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How to pickle loggers?

Working on a project that requires that I am able to pickle the container object at any point, since we expect it to fail on external conditions quite frequently and be able to fully pick up where we left off.

I'm using the python logging library quite extensively, and all of my classes start by setting up a logger like:

class foo:
   def __init__(self):
       self.logger = logging.getLogger("package.foo")

Since I'm pickling a container class, it has several layers of classes within it, each with their own logger instance.

Now, for some reason, these loggers are breaking Pickle. I'm getting the following error, which goes away if I delete self.logger from all the classes:

Can't pickle 'lock' object: <thread.lock object at ... >

So my question is whether or not there is some way to remove the lock objects from all the loggers without having to recurse through my whole object tree deleting loggers which I will have to recreate on unpickle.

like image 505
Josh Arenberg Avatar asked Jul 30 '10 21:07

Josh Arenberg


3 Answers

New in Python 3.7 (bpo30520)

Logger can now be pickled like many other objects.

import pickle
import logging
log = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger_pickle = pickle.dumps(log)

# and of coarse, to load:
log = pickle.loads(logger_pickle)
like image 170
Taku Avatar answered Nov 15 '22 19:11

Taku


You could also create a class that implements a property which returns the needed logger. Every class which inherits from this "LoggerMixin" is now able to use the logger in the same way you were using it before.

class LoggerMixin():
    @property
    def logger(self):
        component = "{}.{}".format(type(self).__module__, type(self).__name__)
        return logging.getLogger(component)

class Foo(LoggerMixin):
    def __init__(self):
        self.logger.info("initialize class")

    def bar(self):
        self.logger.info("execute bar")
like image 28
nerduel Avatar answered Nov 15 '22 19:11

nerduel


You could create a class that wraps the logger and implements __getstate__ and __setstate__.

This is pasted from http://docs.python.org/library/pickle.html. The fh is handled in a way which may be similar to what you need.

#!/usr/local/bin/python

class TextReader:
    """Print and number lines in a text file."""
    def __init__(self, file):
        self.file = file
        self.fh = open(file)
        self.lineno = 0

    def readline(self):
        self.lineno = self.lineno + 1
        line = self.fh.readline()
        if not line:
            return None
        if line.endswith("\n"):
            line = line[:-1]
        return "%d: %s" % (self.lineno, line)

    def __getstate__(self):
        odict = self.__dict__.copy() # copy the dict since we change it
        del odict['fh']              # remove filehandle entry
        return odict

    def __setstate__(self, dict):
        fh = open(dict['file'])      # reopen file
        count = dict['lineno']       # read from file...
        while count:                 # until line count is restored
            fh.readline()
            count = count - 1
        self.__dict__.update(dict)   # update attributes
        self.fh = fh                 # save the file object
like image 39
James Avatar answered Nov 15 '22 21:11

James