(This document is a work in progress: an overly fat README that I'll be reducing alot [v0.2.2: though not before adding to it] and making more of a "quick intro". Complete documentation is here. Thanks for your patience/check this space! — BTO)
log_calls
is a Python 3 decorator that can print much useful information
about calls to a decorated function. It can write to stdout
, to another
stream, or to a logger. It can save you from writing, rewriting, copying,
pasting and tweaking a lot of ad hoc, boilerplate code - and it can keep
your codebase free of that clutter.
For each call of a decorated function, log_calls
can show you:
log_calls
-decorated caller,These and other features are optional and configurable settings, which can be specified for each decorated function via keyword parameters. You can also examine and change these settings on the fly using attributes with the same names as the keywords, or using a dict-like interface whose keys are the keywords.
log_calls
can also collect profiling data and statistics, accessible at runtime:
The package contains another decorator, record_history
, a stripped-down version
of log_calls
which only collects call history and statistics, and outputs no messages.
This document gives an overview of the decorator's features and their use. A thorough account, including many useful examples, can be found in the complete documentation for log_calls
and record_history
.
This document describes version 0.2.3
of log_calls
.
0.2.3
log_message()
, and more, better examples of it — full docs here.0.2.2
log_message()
, which decorated functions and methods can use to write extra debugging messages that align nicely with log_calls
messages.log_message()
.log_calls
adds for them, within their own bodies.stats.history_as_DataFrame
attribute, whose value is the call history of a decorated function as a Pandas DataFrame (if Pandas is installed; else None
).log_calls/docs/history_to_pandas.ipynb
, browsable as HTML here) which compares the performance of using record_history
vs a vectorized approach using numpy to amass medium to large datasets, and which concludes that if you can vectorize, by all means do so.The log_calls package has no dependencies - it requires no other packages. All it does require is a standard distribution of Python 3.2+.
NOTE: This package does require the CPython implementation, as it uses internals of stack frames which may well differ in other interpreters.
You have two simple options:
Download the compressed repository, uncompress it into a directory, and run:
$ python setup.py install
in that directory, or
run
$ pip install log_calls
to install log_calls from PyPI (the Python Package Index). Here and elsewhere, $
at the beginning of a line indicates your command prompt, whatever it may be.
Whichever you choose, ideally you'll do it in a virtual environment (a virtualenv).
Each *.py
file in the log_calls directory has a corresponding test file test_*.py
in the log_calls/tests/
directory; log_calls.py
has a second, test_log_calls_more.py
. The tests provide essentially 100% coverage (98% for log_calls.py
, 100% for the others). All tests have passed on every tested platform + Python version; however, that's a sparse matrix :) If you encounter any turbulence, do let us know.
You can run the test suites either before or after installing log_calls
.
To do this, download the compressed repository, as in 1. above. After you uncompress the archive into a directory, and before you run the install command, first run one of the following commands:
$ python setup.py test [-q]
(-q
for "quiet", recommended) or
$ python run_tests.py [-q | -v | -h]
which takes switches -q
for "quiet", -v
for "verbose", and -h
for "help".
You can run the tests for log_calls
after installing it, using the command:
$ python -m unittest discover log_calls.tests
All the above commands run all tests in the log_calls/tests/
directory. If you run any of them, the output you see should end like so:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 51 tests in 0.726s
OK
indicating that all went well. If any test fails, it will say so.
log_calls
has many features, and thus many, mostly independent, keyword parameters (14 in all). This section introduces all but four of them, one at a time, though of course you can use multiple parameters in any call to the decorator:
The two parameters that let you output log_calls
messages to a Logger
(logger
and loglevel
) are discussed in Using loggers. The two that determine whether call history is retained (record_history), and then how much of it (max_history), are discussed in Call history and statistics.
Every example in this document uses log_calls
, so without further ado:
>>> from log_calls import log_calls
First, let's see the simplest possible examples, using no parameters at all:
>>> @log_calls()
... def f(a, b, c):
... pass
>>> f(1, 2, 3)
f <== called by <module>
arguments: a=1, b=2, c=3
f ==> returning to <module>
Adding another decorated function to the call chain gives useful information too:
>>> @log_calls()
... def g(a):
... f(a, 2*a, 3*a)
>>> g(3)
g <== called by <module>
arguments: a=3
f <== called by g
arguments: a=3, b=6, c=9
f ==> returning to g
g ==> returning to <module>
The next most basic example:
>>> @log_calls(enabled=False)
... def f(a, b, c):
... pass
>>> f(1, 2, 3) # no output
', '
)The args_sep
parameter specifies the character or string used to separate
arguments. If the string ends in (or is) \n
, additional whitespace
is appended so that arguments line up nicely:
>>> @log_calls(args_sep='\\n')
... def f(a, b, c, **kwargs):
... print(a + b + c)
>>> f(1, 2, 3, u='you') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE, +SKIP
f <== called by <module>
arguments:
a=1
b=2
c=3
[**]kwargs={'u': 'you'}
6
f ==> returning to <module>
NOTE: In all the doctest examples in this document, you'll see '\\n'
where in actual code you'd write '\n'
. This is a doctest
quirk: all
the examples herein work (as tests, they pass), and they would fail if
'\n'
were used. The only alternative would be to use raw character strings
and write r'\n'
, which is not obviously better.
