mirror of https://github.com/mitsuhiko/flask.git
You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
353 lines
14 KiB
353 lines
14 KiB
.. _application-errors: |
|
|
|
Application Errors |
|
================== |
|
|
|
.. versionadded:: 0.3 |
|
|
|
Applications fail, servers fail. Sooner or later you will see an exception |
|
in production. Even if your code is 100% correct, you will still see |
|
exceptions from time to time. Why? Because everything else involved will |
|
fail. Here are some situations where perfectly fine code can lead to server |
|
errors: |
|
|
|
- the client terminated the request early and the application was still |
|
reading from the incoming data |
|
- the database server was overloaded and could not handle the query |
|
- a filesystem is full |
|
- a harddrive crashed |
|
- a backend server overloaded |
|
- a programming error in a library you are using |
|
- network connection of the server to another system failed |
|
|
|
And that's just a small sample of issues you could be facing. So how do we |
|
deal with that sort of problem? By default if your application runs in |
|
production mode, Flask will display a very simple page for you and log the |
|
exception to the :attr:`~flask.Flask.logger`. |
|
|
|
But there is more you can do, and we will cover some better setups to deal |
|
with errors. |
|
|
|
.. _error-handlers: |
|
|
|
Error handlers |
|
-------------- |
|
|
|
You might want to show custom error pages to the user when an error occurs. |
|
This can be done by registering error handlers. |
|
|
|
Error handlers are normal :ref:`views` but instead of being registered for |
|
routes they are registered for exceptions that are rised while trying to |
|
do something else. |
|
|
|
Registering |
|
``````````` |
|
|
|
Register error handlers using :meth:`~flask.Flask.errorhandler` or |
|
:meth:`~flask.Flask.register_error_handler`:: |
|
|
|
@app.errorhandler(werkzeug.exceptions.BadRequest) |
|
def handle_bad_request(e): |
|
return 'bad request!' |
|
|
|
app.register_error_handler(400, lambda e: 'bad request!') |
|
|
|
Those two ways are equivalent, but the first one is more clear and leaves |
|
you with a function to call on your whim (and in tests). Note that |
|
:exc:`werkzeug.exceptions.HTTPException` subclasses like |
|
:exc:`~werkzeug.exceptions.BadRequest` from the example and their HTTP codes |
|
are interchangeable when handed to the registration methods or decorator |
|
(``BadRequest.code == 400``). |
|
|
|
You are however not limited to :exc:`~werkzeug.exceptions.HTTPException` |
|
or HTTP status codes but can register a handler for every exception class you |
|
like. |
|
|
|
.. versionchanged:: 0.11 |
|
|
|
Errorhandlers are now prioritized by specificity of the exception classes |
|
they are registered for instead of the order they are registered in. |
|
|
|
Handling |
|
```````` |
|
|
|
Once an exception instance is raised, its class hierarchy is traversed, |
|
and searched for in the exception classes for which handlers are registered. |
|
The most specific handler is selected. |
|
|
|
E.g. if an instance of :exc:`ConnectionRefusedError` is raised, and a handler |
|
is registered for :exc:`ConnectionError` and :exc:`ConnectionRefusedError`, |
|
the more specific :exc:`ConnectionRefusedError` handler is called on the |
|
exception instance, and its response is shown to the user. |
|
|
|
Error Mails |
|
----------- |
|
|
|
If the application runs in production mode (which it will do on your |
|
server) you might not see any log messages. The reason for that is that |
|
Flask by default will just report to the WSGI error stream or stderr |
|
(depending on what's available). Where this ends up is sometimes hard to |
|
find. Often it's in your webserver's log files. |
|
|
|
I can pretty much promise you however that if you only use a logfile for |
|
the application errors you will never look at it except for debugging an |
|
issue when a user reported it for you. What you probably want instead is |
|
a mail the second the exception happened. Then you get an alert and you |
|
can do something about it. |
|
|
|
Flask uses the Python builtin logging system, and it can actually send |
|
you mails for errors which is probably what you want. Here is how you can |
|
configure the Flask logger to send you mails for exceptions:: |
|
|
|
ADMINS = ['yourname@example.com'] |
|
if not app.debug: |
|
import logging |
|
from logging.handlers import SMTPHandler |
|
mail_handler = SMTPHandler('127.0.0.1', |
|
'server-error@example.com', |
|
ADMINS, 'YourApplication Failed') |
|
mail_handler.setLevel(logging.ERROR) |
|
app.logger.addHandler(mail_handler) |
|
|
|
So what just happened? We created a new |
|
:class:`~logging.handlers.SMTPHandler` that will send mails with the mail |
|
server listening on ``127.0.0.1`` to all the `ADMINS` from the address |
|
