I'm working on a page that has lots of images so this generates lots of output in the console of this type. In my dev environment I use django to serve static and media, so I get a LOT of this in my console:
...
[23/May/2014 12:41:54] "GET /static/css/style.css HTTP/1.1" 304 0
[23/May/2014 12:41:55] "GET /static/js/jquery-1.7.1.min.js HTTP/1.1" 304 0
[23/May/2014 12:41:55] "GET /static/js/jquery.form.js HTTP/1.1" 304 0
...
[23/May/2014 12:41:57] "GET /media/producto/Tapa_Santiago_Vazquez_SV.jpg HTTP/1.1" 304 0
[23/May/2014 12:41:57] "GET /media/CACHE/images/producto/Barcos_y_mariposas_DVD_baja/2e3e3894ca08f88c03459e00f9018427.jpg HTTP/1.1" 304 0
[23/May/2014 12:41:56] "GET /media/CACHE/images/producto/tapaDEJA_VU/fb67e92ffd47808a263db02ca016bc24.jpg HTTP/1.1" 304 0
...
making it very tedious to look for meaningful output.
I would like to filter out those messages in my environment so I only see the GET for the view and my output, but so far looking at the logging I saw that I could affect other logging from django but not this. I even tried this but it didn't work:
LOGGING = {
'version': 1,
'disable_existing_loggers': True,
'handlers': {
'null': {
'level': 'ERROR',
'class': 'django.utils.log.NullHandler',
},
},
'loggers': {
'django': {
'handlers': ['null'],
'level': 'ERROR',
'propagate': True,
},
}
}
is it even possible to filter that kind of output out?
Thanks!!