207

I'm using the Python logging module, and would like to disable log messages printed by the third party modules that I import. For example, I'm using something like the following:

logger = logging.getLogger()
logger.setLevel(level=logging.DEBUG)
fh = logging.StreamHandler()
fh_formatter = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(lineno)d:%(filename)s(%(process)d) - %(message)s')
fh.setFormatter(fh_formatter)
logger.addHandler(fh)

This prints out my debug messages when I do a logger.debug("my message!"), but it also prints out the debug messages from any module I import (such as requests, and a number of other things).

I'd like to see only the log messages from modules I'm interested in. Is it possible to make the logging module do this?

Ideally, I'd like to be able tell the logger to print messages from "ModuleX, ModuleY" and ignore all others.

I looked at the following, but I don't want to have to disable/enable logging before every call to an imported function: logging - how to ignore imported module logs?

1

15 Answers 15

148

The problem is that calling getLogger without arguments returns the root logger so when you set the level to logging.DEBUG you are also setting the level for other modules that use that logger.

You can solve this by simply not using the root logger. To do this just pass a name as argument, for example the name of your module:

logger = logging.getLogger('my_module_name')
# as before

this will create a new logger and thus it wont inadvertently change logging level for other modules.


Obviously you have to use logger.debug instead of logging.debug since the latter is a convenience function that calls the debug method of the root logger.

This is mentioned in the Advanced Logging Tutorial. It also allows you to know which module triggered the log message in a simple way.

10
  • 56
    I am creating a logger with __name__ r but I still see the logs from the imported modules. I am trying to configure logging with an ini configuration file.What should I do for that? Oct 2, 2018 at 20:44
  • 30
    Creating a logger with __name__ also did not work for me. Maybe because I'm using a standalone script and not a "module" ? What worked for me was to configure logging for imported modules (matpplotlib, in my case) via logging.getLogger("matplotlib").setLevel(logging.WARNING) and for my script via logging.basicConfig.
    – bli
    Oct 4, 2019 at 13:48
  • 7
    I just wanted to highlightthe value of your line "Obviously you have to use logger.debug instead of logging.debug". It's an easy mistake to make using logging instead of logger but it usurps all of the clever configuration you want to set up. I've spent the last couple of hours living this!
    – timdadev
    Sep 14, 2020 at 19:14
  • 25
    I have no idea why this is so difficult in python. Its sad
    – alex
    Nov 10, 2020 at 18:26
  • 10
    @IanS No, that's why libraries should not use the root logger. Please open a bug report to that library and tell them to use logging.getLogger(__name__) instead.
    – Bakuriu
    Nov 14, 2020 at 9:26
78

I was getting debug logs from matplotlib despite following the pretty straightforward documentation at the logging advanced tutorial and the troubleshooting. I was initiating my logger in main() of one file and importing a function to create a plot from another file (where I had imported matplotlib).

What worked for me was setting the level of matplotlib before importing it, rather than after as I had for other modules in my main file. This seemed counterintuitive to me so if anyone has insight into how you can set the config for a logger that hasn't been imported yet I'd be curious to find out how this works.

In my main file:

import logging
import requests
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
logging.getLogger('requests').setLevel(logging.DEBUG)

def main():
  ...

In my plot.py file:

import logging
logging.getLogger('matplotlib').setLevel(logging.WARNING)
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

def generatePlot():
  ...
4
  • 2
    I got error: 'Logger' object has no attribute 'DEBUG'. logger.DEBUG should be logging.DEBUG
    – foxiris
    May 6, 2019 at 10:44
  • Thanks! It really helps! I set matplotlib logging level after my main logging configuration and before the command which will import matplotlib. Solved!
    – gph
    Sep 5, 2019 at 9:26
  • 2
    I've set logging for matplotlib to WARNING after I've imported the module, since adding it before importing would give a lint-error. It still worked for me. I'm using matplotlib==3.3.2 in Python 3.7 if it helps.
    – End-2-End
    Oct 23, 2020 at 15:17
  • Had you tried logging.getLogger('matplotlib.pyplot').setLevel(logging.WARNING)? (Since the application is actually importing matplotlib.pyplot`.)
    – ingyhere
    Sep 7, 2023 at 12:42
64

If you're going to use the python logging package, it's a common convention to define a logger in every module that uses it.

logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)

Many popular python packages do this, including requests. If a package uses this convention, it's easy to enable/disable logging for it, because the logger name will be the same name as the package (or will be a child of that logger). You can even log it to the same file as your other loggers.

logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)

requests_logger = logging.getLogger('requests')
requests_logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)

handler = logging.StreamHandler()
handler.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
logger.addHandler(handler)
requests_logger.addHandler(handler)
1
  • 19
    Be aware, that when you try to configure your loggers like in the official basic tutorial with logging.basicConfig(...) all loggers will now either output to logging.lastResort (starting with Python 3.2, which is stderr) if no handler was given or to the handler you set. So do not use it or you will continue getting all log messages anyway.
    – user136036
    Feb 20, 2018 at 2:53
34

This disables all existing loggers, such as those created by imported modules, while still using the root logger (and without having to load an external file).

import logging.config
logging.config.dictConfig({
    'version': 1,
    'disable_existing_loggers': True,
})

Note that you need to import all modules you don't want logged first! Otherwise those won't be considered as "existing loggers". It will then disable all loggers from those modules. This might lead you to also miss out on important errors!

For more detailed examples using related options for configuration, see https://gist.github.com/st4lk/6287746, and here is a (partially working) example using YAML for config with the coloredlog library.

4
  • 2
    This works for request for example, but it will not work when the imported modules create their loggers inside their class you'd call later, like the APScheduler does when you call BackgroundScheduler.BackgroundScheduler(). See here for a solution: stackoverflow.com/a/48891485/2441026
    – user136036
    Feb 20, 2018 at 18:10
  • This works for my case with yaml configuration file
    – user2165
    Apr 30, 2020 at 16:44
  • Note that you have to import logging.config, not just logging. Dec 8, 2020 at 17:14
  • what if the imported module originally has a handler or something, does this also disable those handlers?
    – Luk Aron
    Jan 16, 2021 at 8:50
16

After trying various answers in this thread and other forums, I found this method efficient at silencing other modules' loggers. This was inspired by the following link:

https://kmasif.com/2019-11-12-ignore-logging-from-imported-module/

import logging
# Initialize your own logger
logger = logging.getLogger('<module name>')
logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)

# Silence other loggers
for log_name, log_obj in logging.Logger.manager.loggerDict.items():
     if log_name != '<module name>':
          log_obj.disabled = True

Note that you would want to do this after importing other modules. However, I found this to be a convenient and fast way to disabled other modules' loggers.

2
  • 3
    I used this and instead of disabling did logging.getLogger(log_name).setLevel(logging.WARNING)
    – mrc
    Feb 14, 2023 at 13:44
  • 1
    That is a valid way to not silence an important log, by just increasing the log level (removing lower-level messages). Thanks for the suggestion. Feb 14, 2023 at 18:29
12

You could use something like:

logging.getLogger("imported_module").setLevel(logging.WARNING)
logging.getLogger("my_own_logger_name").setLevel(logging.DEBUG)

This will set my own module's log level to DEBUG, while preventing the imported module from using the same level.

Note: "imported_module" can be replaced with imported_module.__name__ (without quotes), and "my_own_logger_name" can be replaced by __name__ if that's the way you prefer to do it.

10

@Bakuriu quite elegantly explains the function. Conversely, you can use the getLogger() method to retrieve and reconfigure/disable the unwanted loggers.

I also wanted to add the logging.fileConfig() method accepts a parameter called disable_existing_loggers which will disable any loggers previously defined (i.e., in imported modules).

8

Inspired by @brendan's answer, I created a simple logger_blocklist to which I can just all loggers I want to increase the level of. Thus, I was able to silence them all at once:

import logging

logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)

logger_blocklist = [
    "fiona",
    "rasterio",
    "matplotlib",
    "PIL",
]

for module in logger_blocklist:
    logging.getLogger(module).setLevel(logging.WARNING)

You can find the logger's name from the format="%(name)s" parameter, also included in logging.basicConfig(), for example: DEBUG:matplotlib.font_manager:findfont: score(FontEntry(fname='/usr/share/fonts/truetype/ubuntu/Ubuntu-R.ttf', name='Ubuntu', style='normal', variant='normal', weight=400, stretch='normal', size='scalable')) = 10.05.

In this case you want to add the logger matplotlib to your block list.

As opposed to @Finn's answer it was not necessary to have it outside main(), etc.

3

Another thing to consider is the propagate property of the Logger class.

