My idea is to make a context logging scheme as showed on the example below:
[ DEBUG] Parsing dialogs files
[ DEBUG] ... [DialogGroup_001]
[ DEBUG] ...... Indexing dialog xml file [c:\001_dlg.xml]
[ DEBUG] ......... dialog [LobbyA]
[ DEBUG] ............ speech nodes [3]
[ DEBUG] ............... [LobbyA_01]
[ DEBUG] ............... [LobbyA_02]
[ DEBUG] ............... [LobbyA_03]
[ DEBUG] ............ sms nodes [0]
[ DEBUG] ......... dialog [LobbyB]
[ DEBUG] ............ speech nodes [3]
[ DEBUG] ............... [LobbyB_01]
[ DEBUG] ............... [LobbyB_02]
[ DEBUG] ............... [LobbyB_03]
[ DEBUG] ............ sms nodes [0]
[ DEBUG] ... [DialogGroup_002]
[ DEBUG] ...... Indexing dialog xml file [c:\002_dlg.xml]
[ DEBUG] ......... dialog [HighGroundsA]
[ DEBUG] ............ speech nodes [3]
[ DEBUG] ............... [HighGroundsA_01]
[ DEBUG] ............... [HighGroundsA_02]
[ DEBUG] ............... [HighGroundsA_03]
[ DEBUG] ............ sms nodes [0]
At this point, I'm using Python's logging module with custom, hand-written prefixes when logging, for example:
(...)
log.debug('')
log.debug('Parsing dialogs files')
for dlg in defDlgList:
log.debug('... [{0}]'.format(dlg))
(...)
It's working quite ok, but there are some subtle problems, for example: when logging from inside functions - they may be called from various scopes and prefix length may vary for each call.
I'm looking for an elegant and invisible way to establish a length of a '...' prefix automatically for each log. I'd rather avoid passing prefix length as a parameter to each function or setting the length using explicit calls, for example:
(...)
logWrapper.debug('')
logWrapper.debug('Parsing dialogs files')
for dlg in defDlgList:
logWrapper.nextLogLevelBegin()
logWrapper.debug('[{0}]'.format(dlg))
logWrapper.nextLogLevelEnd()
(...)
Is there a way to get the current indentation level from Python's parser or construct a scope sensitive wrapper class for logging?