When true, as seen above, arguments passed to the decorated function are
logged. If the function's signature contains positional and/or keyword
"varargs" (*args
and/or **kwargs
), these are included if they're nonempty.
Any default values of keyword parameters with no corresponding argument are also
logged, on a separate line.
>>> @log_calls()
... def f_a(a, *args, something='that thing', **kwargs): pass
>>> f_a(1, 2, 3, foo='bar')
f_a <== called by <module>
arguments: a=1, [*]args=(2, 3), [**]kwargs={'foo': 'bar'}
defaults: something='that thing'
f_a ==> returning to <module>
Here, no argument information is logged at all:
>>> @log_calls(log_args=False)
... def f_b(a, *args, something='that thing', **kwargs): pass
>>> f_b(1, 2, 3, foo='bar')
f_b <== called by <module>
f_b ==> returning to <module>
If a function has no parameters, log_calls
won't display any "arguments"
section:
>>> @log_calls()
... def f(): pass
>>> f()
f <== called by <module>
f ==> returning to <module>
If a function has parameters but is passed no arguments, log_calls
will display arguments: <none>
, plus any default values used:
>>> @log_calls()
... def ff(*args, **kwargs): pass
>>> ff()
ff <== called by <module>
arguments: <none>
ff ==> returning to <module>
>>> @log_calls()
... def fff(*args, kw='doh', **kwargs): pass
>>> fff()
fff <== called by <module>
arguments: <none>
defaults: kw='doh'
fff ==> returning to <module>
When true, this parameter displays the value returned by the function:
>>> @log_calls(log_retval=True)
... def f(a, b, c):
... return a + b + c
>>> _ = f(1, 2, 3)
f <== called by <module>
arguments: a=1, b=2, c=3
f return value: 6
f ==> returning to <module>
When false, this parameter suppresses the ... ==> returning to ...
line
that indicates the function's return to its caller.
>>> @log_calls(log_exit=False)
... def f(a, b, c):
... return a + b + c
>>> _ = f(1, 2, 3)
f <== called by <module>
arguments: a=1, b=2, c=3
log_calls
keeps a running tally of the number of times a decorated function
is called. You can display this (1-based) number using the log_call_numbers
parameter:
>>> @log_calls(log_call_numbers=True)
... def f(): pass
>>> for i in range(2): f()
f [1] <== called by <module>
f [1] ==> returning to <module>
f [2] <== called by <module>
f [2] ==> returning to <module>
The call number is also displayed when log_retval
is true:
>>> @log_calls(log_call_numbers=True, log_retval=True)
... def f():
... return 81
>>> _ = f()
f [1] <== called by <module>
f [1] return value: 81
f [1] ==> returning to <module>
This is particularly valuable in the presence of recursion, for example. See the recursion example later, where the feature is used to good effect.
For performance profiling, you can measure the time it took a function to execute by using the log_elapsed
keyword. When true, log_calls
reports the time the decorated function took to complete, in seconds:
>>> @log_calls(log_elapsed=True)
... def f(n):
... for i in range(n):
... # do something time-critical
... pass
>>> f(5000) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
f <== called by <module>
arguments: n=5000
elapsed time: ... [secs]
f ==> returning to <module>
The indent
parameter, when true, indents each new level of logged messages by 4 spaces, providing a visualization of the call hierarchy.
(log_calls
indents only when using print
, not when using loggers.)
A decorated function's logged output is indented only as much as is necessary. Here, the even numbered functions don't indent, so the indented functions that they call are indented just one level more than their "inherited" indentation level:
>>> @log_calls(indent=True)
... def g1():
... pass
>>> @log_calls() # no extra indentation for g1
... def g2():
... g1()
>>> @log_calls(indent=True)
... def g3():
... g2()
>>> @log_calls() # no extra indentation for g3
... def g4():
... g3()
>>> @log_calls(indent=True)
... def g5():
... g4()
>>> g5()
g5 <== called by <module>
g4 <== called by g5
g3 <== called by g4
g2 <== called by g3
g1 <== called by g2
g1 ==> returning to g2
g2 ==> returning to g3
g3 ==> returning to g4
g4 ==> returning to g5
g5 ==> returning to <module>
''
): decorating methodsEspecially useful for clarity when decorating methods, the prefix
keyword
parameter lets you specify a string with which to prefix the name of the
method. log_calls
uses the prefixed name in its output: when logging
a call to, and a return from, the method; when reporting the method's return value; and when the method is at the end of a call or return chain.