For example, py-suds library for handling soap calls, even put to ERROR

logging.getLogger('suds.client').setLevel(logging.ERROR)
logging.getLogger('suds.transport').setLevel(logging.ERROR)
logging.getLogger('suds.xsdschema').setLevel(logging.ERROR)
logging.getLogger('suds.wsdl').setLevel(logging.ERROR)

logs logs about a module called sxbasics.py creationg a huge amount of logs

enter image description here

that because the propagation of the logs is True by default, setting to False, instead, i recovered 514MB of logs.

import logging
logging.getLogger("suds").propagate = False
logging.getLogger('suds.client').setLevel(logging.ERROR)
logging.getLogger('suds.transport').setLevel(logging.ERROR)
logging.getLogger('suds.xsdschema').setLevel(logging.ERROR)
logging.getLogger('suds.wsdl').setLevel(logging.ERROR)
3

Simply doing something like this solves the problem:

logging.config.dictConfig({'disable_existing_loggers': True,})

NOTE: Wherever you're placing this line, make sure all the imports everywhere in your project are done within that file itself. :)

2
  • AttributeError: module 'logging' has no attribute 'config'
    – ciurlaro
    Jan 6, 2022 at 12:03
  • @ciurlaro: import logging.config
    – Godsmith
    Feb 3, 2022 at 8:36
3

In the case that your imported module uses the root logger, then you can add a filter (https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html#filter-objects) on the root logger to remove unwanted logs:

class FilterUnwantedRecords():
    def filter(self, record):
        if '3rdpartymodule' in record.pathname:
            return False
        return True

logging.getLogger().addFilter(FilterUnwantedRecords())
3
  • 1
    This will not work since loggers don't propagate. The filter has to be attached to the handler used by the module. This is when the pain starts.
    – omni
    Sep 14, 2022 at 15:59
  • 1
    @omni Your comment does not make sense in the context of the imported module using only the root logger. Why would propagation be relevant? I've had exactly this situation and solved it with exactly this code.
    – bmurr
    Dec 16, 2022 at 11:57
  • From far the best solution, and the only one really answering to the question
    – Gojir4
    Oct 23, 2023 at 9:31
2

I had the same problem. I have a logging_config.py file which I import in all other py files. In logging_config.py file I set root logger logging level to ERROR (by default its warning):

logging.basicConfig(
    handlers=[
        RotatingFileHandler('logs.log',maxBytes=1000, backupCount=2),
        logging.StreamHandler(), #print to console
    ],
    level=logging.ERROR
)

In other modules I import logging_config.py and declare a new logger and set its level to debug:

log = logging.getLogger(__name__)
log.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)

This way everything I log in my py files is logged, but stuff logged at debug and info level by imported modules like urllib, request,boto3 etc is not logged. If there is some error in those import module then its logged, since I set root loggers level to ERROR.

0
# mymodule.py

# Import 'logging' module from standard library
import logging

# Set all loggers to show only WARNING and above
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.WARNING)

# Create your module-specific logger (__name__ will be 'mymodule' in this example)
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)

# Set your desired logging level for your logger
logger.setLevel(level=logging.DEBUG)

# Add handlers if you want
fh = logging.StreamHandler()
fh_formatter = logging.Formatter('%(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(lineno)d:% filename)s(%(process)d) - %(message)s')
fh.setFormatter(fh_formatter)
logger.addHandler(fh)

Another example, this time using a helper function and the RichHandler from the rich 3rd-party module.

# loghelper.py
import logging
from rich.logging import RichHandler

def new_logger(logger_name: str) -> logging.Logger:
    FORMAT = "%(message)s"
    logging.basicConfig(
        level=logging.WARNING, format=FORMAT, datefmt="[%X]", handlers=[RichHandler()]
    )
    log = logging.getLogger(logger_name)
    # Add handlers ...
    # ...
    return log

Then import the helper function into your module

# mymodule.py

from loghelper import new_logger

# Nice and tidy!
logger = new_logger(__name__)
0

This is the simplest solution I could find in order to print exclusively the logging statements from your own script (i.e. ignoring anything coming from imported modules).

import logging.config

logging.config.dictConfig({
    'version': 1,
    'disable_existing_loggers': True,
    'loggers': { '': {'level': 'INFO'} }
})

logging.info('Message from my own script')

Output:

INFO:root:Message from my own script

The level (DEBUG, INFO, WARNING, etc.) can be selected under the loggers object above. To further customize the format, have a look at the complete configuration schema.

-1

Just change the lvl of the imported module loggers to higher than debug < warning or critical.

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