Add colours to the output of Python's logging
module.
colorlog currently requires Python 3.6 or higher. Older versions (below 5.x.x) support Python 2.6 and above.
- colorlog 6.x requires Python 3.6 or higher.
- colorlog 5.x is an interim version that will warn Python 2 users to downgrade.
- colorlog 4.x is the final version supporting Python 2.
colorama is included as a required dependency and initialised when using colorlog on Windows.
This library is over a decade old and supported a wide set of Python versions for most of its life, which has made it a difficult library to add new features to. colorlog 6 may break backwards compatibility so that newer features can be added more easily, but may still not accept all changes or feature requests. colorlog 4 might accept essential bugfixes but should not be considered actively maintained and will not accept any major changes or new features.
Install from PyPI with:
pip install colorlog
Several Linux distributions provide official packages (Debian, Arch, Fedora, Gentoo, OpenSuse and Ubuntu), and others have user provided packages (BSD ports, Conda).
import colorlog
handler = colorlog.StreamHandler()
handler.setFormatter(colorlog.ColoredFormatter(
'%(log_color)s%(levelname)s:%(name)s:%(message)s'))
logger = colorlog.getLogger('example')
logger.addHandler(handler)
The ColoredFormatter
class takes several arguments:
format
: The format string used to output the message (required).datefmt
: An optional date format passed to the base class. Seelogging.Formatter
.reset
: Implicitly adds a color reset code to the message output, unless the output already ends with one. Defaults toTrue
.log_colors
: A mapping of record level names to color names. The defaults can be found incolorlog.default_log_colors
, or the below example.secondary_log_colors
: A mapping of names tolog_colors
style mappings, defining additional colors that can be used in format strings. See below for an example.style
: Available on Python 3.2 and above. Seelogging.Formatter
.
Color escape codes can be selected based on the log records level, by adding parameters to the format string:
log_color
: Return the color associated with the records level.<name>_log_color
: Return another color based on the records level if the formatter has secondary colors configured (seesecondary_log_colors
below).
Multiple escape codes can be used at once by joining them with commas when
configuring the color for a log level (but can't be used directly in the format
string). For example, black,bg_white
would use the escape codes for black
text on a white background.
The following escape codes are made available for use in the format string:
{color}
,fg_{color}
,bg_{color}
: Foreground and background colors.bold
,bold_{color}
,fg_bold_{color}
,bg_bold_{color}
: Bold/bright colors.thin
,thin_{color}
,fg_thin_{color}
: Thin colors (terminal dependent).reset
: Clear all formatting (both foreground and background colors).
The available color names are:
black
red
green
yellow
blue
,purple
cyan
white
You can also use "bright" colors. These aren't standard ANSI codes, and support for these varies wildly across different terminals.
light_black
light_red
light_green
light_yellow
light_blue
light_purple
light_cyan
light_white
The following code creates a ColoredFormatter
for use in a logging setup,
using the default values for each argument.
from colorlog import ColoredFormatter
formatter = ColoredFormatter(
"%(log_color)s%(levelname)-8s%(reset)s %(blue)s%(message)s",
datefmt=None,
reset=True,
log_colors={
'DEBUG': 'cyan',
'INFO': 'green',
'WARNING': 'yellow',
'ERROR': 'red',
'CRITICAL': 'red,bg_white',
},
secondary_log_colors={},
style='%'
)
Secondary log colors are a way to have more than one color that is selected
based on the log level. Each key in secondary_log_colors
adds an attribute
that can be used in format strings (message
becomes message_log_color
), and
has a corresponding value that is identical in format to the log_colors
argument.
The following example highlights the level name using the default log colors,
and highlights the message in red for error
and critical
level log messages.
from colorlog import ColoredFormatter
formatter = ColoredFormatter(
"%(log_color)s%(levelname)-8s%(reset)s %(message_log_color)s%(message)s",
secondary_log_colors={
'message': {
'ERROR': 'red',
'CRITICAL': 'red'
}
}
)
With dictConfig
logging.config.dictConfig({
'formatters': {
'colored': {
'()': 'colorlog.ColoredFormatter',
'format': "%(log_color)s%(levelname)-8s%(reset)s %(blue)s%(message)s"
}
}
})
A full example dictionary can be found in tests/test_colorlog.py
.
With fileConfig
...
[formatters]
keys=color
[formatter_color]
class=colorlog.ColoredFormatter
format=%(log_color)s%(levelname)-8s%(reset)s %(bg_blue)s[%(name)s]%(reset)s %(message)s from fileConfig
datefmt=%m-%d %H:%M:%S
An instance of ColoredFormatter created with those arguments will then be used
by any handlers that are configured to use the color
formatter.
A full example configuration can be found in tests/test_config.ini
.
ColoredFormatter will work with custom log levels added with
logging.addLevelName
:
import logging, colorlog
TRACE = 5
logging.addLevelName(TRACE, 'TRACE')
formatter = colorlog.ColoredFormatter(log_colors={'TRACE': 'yellow'})
handler = logging.StreamHandler()
handler.setFormatter(formatter)
logger = logging.getLogger('example')
logger.addHandler(handler)
logger.setLevel('TRACE')
logger.log(TRACE, 'a message using a custom level')
Tests similar to the above examples are found in tests/test_colorlog.py
.
colorlog is in maintenance mode. I try and ensure bugfixes are published, but compatibility with Python 2.6+ and Python 3+ makes this a difficult codebase to add features to. Any changes that might break backwards compatibility for existing users will not be considered.
There are some more modern libraries for improving Python logging you may find useful.
GitHub provides a list of projects that depend on colorlog.
Some early adopters included Errbot, Pythran, and zenlog.
Copyright (c) 2012-2021 Sam Clements [email protected]
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