>>> import math
>>> class Point():
... # NOTE: You can't decorate __init__ :D
... def __init__(self, x, y):
... self.x = x
... self.y = y
... @staticmethod
... @log_calls(prefix='Point.')
... def distance(pt1, pt2):
... return math.sqrt((pt1.x - pt2.x)**2 + (pt1.y - pt2.y)**2)
... @log_calls(log_retval=True, prefix='Point.')
... def length(self):
... return self.distance(self, Point(0, 0))
... @log_calls(prefix='Point.')
... def diag_reflect(self):
... self.x, self.y = self.y, self.x
... return self
... def __repr__(self):
... return "Point" + str((self.x, self.y))
>>> print("Point(1, 2).diag_reflect() =", Point(1, 2).diag_reflect())
Point.diag_reflect <== called by <module>
arguments: self=Point(1, 2)
Point.diag_reflect ==> returning to <module>
Point(1, 2).diag_reflect() = Point(2, 1)
>>> print("length of Point(1, 2) =", round(Point(1, 2).length(), 2)) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Point.length <== called by <module>
arguments: self=Point(1, 2)
Point.distance <== called by Point.length
arguments: pt1=Point(1, 2), pt2=Point(0, 0)
Point.distance ==> returning to Point.length
Point.length return value: 2.236...
Point.length ==> returning to <module>
length of Point(1, 2) = 2.24
The file
parameter specifies a stream (an instance of io.TextIOBase
) to which log_calls
will print its messages. This value is supplied to the file
keyword parameter of the print
function, and, like that parameter, its default value is sys.stdout
. This parameter is ignored if you've supplied a logger for output using the logger
parameter.
If your program writes to the console a lot, you may not want log_calls
messages interspersed with your real output: your understanding of both logically distinct streams can be compromised, so, better to make them two actually distinct streams. It can also be advantageous to gather all, and only all, of the log_calls messages in one place. You can use indent=True
with a file, and the indentations will appear as intended, whereas that's not possible with loggers.
It's not possible to test this feature with doctest (in fact, there are subtleties to supporting this feature and using doctest at all), so we'll just give an example of writing to stderr
, and reproduce the output:
>>> import sys
>>> @log_calls(file=sys.stderr, indent=True)
... def f(n):
... if n <= 0:
... return 'a'
... return '(' + f(n-1) + ')'
Running >>> f(2)
will return '((a))' and will write the following to stderr
:
f <== called by <module>
f <== called by f
arguments: n=1
f <== called by f
arguments: n=0
f ==> returning to f
f ==> returning to f
f ==> returning to <module>
log_calls
works well with loggers obtained from Python's logging
module. First, we'll set up a logger with a single handler that writes to the console. Because doctest
doesn't capture output written to stderr
(the default stream to which console handlers write), we'll send the console handler's output to stdout
, using the format <loglevel>:<loggername>:<message>
.
>>> import logging
>>> import sys
>>> ch = logging.StreamHandler(stream=sys.stdout)
>>> c_formatter = logging.Formatter('%(levelname)8s:%(name)s:%(message)s')
>>> ch.setFormatter(c_formatter)
>>> logger = logging.getLogger('a_logger')
>>> logger.addHandler(ch)
>>> logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
The logger
keyword parameter tells log_calls
to write its output using
that logger rather than the print
function:
>>> @log_calls(logger=logger)
... def somefunc(v1, v2):
... logger.debug(v1 + v2)
>>> @log_calls(logger=logger)
... def anotherfunc():
... somefunc(17, 19)
>>> anotherfunc() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
DEBUG:a_logger:anotherfunc <== called by <module>
DEBUG:a_logger:somefunc <== called by anotherfunc
DEBUG:a_logger: arguments: v1=17, v2=19
DEBUG:a_logger:36
DEBUG:a_logger:somefunc ==> returning to anotherfunc
DEBUG:a_logger:anotherfunc ==> returning to <module>
log_calls
also takes a loglevel
keyword parameter, whose value must be
one of the logging
module's constants - logging.DEBUG
, logging.INFO
, etc.
– or a custom logging level if you've added any. log_calls
writes output messages
using logger.log(loglevel, …)
. Thus, if the logger
's log level is higher than
loglevel
, no output will appear:
>>> logger.setLevel(logging.INFO) # raise logger's level to INFO
>>> @log_calls(logger='logger_=', loglevel=logging.DEBUG)
... def f(x, y, z, **kwargs):
... return y + z
>>> # No log_calls output from f
>>> # because loglevel for f < level of logger
>>> f(1,2,3, enable=True, sep_='\\n', logger_=logger) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE, +ELLIPSIS
5
The use of loggers, and of these parameters, is explored further in the main documentation, which contains an example of using a logger with multiple handlers that have different loglevels.
log_calls
does its best to chase back along the call chain to find
the first enabled log_calls
-decorated function on the stack.
If there's no such function, it just displays the immediate caller.
