This is my settings module:
LOGGING = {
\'version\': 1,
\'disable_existing_loggers\': False,
\'handlers\': {
\'file\': {
\'level\': \'DEBU
You could add the "catch all" logger to the loggers section:
'loggers': {
'': {
'handlers': ['file'],
'level': 'DEBUG',
}
}
It will catch all the log messages which are not caught by Django's default loggers.
Your logging configuration only captures logs within the django
namespace.
This line:
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
... tells the logger to use your module's name as the namespace for these logs (docs). If your module is called mymodule
, then you can catch these logs by adding something like this to your logging configuration:
'loggers': {
'django' : {...},
'mymodule': {
'handlers': ['file'],
'level': 'DEBUG',
'propagate': True,
},
},
import logging
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
after add:
logging.basicConfig(
level = logging.DEBUG,
format = '%(name)s %(levelname)s %(message)s',
)
or just add settings.py :
import logging
logging.basicConfig(
level = logging.DEBUG,
format = '%(name)s %(levelname)s %(message)s',
)
we may change format to:
format = '"%(levelname)s:%(name)s:%(message)s" ',
or
format = '%(name)s %(asctime)s %(levelname)s %(message)s',
you should add logger configuration due to your application name - something like
'your_app_name': {
'handlers': ['file'],
'level': 'DEBUG',
'propagate': True,
},
By now you have declared only logger for django default messages (like system errors)
Notice that the level of logger messages is important so when you are using
logger.info("this is an error message!!")
method to print out message your logger's level should be INFO or more strict