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When I access my Webrick server via the localhost, or when I run rails migrations, my development.log is correctly written to. However, when I bootup my rails console with "rails c" and then try and create a new database object and save it via a command like "user.save", I see SQL statements in the console, but nothing is written to in the development log.

Most people when answering a question similar to this say "check to make sure that the config is set to the correct environment". I've done this, and can say on my system this happens for a completely new rails app.

Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!

2 Answers 2

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the rails console never writes to the log file, but you can achieve it quite easily, for example, if you execute following after starting the rails console

ActiveRecord::Base.logger = Logger.new STDOUT

rails will log all SQL statements to stdout, thus display them in your terminal. and since Logger.new accepts any stream as first argument, you could just let it write to the rails development.log:

ActiveRecord::Base.logger = Logger.new File.open('log/development.log', 'a')
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  • 1
    Thank you for the response. You say Rails console never writes to the log file. To me, this seems add odds to what Michael Hartl teaches in section 6.1.3 of "The Ruby on Rails Tutorial 3".. which says: .. working at the console, it’s useful to keep an eye on the development log, which records the actual low-level SQL statements being issued by Active Record, as shown in Figure 6.4. The way to get this output at a Unix command line is to tail the log: $ tail -f log/development.log - Am I to take it then that in this situation its Active Record that's writing to the log? If so.. mine fails
    – Inc1982
    Sep 23, 2011 at 21:48
  • i'm absolutely sure, that rails doesn't normally log to file in console mode. it would be quite embarrassing if I'm wrong :), but maybe i am? or maybe you missed some setup section in Hartl's book ? i didn't read that book, so i don't know. Sep 23, 2011 at 21:59
  • to be exact, Rails' different parts, i.e. ActionController, ActiveRecord etc. all write to the log. you can set different loggers for these frameworks, or just set Rails.logger = Logger.new(STDOUT), but in the rails console, you have not logging from controllers etc, as you usually only work with models Sep 23, 2011 at 22:01
  • Confirmed with version 3.1.1: The Rails console does not log to development.log. Nov 3, 2011 at 10:09
  • 3.2.x does add "Connecting to database specified by database.yml" to the development log, but SQL statements are sent to STDOUT.
    – graywh
    May 15, 2013 at 19:46
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I am in Rails 2.3.8, the above answer doesn't really work for me.

ActiveRecord::Base.logger = Logger.new STDOUT

The following actually works:

ActiveRecord::Base.connection.instance_variable_set :@logger, Logger.new(STDOUT)

Reference http://www.shanison.com/2012/03/05/show-sql-statements-in-rails-console/

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