I'm accessing an environment variable in a script with os.environ.get
and it's throwing a KeyError
. It doesn't throw the error from the Python prompt. This is running on OS X 10.11.6, and is Python 2.7.10.
What is going on?
$ python score.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "score.py", line 4, in <module>
setup_logging()
File "/score/log.py", line 29, in setup_logging
config = get_config()
File "/score/log.py", line 11, in get_config
environment = os.environ.get('NODE_ENV')
File "/System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/UserDict.py", line 23, in __getitem__
raise KeyError(key)
KeyError: 'NODE_ENV'
$ python -c "import os; os.environ.get('NODE_ENV')"
$
As requested, here's the source code for score.py
from __future__ import print_function
from log import get_logger, setup_logging
setup_logging()
log = get_logger('score')
And here's log.py
import json
import os
import sys
from iron_worker import IronWorker
from logbook import Logger, Processor, NestedSetup, StderrHandler, SyslogHandler
IRON_IO_TASK_ID = IronWorker.task_id()
def get_config():
environment = os.environ.get('NODE_ENV')
if environment == 'production':
filename = '../config/config-production.json'
elif environment == 'integration':
filename = '../config/config-integration.json'
else:
filename = '../config/config-dev.json'
with open(filename) as f:
return json.load(f)
def setup_logging():
# This defines a remote Syslog handler
# This will include the TASK ID, if defined
app_name = 'scoreworker'
if IRON_IO_TASK_ID:
app_name += '-' + IRON_IO_TASK_ID
config = get_config()
default_log_handler = NestedSetup([
StderrHandler(),
SyslogHandler(
app_name,
address = (config['host'], config['port']),
level = 'ERROR',
bubble = True
)
])
default_log_handler.push_application()
def get_logger(name):
return Logger(name)
score.py
?get
should never throw aKeyError
; it's supposed to returnNone
if the key isn't found (or whatever default you provided if you provided one). Heck, the source code for that method isn't even supposed to have araise KeyError(key)
line in it at all!.pyc
file), but seems to be what that user is describing.UserDict.get
(line 61 in UserDict.py) should be in the traceback -- But I'm not seeing it. It's almost like someone monkey patchedUserDict.get = UserDict.__getitem__
, but that would be a really shady thing to do...