Logging¶
shade uses Python Logging. As shade is a library, it does not configure logging handlers automatically, expecting instead for that to be the purview of the consuming application.
Simple Usage¶
For consumers who just want to get a basic logging setup without thinking about it too deeply, there is a helper method. If used, it should be called before any other shade functionality.
import shade
shade.simple_logging()
shade.simple_logging takes two optional boolean arguments:
- debug
Turns on debug logging.
- http_debug
Turns on debug logging as well as debug logging of the underlying HTTP calls.
shade.simple_logging also sets up a few other loggers and squelches some warnings or log messages that are otherwise uninteresting or unactionable by a shade user.
Advanced Usage¶
shade logs to a set of different named loggers.
Most of the logging is set up to log to the root shade logger. There are additional sub-loggers that are used at times, primarily so that a user can decide to turn on or off a specific type of logging. They are listed below.
- shade.task_manager
shade uses a Task Manager to perform remote calls. The shade.task_manager logger emits messages at the start and end of each Task announging what it is going to run and then what it ran and how long it took. Logging shade.task_manager is a good way to get a trace of external actions shade is taking without full HTTP Tracing.
- shade.request_ids
The shade.request_ids logger emits a log line at the end of each HTTP interaction with the OpenStack Request ID associated with the interaction. This can be be useful for tracking action taken on the server-side if one does not want HTTP Tracing.
- shade.iterate_timeout
When shade needs to poll a resource, it does so in a loop that waits between iterations and ultimately timesout. The shade.iterate_timeout logger emits messages for each iteration indicating it is waiting and for how long. These can be useful to see for long running tasks so that one can know things are not stuck, but can also be noisy.
- shade.http
shade will sometimes log additional information about HTTP interactions to the shade.http logger. This can be verbose, as it sometimes logs entire response bodies.
- shade.fnmatch
shade will try to use fnmatch on given name_or_id arguments. It’s a best effort attempt, so pattern misses are logged to shade.fnmatch. A user may not be intending to use an fnmatch pattern - such as if they are trying to find an image named
Fedora 24 [official]
, so these messages are logged separately.
HTTP Tracing¶
HTTP Interactions are handled by keystoneauth. If you want to enable HTTP tracing while using shade and are not using shade.simple_logging, set the log level of the keystoneauth logger to DEBUG.
Python Logging¶
Python logging is a standard feature of Python and is documented fully in the Python Documentation, which varies by version of Python.
For more information on Python Logging for Python v2, see https://docs.python.org/2/library/logging.html.
For more information on Python Logging for Python v3, see https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html.