24

I am trying to debug a model in Rails so I'm using this code: logger.debug('asasd')

However, I'm tailing the log file development.log but I'm not seeing it add to this file.

  1. I am certain this module is being run
  2. I have confirmed that runtime errors are logging to this file, and I see them when I tail.

How do I get this to work?

1
  • Which version of Rails are you using?
    – user9903
    Apr 9, 2012 at 16:15

2 Answers 2

18

Make sure that you have set the log level to debug in environments/appropriate_env_file.rb:

config.log_level = :debug

and also make sure you are tailing the correct log file based on the environment you are running against.

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4

You could attempt to call flush on the logger to force it to write to this file. Usually this would happen after every request:

logger.debug("asasd")
logger.flush

There's also the auto_flushing setting on the Rails.logger instance itself:

Rails.logger.auto_flushing = true

This will make the call to logger.flush unnecessary, as Rails will automatically flush the buffered output to the log file whenever it is written to.

1
  • 4
    Additionally, logger.flush is now a deprecated, no-op method.
    – Lambart
    Nov 13, 2013 at 21:54

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