using configobj string interpolation and logging.config.dictConfig
Tim Williams
tjandacw at cox.net
Thu May 25 21:43:29 EDT 2017
On Thursday, May 25, 2017 at 5:16:13 PM UTC-4, Peter Otten wrote:
> Tim Williams wrote:
>
> > On Wednesday, May 24, 2017 at 5:47:37 PM UTC-4, Peter Otten wrote:
> >> Tim Williams wrote:
> >>
> >> > Just as a followup, if I use 'unrepr=True' in my ConfigObj, I don't
> >> > have to convert the strings.
> >>
> >> I'd keep it simple and would use JSON...
> >
> > I looked at JSON at first, but went with configobj because I didn't see
> > where it did string interpolation, which I needed for other parts of my
> > INI file, and I'm trying to use it to specify my log file in my handler.
> >
> > Which brings me to ...
>
> > I have this stripped down INI file:
> >
> ...
>
> How do you get
>
> > LogFile = '%(CaptureDrive)s%(RootDir)s/test.log'
>
> to be interpolated while leaving
>
> > format = '%(asctime)s: (%(levelname)s) %(message)s'
>
> as is?
>
> > However, when I try to call logging.config.dictConfig() on it, the stream
> > that is opened on creating the logging.FileHandler object is
> > "%(LogFile)s", not "C:/TestData/test.log".
>
> I don't even get this far:
>
> >>> c = configobj.ConfigObj("second.ini", unrepr=True)
> >>> c.dict()
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> ...
> configobj.MissingInterpolationOption: missing option "asctime" in
> interpolation.
>
> I tried to escape % as %%, but that doesn't seem to work. When I provide
> bogus replacements
>
> >>> c = configobj.ConfigObj("third.ini", unrepr=True)
> >>> pprint.pprint(c.dict()["loggng"])
> {'CaptureDrive': 'C:/',
> 'LogFile': 'C:/TestData/test.log',
> 'RootDir': 'TestData',
> 'asctime': 'ASCTIME',
> 'formatters': {'fmt1': {'datefmt': '',
> 'format': 'ASCTIME: (LEVELNAME) MESSAGE'}},
> 'handlers': {'console': {'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
> 'level': 'INFO',
> 'stream': 'ext://sys.stdout'},
> 'file': {'class': 'logging.FileHandler',
> 'filename': 'C:/TestData/test.log',
> 'level': 'WARN'}},
> 'level': 'INFO',
> 'levelname': 'LEVELNAME',
> 'loggers': {'root': {'handlers': ['file', 'console'], 'level': 'INFO'}},
> 'message': 'MESSAGE',
> 'version': 1}
>
> I get the expected output.
I'm at home now, so I don't have my environment, but if I do a c.dict() I get the error about asctime also. If I just pass in the dict object or do a 'dict(config['loggng'])', I don't get that.
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