*server-error@example.com* with the subject "YourApplication Failed". If |
|
your mail server requires credentials, these can also be provided. For |
|
that check out the documentation for the |
|
:class:`~logging.handlers.SMTPHandler`. |
|
|
|
We also tell the handler to only send errors and more critical messages. |
|
Because we certainly don't want to get a mail for warnings or other |
|
useless logs that might happen during request handling. |
|
|
|
Before you run that in production, please also look at :ref:`logformat` to |
|
put more information into that error mail. That will save you from a lot |
|
of frustration. |
|
|
|
|
|
Logging to a File |
|
----------------- |
|
|
|
Even if you get mails, you probably also want to log warnings. It's a |
|
good idea to keep as much information around that might be required to |
|
debug a problem. By default as of Flask 0.11, errors are logged to your |
|
webserver's log automatically. Warnings however are not. Please note |
|
that Flask itself will not issue any warnings in the core system, so it's |
|
your responsibility to warn in the code if something seems odd. |
|
|
|
There are a couple of handlers provided by the logging system out of the |
|
box but not all of them are useful for basic error logging. The most |
|
interesting are probably the following: |
|
|
|
- :class:`~logging.FileHandler` - logs messages to a file on the |
|
filesystem. |
|
- :class:`~logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler` - logs messages to a file |
|
on the filesystem and will rotate after a certain number of messages. |
|
- :class:`~logging.handlers.NTEventLogHandler` - will log to the system |
|
event log of a Windows system. If you are deploying on a Windows box, |
|
this is what you want to use. |
|
- :class:`~logging.handlers.SysLogHandler` - sends logs to a UNIX |
|
syslog. |
|
|
|
Once you picked your log handler, do like you did with the SMTP handler |
|
above, just make sure to use a lower setting (I would recommend |
|
`WARNING`):: |
|
|
|
if not app.debug: |
|
import logging |
|
from themodule import TheHandlerYouWant |
|
file_handler = TheHandlerYouWant(...) |
|
file_handler.setLevel(logging.WARNING) |
|
app.logger.addHandler(file_handler) |
|
|
|
.. _logformat: |
|
|
|
Controlling the Log Format |
|
-------------------------- |
|
|
|
By default a handler will only write the message string into a file or |
|
send you that message as mail. A log record stores more information, |
|
and it makes a lot of sense to configure your logger to also contain that |
|
information so that you have a better idea of why that error happened, and |
|
more importantly, where it did. |
|
|
|
A formatter can be instantiated with a format string. Note that |
|
tracebacks are appended to the log entry automatically. You don't have to |
|
do that in the log formatter format string. |
|
|
|
Here some example setups: |
|
|
|
Email |
|
````` |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
from logging import Formatter |
|
mail_handler.setFormatter(Formatter(''' |
|
Message type: %(levelname)s |
|
Location: %(pathname)s:%(lineno)d |
|
Module: %(module)s |
|
Function: %(funcName)s |
|
Time: %(asctime)s |
|
|
|
Message: |
|
|
|
%(message)s |
|
''')) |
|
|
|
File logging |
|
```````````` |
|
|
|
:: |
|
|
|
from logging import Formatter |
|
file_handler.setFormatter(Formatter( |
|
'%(asctime)s %(levelname)s: %(message)s ' |
|
'[in %(pathname)s:%(lineno)d]' |
|
)) |
|
|
|
|
|
Complex Log Formatting |
|
`````````````````````` |
|
|
|
Here is a list of useful formatting variables for the format string. Note |
|
that this list is not complete, consult the official documentation of the |
|
:mod:`logging` package for a full list. |
|
|
|
.. tabularcolumns:: |p{3cm}|p{12cm}| |
|
|
|
+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| Format | Description | |
|
+==================+====================================================+ |
|
| ``%(levelname)s``| Text logging level for the message | |
|
| | (``'DEBUG'``, ``'INFO'``, ``'WARNING'``, | |
|
| | ``'ERROR'``, ``'CRITICAL'``). | |
|
+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``%(pathname)s`` | Full pathname of the source file where the | |
|
| | logging call was issued (if available). | |
|
+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``%(filename)s`` | Filename portion of pathname. | |
|
+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``%(module)s`` | Module (name portion of filename). | |
|
+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``%(funcName)s`` | Name of function containing the logging call. | |
|
+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``%(lineno)d`` | Source line number where the logging call was | |
|
| | issued (if available). | |
|
+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``%(asctime)s`` | Human-readable time when the LogRecord` was | |
|
| | created. By default this is of the form | |