If there is such a function, however, it displays the entire list of
functions on the stack up to and including that function when reporting
calls and returns. Without this, you'd have to guess at what was called
in between calls to functions decorated by log_calls
. If you specified
a prefix for the decorated caller on the end of a call chain, log_calls
will use the prefixed name:
>>> @log_calls()
... def g1():
... pass
>>> def g2():
... g1()
>>> @log_calls(prefix='mid.')
... def g3():
... g2()
>>> def g4():
... g3()
>>> @log_calls()
... def g5():
... g4()
>>> g5()
g5 <== called by <module>
mid.g3 <== called by g4 <== g5
g1 <== called by g2 <== mid.g3
g1 ==> returning to g2 ==> mid.g3
mid.g3 ==> returning to g4 ==> g5
g5 ==> returning to <module>
In the next example, g
is log_calls
-decorated but logging is disabled,
so the reported call chain for f
stops at its immediate caller:
>>> @log_calls()
... def f(): pass
>>> def not_decorated(): f()
>>> @log_calls(enabled=False, log_call_numbers=True)
... def g(): not_decorated()
>>> g()
f <== called by not_decorated
f ==> returning to not_decorated
Elaborating on the previous example, here are longer call chains with an intermediate decorated function that has logging disabled. We've also enabled indentation:
>>> @log_calls(indent=True)
... def e(): pass
>>> def not_decorated_call_e(): e()
>>> @log_calls(indent=True)
... def f(): not_decorated_call_e()
>>> def not_decorated_call_f(): f()
>>> @log_calls(enabled=False, log_call_numbers=True, indent=True)
... def g(): not_decorated_call_f()
>>> @log_calls(indent=True)
... def h(): g()
>>> h()
h <== called by <module>
f <== called by not_decorated_call_f <== g <== h
e <== called by not_decorated_call_e <== f
e ==> returning to not_decorated_call_e ==> f
f ==> returning to not_decorated_call_f ==> g ==> h
h ==> returning to <module>
log_calls
chases back to the nearest enabled decorated function, so that there aren't gaps between call chains.
These features are especially useful in recursive and mutually recursive situations. We have to use OrderedDict
s here because of doctest:
>>> from collections import OrderedDict
>>> @log_calls(log_call_numbers=True, log_retval=True, indent=True)
... def depth(d, key=None):
... if not isinstance(d, dict):
... return 0 # base case
... elif not d:
... return 1
... else:
... return max(map(depth, d.values(), d.keys())) + 1
>>> depth(
... OrderedDict(
... (('a', 0),
... ('b', OrderedDict( (('c1', 10), ('c2', 11)) )),
... ('c', 'text'))
... )
... )
depth [1] <== called by <module>
arguments: d=OrderedDict([('a', 0), ('b', OrderedDict([('c1', 10), ('c2', 11)])), ('c', 'text')])
defaults: key=None
depth [2] <== called by depth [1]
arguments: d=0, key='a'
depth [2] return value: 0
depth [2] ==> returning to depth [1]
depth [3] <== called by depth [1]
arguments: d=OrderedDict([('c1', 10), ('c2', 11)]), key='b'
depth [4] <== called by depth [3]
arguments: d=10, key='c1'
depth [4] return value: 0
depth [4] ==> returning to depth [3]
depth [5] <== called by depth [3]
arguments: d=11, key='c2'
depth [5] return value: 0
depth [5] ==> returning to depth [3]
depth [3] return value: 1
depth [3] ==> returning to depth [1]
depth [6] <== called by depth [1]
arguments: d='text', key='c'
depth [6] return value: 0
depth [6] ==> returning to depth [1]
depth [1] return value: 2
depth [1] ==> returning to <module>
2
NOTE: The optional key
parameter is for instructional purposes, so you can see the key that's paired with the value of d
in the caller's dictionary. Typically the signature of this function would be just def depth(d)
, and the recursive case would return max(map(depth, d.values())) + 1
.
log_calls
exposes the method it uses to write its messages, log_message
,
whose full signature is:
`log_message(msg, *msgs, sep=' ',
extra_indent_level=1, prefix_with_name=False)`
This method takes one or more "messages" (anything you want to see as a string),
and writes one final output message formed by joining messages separated by sep
.
extra_indent_level
is a number of 4-columns wide indent levels specifying
where to begin writing that message. This value * 4 is an offset in columns
from the left margin of the visual frame established by log_calls – that is,
an offset from the column in which the function entry/exit messages begin. The default
of 1 aligns the message with the "arguments: " line of log_calls
's output.
prefix_with_name
is a bool. If true, the final message is prefaced with the
possibly prefixed name of the function (using the prefix
setting),
plus possibly its call number in square brackets (if the log_call_numbers
setting
is true.
If a decorated function or method writes debugging messages, even multiline
messages, it can use this method to write them so that they sit nicely within
the visual frame provided by log_calls
.
Consider the following function:
>>> @log_calls(indent=True, log_call_numbers=True)
... def f(n):
... if n <= 0:
... print("*** Base case n <= 0")
... else:
... print("*** n=%d is %s,\\n but we knew that."
