name__ == __main__():
    # Load the logger & handlers
    logger = logging.getLogger("myAppsLogger")
    logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
    # HANDLER = logging.StreamHandler()
    HANDLER = DefaultStreamHandler()  # <--- replace the normal streamhandler with this
    logger.addHandler(HANDLER)
    logFormatter = logging.Formatter("[%(asctime)s] - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s")
    HANDLER.setFormatter(logFormatter)

    # Run this AFTER you load the logger
    replace_stderr_and_stdout_with_logger()

And then finally call the replace_stderr_and_stdout_with_logger() after you've initialised your logger (the last bit of the code)

1
  • I was facing the same problem. sys.__stdout__ really solved the problem. Now, we can dump the data to both console and the file
    – kkk
    Apr 20, 2023 at 12:52
0

If you want to logging info and error messages into separates stream (info into stdout, errors into stderr) you can use this trick:

class ErrorStreamHandler(log.StreamHandler):
"""Print input log-message into stderr, print only error/warning messages"""
def __init__(self, stream=sys.stderr):
    log.Handler.__init__(self, log.WARNING)
    self.stream = stream

def emit(self, record):
    try:
        if record.levelno in (log.INFO, log.DEBUG, log.NOTSET):
            return
        msg = self.format(record)
        stream = self.stream
        # issue 35046: merged two stream.writes into one.
        stream.write(msg + self.terminator)
        self.flush()
    except RecursionError:  # See issue 36272
        raise
    except Exception:
        self.handleError(record)


class OutStreamHandler(log.StreamHandler):
"""Print input log-message into stdout, print only info/debug messages"""
def __init__(self, loglevel, stream=sys.stdout):
    log.Handler.__init__(self, loglevel)
    self.stream = stream

def emit(self, record):
    try:
        if record.levelno not in (log.INFO, log.DEBUG, log.NOTSET):
            return
        msg = self.format(record)
        stream = self.stream
        # issue 35046: merged two stream.writes into one.
        stream.write(msg + self.terminator)
        self.flush()
    except RecursionError:  # See issue 36272
        raise
    except Exception:
        self.handleError(record)

Usage:

log.basicConfig(level=settings.get_loglevel(),
                    format="[%(asctime)s] %(levelname)s: %(message)s",
                    datefmt='%Y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S', handlers=[ErrorStreamHandler(), OutStreamHandler(settings.get_loglevel())])
0

check this solution, it worked for me.

In the StreamToLogger class below, you pass both a logger instance and a log level to each instance of the class. The log level can be different for stdout and stderr.

This method offers more flexibility because you can decide the log level dynamically when creating each instance. This is useful if you want different levels for stdout and stderr. and The write method directly logs the message using the specified log level.

class StreamToLogger:

    def __init__(self, logger, log_level=logging.INFO):
        self.logger = logger
        self.log_level = log_level

    def write(self, message):
        if message.rstrip() != "":
            self.logger.log(self.log_level, message.rstrip())

    def flush(self):
        pass


stdout_log_level_name = os.getenv('STDOUT_PYTHON_LOG_LEVEL', 'INFO').upper()
stdout_logging_level = getattr(logging, stdout_log_level_name, logging.INFO)
sys.stdout = StreamToLogger(custom_logger, stdout_logging_level)


stderr_log_level_name = os.getenv('STDERR_PYTHON_LOG_LEVEL', 'ERROR').upper()
stderr_logging_level = getattr(logging, stderr_log_level_name, logging.ERROR)
sys.stderr = StreamToLogger(custom_logger, stderr_logging_level)

custom_logger is my logger, replace it with your logger instance.

hope this helps, Happy coding .

1
  • Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Nov 25, 2023 at 21:20
0

I come up with this one, Fixes random new-lines appearing in the log file by not logging anything until a new-line character is passed:

The Code

import logging
import sys

logging.basicConfig(
    level=logging.DEBUG,
    format='[%(asctime)s] [%(name)s/%(levelname)s]: %(message)s',
    filename="out.log",
    filemode='a'
)


class OutLogger(object):
    def __init__(self, logger: logging.Logger):
        self.logger = logger
        self.info_ = ""
        self.error_ = ""

    def infolog(self, message: str):
        for line in message.splitlines(keepends=True):
            if line.endswith("\n"):
                self.logger.info(self.info_ + line[:-1])
                self.info_ = ""
            else:
                self.info_ += line

    def errorlog(self, message: str):
        for line in message.splitlines(keepends=True):
            if line.endswith("\n"):
                self.logger.error(self.error_ + line[:-1])
                self.error_ = ""
            else:
                self.error_ += line


if __name__ == "__main__":
    logger = OutLogger(logging.getLogger("Admin Tools"))

    sys.stdout.write = logger.infolog
    sys.stderr.write = logger.errorlog

    print("Test to standard out")
    raise Exception('Test to standard error')

out.log File

[2023-12-24 16:57:08,585] [Admin Tools/INFO]: Test to standard out
[2023-12-24 16:57:08,586] [Admin Tools/ERROR]: Traceback (most recent call last):
[2023-12-24 16:57:08,586] [Admin Tools/ERROR]:   File "c:\Users\AAM\Desktop\ubuntu\admin-tools\logger.py", line 42, in <module>
[2023-12-24 16:57:08,586] [Admin Tools/ERROR]:     raise Exception('Test to standard error')
[2023-12-24 16:57:08,586] [Admin Tools/ERROR]: Exception: Test to standard error

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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