|
| | ``"2003-07-08 16:49:45,896"`` (the numbers after | |
|
| | the comma are millisecond portion of the time). | |
|
| | This can be changed by subclassing the formatter | |
|
| | and overriding the | |
|
| | :meth:`~logging.Formatter.formatTime` method. | |
|
+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+ |
|
| ``%(message)s`` | The logged message, computed as ``msg % args`` | |
|
+------------------+----------------------------------------------------+ |
|
|
|
If you want to further customize the formatting, you can subclass the |
|
formatter. The formatter has three interesting methods: |
|
|
|
:meth:`~logging.Formatter.format`: |
|
handles the actual formatting. It is passed a |
|
:class:`~logging.LogRecord` object and has to return the formatted |
|
string. |
|
:meth:`~logging.Formatter.formatTime`: |
|
called for `asctime` formatting. If you want a different time format |
|
you can override this method. |
|
:meth:`~logging.Formatter.formatException` |
|
called for exception formatting. It is passed an :attr:`~sys.exc_info` |
|
tuple and has to return a string. The default is usually fine, you |
|
don't have to override it. |
|
|
|
For more information, head over to the official documentation. |
|
|
|
|
|
Other Libraries |
|
--------------- |
|
|
|
So far we only configured the logger your application created itself. |
|
Other libraries might log themselves as well. For example, SQLAlchemy uses |
|
logging heavily in its core. While there is a method to configure all |
|
loggers at once in the :mod:`logging` package, I would not recommend using |
|
it. There might be a situation in which you want to have multiple |
|
separate applications running side by side in the same Python interpreter |
|
and then it becomes impossible to have different logging setups for those. |
|
|
|
Instead, I would recommend figuring out which loggers you are interested |
|
in, getting the loggers with the :func:`~logging.getLogger` function and |
|
iterating over them to attach handlers:: |
|
|
|
from logging import getLogger |
|
loggers = [app.logger, getLogger('sqlalchemy'), |
|
getLogger('otherlibrary')] |
|
for logger in loggers: |
|
logger.addHandler(mail_handler) |
|
logger.addHandler(file_handler) |
|
|
|
|
|
Debugging Application Errors |
|
============================ |
|
|
|
For production applications, configure your application with logging and |
|
notifications as described in :ref:`application-errors`. This section provides |
|
pointers when debugging deployment configuration and digging deeper with a |
|
full-featured Python debugger. |
|
|
|
|
|
When in Doubt, Run Manually |
|
--------------------------- |
|
|
|
Having problems getting your application configured for production? If you |
|
have shell access to your host, verify that you can run your application |
|
manually from the shell in the deployment environment. Be sure to run under |
|
the same user account as the configured deployment to troubleshoot permission |
|
issues. You can use Flask's builtin development server with `debug=True` on |
|
your production host, which is helpful in catching configuration issues, but |
|
**be sure to do this temporarily in a controlled environment.** Do not run in |
|
production with `debug=True`. |
|
|
|
|
|
.. _working-with-debuggers: |
|
|
|
Working with Debuggers |
|
---------------------- |
|
|
|
To dig deeper, possibly to trace code execution, Flask provides a debugger out |
|
of the box (see :ref:`debug-mode`). If you would like to use another Python |
|
debugger, note that debuggers interfere with each other. You have to set some |
|
options in order to use your favorite debugger: |
|
|
|
* ``debug`` - whether to enable debug mode and catch exceptions |
|
* ``use_debugger`` - whether to use the internal Flask debugger |
|
* ``use_reloader`` - whether to reload and fork the process on exception |
|
|
|
``debug`` must be True (i.e., exceptions must be caught) in order for the other |
|
two options to have any value. |
|
|
|
If you're using Aptana/Eclipse for debugging you'll need to set both |
|
``use_debugger`` and ``use_reloader`` to False. |
|
|
|
A possible useful pattern for configuration is to set the following in your |
|
config.yaml (change the block as appropriate for your application, of course):: |
|
|
|
FLASK: |
|
DEBUG: True |
|
DEBUG_WITH_APTANA: True |
|
|
|
Then in your application's entry-point (main.py), you could have something like:: |
|
|
|
if __name__ == "__main__": |
|
# To allow aptana to receive errors, set use_debugger=False |
|
app = create_app(config="config.yaml") |
|
|
|
if app.debug: use_debugger = True |
|
try: |
|
# Disable Flask's debugger if external debugger is requested |
|
use_debugger = not(app.config.get('DEBUG_WITH_APTANA')) |
|
except: |
|
pass |
|
app.run(use_debugger=use_debugger, debug=app.debug, |
|
use_reloader=use_debugger, host='0.0.0.0')
|
|
|