... % (n, "odd" if n%2 else "even"))
... print("*** (n=%d) We'll be right back, after this:" % n)
... f(n-1)
... print("*** (n=%d) We're back." % n)
>>> f(2) # doctest: +SKIP
f [1] <== called by <module>
arguments: n=2
*** n=2 is even,
but we knew that.
*** (n=2) We'll be right back, after this:
f [2] <== called by f [1]
arguments: n=1
*** n=1 is odd,
but we knew that.
*** (n=1) We'll be right back, after this:
f [3] <== called by f [2]
arguments: n=0
*** Base case n <= 0
f [3] ==> returning to f [2]
*** (n=1) We're back.
f [2] ==> returning to f [1]
*** (n=2) We're back.
f [1] ==> returning to <module>
The debugging messages written by f
literally "stick out", and it gets difficult,
especially in more complex situations with multiple functions and methods,
to figure out who actually wrote which message; hence the "(n=%d)" tag. If instead
f
uses log_message
, all of its messages from each invocation align neatly
within the frame presented by log_calls
. We also take the opportunity to
illustrate the keyword parameters of log_message
:
>>> @log_calls(indent=True, log_call_numbers=True)
... def f(n):
... if n <= 0:
... f.log_message("Base case n =", n, prefix_with_name=True)
... else:
... f.log_message("n=%d is %s,\\n but we knew that."
... % (n, "odd" if n%2 else "even"),
... prefix_with_name=True)
... f.log_message("We'll be right back", "after this:",
... extra_indent_level=0, sep=", ", prefix_with_name=True)
... f(n-1)
... f.log_message("We're back.", extra_indent_level=0, prefix_with_name=True)
>>> f(2) # doctest: +SKIP
f [1] <== called by <module>
arguments: n=2
f [1]: n=2 is even,
but we knew that.
f [1]: We'll be right back, after this:
f [2] <== called by f [1]
arguments: n=1
f [2]: n=1 is odd,
but we knew that.
f [2]: We'll be right back, after this:
f [3] <== called by f [2]
arguments: n=0
f [3]: Base case n = 0
f [3] ==> returning to f [2]
f [2]: We're back.
f [2] ==> returning to f [1]
f [1]: We're back.
f [1] ==> returning to <module>
See the full documentation for the log_message
method for a couple of notes
and internal links to further examples.
log_calls
provides a number of features beyond those already described. We'll only give an overview of them here. For a full account, see the complete documentation.
Sometimes, you'll need or want to change a log_calls
setting for a decorated function on the fly. The major impediment to doing so is that the values of the log_calls
parameters are set once the decorated function is interpreted.
Those values are established once and for all when the Python interpreter
parses the definition of a decorated function and creates a function object.
Even if a variable is used as a parameter value, its value at the time Python processes the definition is "frozen" for the created function object. Subsequently changing the value of the variable will not affect the behavior of the decorator.
For example, suppose DEBUG
is a module-level variable initialized to False
:
>>> DEBUG = False
and you use this code:
>>> @log_calls(enabled=DEBUG)
... def foo(**kwargs):
... pass
>>> foo() # No log_calls output: DEBUG is False
If later you set Debug = True
and call foo
, that call won't be logged,
because the decorated foo
's enabled setting is bound to the original value
of DEBUG
, established when the definition was processed:
>>> DEBUG = True
>>> foo() # Still no log_calls output
log_calls
provides two ways to overcome this limitation and dynamically control the settings of a decorated function:
log_calls_settings
attribute, which provides a mapping interface and an attribute-based interface to settings, andThe following two subsections give a brief introduction to these features, which the main documentation presents in depth.
log_calls
adds an attribute log_calls_settings
to a decorated function, through which you can access the decorator settings for that function. This attribute is an object which lets you control the settings for a decorated function via a mapping (dict
-like) interface, and equivalently, via attributes of the object. The mapping keys and the attribute names are simply the log_calls
keywords. log_calls_settings
also implements many of the standard dict
methods for interacting with the settings in familiar ways.
Once you've decorated a function with log_calls
,
>>> @log_calls()
... def f(*args, **kwargs):
... return 91
you can access and change its settings via the log_calls_settings
attribute
of the decorated function, which behaves like a dictionary. You can read and
write settings using the log_calls
keywords as keys:
>>> f.log_calls_settings['enabled']
True
>>> f.log_calls_settings['enabled'] = False
>>> _ = f() # no output (not even 91, because of "_ = ")
>>> f.log_calls_settings['enabled']
False
>>> f.log_calls_settings['log_retval']
False
>>> f.log_calls_settings['log_retval'] = True
>>> f.log_calls_settings['log_elapsed']
False
>>> f.log_calls_settings['log_elapsed'] = True
You can also use the same keywords as attributes of log_calls_settings
instead of as keywords to the mapping interface; they're completely
equivalent:
>>> f.log_calls_settings.log_elapsed
True
>>> f.log_calls_settings.log_call_numbers
False
>>> f.log_calls_settings.log_call_numbers = True
>>> f.log_calls_settings.enabled = True # turn it back on!
