74

With my Procfile like this:

web: gunicorn app:app \
    --bind "$HOST:$PORT" \
    --error-logfile "-" \
    --enable-stdio-inheritance \
    --reload \
    --log-level "debug" 

is it in any way possible to get python print statements to be logged to stdout / bash? I am using the bottle framework here as well, if that affects anything.

2
  • 1
    The debug flag doesn't apply to gunicorn. It actually fails if you try to run it: gunicorn: error: unrecognized arguments: --debug
    – Akronix
    May 25, 2018 at 11:11
  • 1
    @Akronix thanks, checked in the docs and can't find the --debug either; maybe it was never supported but didn't cause an error, or it has since been removed. Deleted it from the question, just so there's no incentive to copy it.
    – kontur
    Jun 8, 2022 at 12:15

5 Answers 5

54

It turns out the print statements were actually getting through, but with delay.

The gunicorn docs for --enable-stdio-inheritance note to set the PYTHONUNBUFFERED, which I thought I had, but it seems with wrong syntax.

I solved it using a .env file with my foreman setup to set the variable like this:

PYTHONUNBUFFERED=TRUE
1
  • Even though it is official way to do it - it does not work for unknown reason (python 2.7)
    – FelikZ
    Nov 4, 2016 at 11:55
46

In python 3, adding flush=True in each print statement works for my flask/gunicorn app.

E.g.

gunicorn --bind 0.0.0.0:8080 server --log-level debug

No particular flags are required.

See if this helps.

2
  • 2
    It doesn't seem convenient to change the app code to work around this.
    – kontur
    Sep 25, 2020 at 6:41
  • 1
    adding flush=True to print() also worked for me with gunicorn
    – jaycer
    Jul 20, 2022 at 17:58
40

Please try below command:

gunicorn --workers 3 --bind 127.0.0.1:5000 --error-logfile /var/log/gunicorn/error.log --access-logfile /var/log/gunicorn/access.log --capture-output --log-level debug

It did work for me.

  1. Specify --log-level to debug(default info).

  2. Specify --capture-output flag (default false).

You should be able to watch logs in error log file.

2
  • 1
    No way to auto create it? FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/var/log/gunicorn/error.log' Dec 23, 2021 at 21:15
  • is there a way to redirect all stdout and stderr to a separate file than what's specified in --error-log? Jan 22, 2022 at 8:19
13

I use Python3 along with Flask.

I use print('log info') directly instead of print('log info', flush=True).

I only set capture_output to True and set a errorlog file and it works.

Note that:

capture_output

--capture-output
False
Redirect stdout/stderr to specified file in errorlog

I think it's that you need to specifiy a errorlog file to get the standard output.


Here's my config file gunicorn.config.py setting

accesslog = 'gunicorn.log'
errorlog = 'gunicorn.error.log'
capture_output = True

Then run with gunicorn app_py:myapp -c gunicorn.config.py

The equivaluent command line would be

gunicorn app_py:myapp --error-logfile gunicorn.error.log --access-logfile gunicorn.log --capture-output

0

This is working for me (I'm using a service called si-ct)

gunicorn --workers 3 --bind unix:si-ct.sock -m 007 wsgi:app --log-level debug --error-logfile - --access-logfile - --capture-output --reload 

With that, the print output shows in my service logs, which I read using

sudo journalctl -u si-ct -f

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