>>> _ = f() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
f [1] <== called by <module>
arguments: <none>
f [1] return value: 91
elapsed time: ... [secs]
f [1] ==> returning to <module>
>>> f.log_calls_settings.log_args = False
>>> f.log_calls_settings.log_elapsed = False
>>> f.log_calls_settings.log_retval = False
>>> _ = f() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
f [2] <== called by <module>
f [2] ==> returning to <module>
The log_calls_settings
attribute has a length (14), its keys and items()
can be iterated through, you can use in
to test for key membership, and it has an update()
method. As with an ordinary dictionary, attempting to access a nonexistent setting
raises KeyError
. Unlike an ordinary dictionary, you can't add new keys – the log_calls_settings
dictionary is closed to new members, and attempts to add one will also raise KeyError
.
The update()
method of the log_calls_settings
object lets you update several settings at once:
>>> f.log_calls_settings.update(
... log_args=True, log_elapsed=False, log_call_numbers=False,
... log_retval=False)
>>> _ = f()
f <== called by <module>
arguments: <none>
f ==> returning to <module>
You can retrieve the entire collection of settings as either an OrderedDict
using the as_OrderedDict()
method, or as a dict
using as_dict()
.
Either can serve as a snapshot of the settings, so that you can change settings temporarily, use the new settings, and then use update()
restore settings from the snapshot.
in addition to taking keyword arguments, as shown above, update()
can take one or more dicts – in particular, a dictionary retrieved from one of the as_*
methods. For example:
Retrieve settings (here, as an OrderedDict
because those are more doctest-friendly, but using as_dict()
suffices):
>>> od = f.log_calls_settings.as_OrderedDict()
>>> od # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
OrderedDict([('enabled', True), ('args_sep', ', '),
('log_args', True), ('log_retval', False),
('log_elapsed', False), ('log_exit', True),
('indent', False), ('log_call_numbers', False),
('prefix', ''), ('file', None),
('logger', None), ('loglevel', 10),
('record_history', False), ('max_history', 0)])
change settings temporarily:
>>> f.log_calls_settings.update(
... log_args=False, log_elapsed=True, log_call_numbers=True,
... log_retval=True)
use the new settings for f
:
>>> _ = f() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
f [4] <== called by <module>
f [4] return value: 91
elapsed time: ... [secs]
f [4] ==> returning to <module>
and restore original settings, this time passing the retrieved settings
dictionary rather than keywords (we could pass **od
, but that's unnecessary and a pointless expense):
>>> f.log_calls_settings.update(od)
>>> od == f.log_calls_settings.as_OrderedDict()
True
log_calls
provides a second way to access and change settings on the fly. The decorator lets you specify any parameter
except prefix
or max_history
with one level of indirection, by using
indirect values: an indirect value is a string that names a keyword argument
of the decorated function. It can be an explicit keyword argument present
in the signature of the function, or an implicit keyword argument that ends up
in **kwargs
(if that's present in the function's signature). When the decorated
function is called, the arguments passed by keyword, and the decorated function's
explicit keyword parameters with default values, are both searched for the named
parameter; if it is found and of the correct type, its value is used; otherwise
the default value for the log_calls
parameter is used.
To specify an indirect value for a parameter whose normal type is str
(only
args_sep
, at present), append an '='
to the value. For consistency,
any indirect value can end in a trailing '='
, which is stripped. Thus,
enabled='enable_='
indicates an indirect value to be supplied by the keyword (argument or parameter) enable_
of the decorated function.
For example, in:
>>> @log_calls(args_sep='sep=', prefix="*** ")
... def f(a, b, c, sep='|'): pass
args_sep
has an indirect value which names f
's explicit keyword parameter sep
,
and prefix
has a direct value as it always does. A call can dynamically override the default
value '|' in the signature of f
by supplying a value:
>>> f(1, 2, 3, sep=' / ')
*** f <== called by <module>
arguments: a=1 / b=2 / c=3 / sep=' / '
*** f ==> returning to <module>
or it can use f
's default value by not supplying a sep
argument:
>>> f(1, 2, 3)
*** f <== called by <module>
arguments: a=1|b=2|c=3
defaults: sep='|'
*** f ==> returning to <module>
A decorated function doesn't have to explicitly declare the parameter
named as an indirect value, if its signature includes **kwargs
:
the intermediate parameter can be an implicit keyword parameter,
passed by a caller but not present in the function's signature.
Consider:
>>> @log_calls(enabled='enable')
... def func1(a, b, c, **kwargs): pass
>>> @log_calls(enabled='enable')
... def func2(z, **kwargs): func1(z, z+1, z+2, **kwargs)
When the following statement is executed, the calls to both func1
and func2
will be logged:
>>> func2(17, enable=True)
func2 <== called by <module>
arguments: z=17, [**]kwargs={'enable': True}
func1 <== called by func2
arguments: a=17, b=18, c=19, [**]kwargs={'enable': True}
func1 ==> returning to func2
func2 ==> returning to <module>
whereas neither of the following two statements will trigger logging:
>>> func2(42, enable=False) # no log_calls output
>>> func2(99) # no log_calls output
See the section in the full documentation on indirect values for several more examples and useful techniques involving indirect values. The test suite log_calls/tests/test_log_calls_more.py
also contains further doctests/examples.
log_calls
always collects a few basic statistics about calls to a decorated
function. It can collect the entire history of calls to a function if asked
to, or just the most recent n
calls; the *_history parameters, discussed next, determine these settings. The statistics and history are accessible via the stats
attribute which log_calls
adds to a decorated function.
The two parameters we haven't yet discussed govern the recording of a decorated function's call history.
When the record_history
setting is true for a decorated function f
, log_calls
will retain a sequence of records holding the details of each logged call to that function. That history is accessible via attributes of the stats
object.
Let's define a function f
with record_history
set to true:
>>> @log_calls(record_history=True, log_call_numbers=True, log_exit=False)
... def f(a, *args, x=1, **kwargs): pass
We'll call this function f in the following subsections, manipulate its settings, and examine its statistics.
The max_history
parameter determines how many call history records are retained for a decorated function whose call history is recorded. If this value is 0 or negative, unboundedly many records are retained (unless or until
you set the record_history
setting to false, or call the
stats.clear_history()
method). If the value of max_history
is > 0, log_calls
will retain at most that many records, discarding the oldest records to make room for newer ones if the history reaches capacity.
You cannot change max_history
using the mapping interface or the attribute
of the same name; attempts to do so raise ValueError
. The only way to change its value is with the stats.clear_history()
method, discussed below.
The stats
attribute of a decorated function is an object that provides statistics and data about calls to a decorated function:
stats.num_calls_logged
stats.num_calls_total
stats.elapsed_secs_logged
stats.history
stats.history_as_csv
stats.history_as_DataFrame
The first three don't depend on the record_history
setting at all.The last three yield empty results unless record_history
is true.
The stats
attribute also provides one method, stats.clear_history()
.
Let's call the function f
defined above twice:
>>> f(0)
f [1] <== called by <module>
arguments: a=0
defaults: x=1
>>> f(1, 100, 101, x=1000, y=1001)
f [2] <== called by <module>
arguments: a=1, [*]args=(100, 101), x=1000, [**]kwargs={'y': 1001}
and look at its stats
.
The stats.num_calls_logged
attribute contains the number of the most
recent logged call to a decorated function. Thus, f.stats.num_calls_logged
will equal 2:
>>> f.stats.num_calls_logged
2
This counter gets incremented when a decorated function is called that has logging enabled, even if its log_call_numbers
setting is false.
The stats.num_calls_total
attribute holds the total number of calls
to a decorated function. This counter gets incremented even when logging
is disabled for a function.
For example, let's now disable logging for f
and call it 3 more times:
>>> f.log_calls_settings.enabled = False
>>> for i in range(3): f(i)
Now stats.num_calls_total
will equal 5, but f.stats.num_calls_logged
will still equal 2:
>>> f.stats.num_calls_total
5
>>> f.stats.num_calls_logged
2
Finally, let's re-enable logging for f
and call it again.
The displayed call number will be the number of the logged call, 3, the same
value as f.stats.num_calls_logged
after the call:
>>> f.log_calls_settings.enabled = True
>>> f(10, 20, z=5000)
f [3] <== called by <module>
arguments: a=10, [*]args=(20,), [**]kwargs={'z': 5000}
defaults: x=1
>>> f.stats.num_calls_total
6
>>> f.stats.num_calls_logged
3
ATTENTION: Thus, log_calls
has some overhead even when it's disabled, and somewhat more when it's enabled. So, comment it out in production code!
The stats.elapsed_secs_logged
attribute holds the sum of the elapsed times of
all logged calls to a decorated function, in seconds. Here's its value for the 3 logged calls to f
above:
>>> f.stats.elapsed_secs_logged # doctest: +SKIP
6.67572021484375e-06
The stats.history
attribute of a decorated function provides the call history
of logged calls to the function as a tuple of records. Each record is a namedtuple
of type CallRecord
. Here's f
's call history,
in (almost) human-readable form:
>>> print('\\n'.join(map(str, f.stats.history))) # doctest: +SKIP
CallRecord(call_num=1, argnames=['a'], argvals=(0,), varargs=(),
explicit_kwargs=OrderedDict(),
defaulted_kwargs=OrderedDict([('x', 1)]), implicit_kwargs={},
retval=None, elapsed_secs=2.1457672119140625e-06,
timestamp='10/28/14 15:56:13.733763',
prefixed_func_name='f', caller_chain=['<module>'])
CallRecord(call_num=2, argnames=['a'], argvals=(1,), varargs=(100, 101),
explicit_kwargs=OrderedDict([('x', 1000)]),
defaulted_kwargs=OrderedDict(), implicit_kwargs={'y': 1001},
retval=None, elapsed_secs=1.9073486328125e-06,
timestamp='10/28/14 15:56:13.734102',
prefixed_func_name='f', caller_chain=['<module>'])
CallRecord(call_num=3, argnames=['a'], argvals=(10,), varargs=(20,),
explicit_kwargs=OrderedDict(),
defaulted_kwargs=OrderedDict([('x', 1)]), implicit_kwargs={'z': 5000},
retval=None, elapsed_secs=2.1457672119140625e-06,
timestamp='10/28/14 15:56:13.734412',
prefixed_func_name='f', caller_chain=['<module>'])
The CSV representation pairs
the argnames
with their values in argvals
(the argnames
become column headings),
making it even more human-readable, especially when viewed in a program that
presents CSVs nicely.
The value stats.history_as_csv
attribute is a text representation in CSV format
of a decorated function's call history. You can save this string
and import it into the program or tool of your choice for further analysis.
(Note: if your tool of choice is Pandas, you can use
the stats
attribute stats.history_as_DataFrame
to directly obtain history in
the representation you ultimately want.)
The CSV representation
breaks out each argument into its own column, throwing away
information about whether an argument's value was passed or is a default.
The CSV separator is '|' rather than ',' because some of the fields – args
, kwargs
and caller_chain
– use commas intrinsically. Let's examine one more
history_as_csv
for a function that has all of those fields:
>>> @log_calls(record_history=True, log_call_numbers=True,
... log_exit=False, log_args=False)
... def f(a, *extra_args, x=1, **kw_args): pass
>>> def g(a, *args, **kwargs): f(a, *args, **kwargs)
>>> @log_calls(log_exit=False, log_args=False)
... def h(a, *args, **kwargs): g(a, *args, **kwargs)
>>> h(0)
h <== called by <module>
f [1] <== called by g <== h
>>> h(10, 17, 19, z=100)
h <== called by <module>
f [2] <== called by g <== h
>>> h(20, 3, 4, 6, x=5, y='Yarborough', z=100)
h <== called by <module>
f [3] <== called by g <== h
Here's the call history in CSV format:
>>> print(f.stats.history_as_csv) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE, +ELLIPSIS
call_num|a|extra_args|x|kw_args|retval|elapsed_secs|timestamp|prefixed_fname|caller_chain
1|0|()|1|{}|None|...|...|'f'|['g', 'h']
2|10|(17, 19)|1|{'z': 100}|None|...|...|'f'|['g', 'h']
3|20|(3, 4, 6)|5|{'y': 'Yarborough', 'z': 100}|None|...|...|'f'|['g', 'h']
<BLANKLINE>
Ellipses are for the elapsed_secs
and timestamp
fields. As usual, log_calls
will use whatever names you use for varargs parameters
(here, extra_args
and kw_args
). Whatever the name of the kwargs
parameter,
items within that field are guaranteed to be in sorted order.
The stats.history_as_DataFrame
attribute returns the history of a decorated
function as a Pandas DataFrame,
if the Pandas library is installed. This saves you the intermediate step of
calling DataFrame.from_csv
with the proper arguments (and also saves you from
having to know or care what those are).
If Pandas is not installed, the value of this attribute is None
.
As you might expect, the stats.clear_history(max_history=0)
method clears
the call history of a decorated function. In addition, it resets all running sums:
num_calls_total
and num_calls_logged
are reset to 0, and
elapsed_secs_logged
is reset to 0.0.
It is the only way to change the value of the max_history
setting, via
the optional keyword parameter for which you can supply any (integer) value,
by default 0.
The function f
has a nonempty history, as we just saw. Let's clear f
's history, setting max_history
to 33, and check that settings
and stats
tallies are reset:
>>> f.stats.clear_history(max_history=33)
>>> f.log_calls_settings.max_history
33
>>> f.stats.num_calls_logged
0
>>> f.stats.num_calls_total
0
>>> f.stats.elapsed_secs_logged
0.0
The record_history
decorator is a stripped-down version of log_calls
which
records calls to a decorated function but writes no messages. You can think
of it as log_calls
with the record_history
and log_call_numbers
settings
always true, and without any of the message-logging apparatus.
record_history
has only three keyword parameters:
enabled
prefix
max_history
Just as the settings of log_calls
for a decorated function are accessible
dynamically through the log_calls_settings
attribute, these settings of
record_history
are exposed via a record_history_settings
attribute.
record_history_settings
is an object of the same type as log_calls_settings
,
so it has the same methods and behaviors described in the log_calls_settings
section.
Functions decorated by record_history
have a full-featured stats
attribute,
as described in the Call history and statistics section.
See the documentation for record_history
for examples and tests.
ATTENTION: Like log_calls
, record_history
has some overhead. So, comment it out in production code!